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A History of Social Psychology: From The Eighteenth-Century Enlightenment To The Second World War
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 5/31/2007
EAN 9780521687867, ISBN10: 0521687861
Paperback, 254 pages, 24.4 x 17.2 x 1.8 cm
Language: English
The term 'social psychology' was first established in the 1860s but the issues surrounding the subject have evolved over a much longer period. This book follows the history of the discipline over two and a half centuries, demonstrating the links between early and current thought. The first attempts at empirical approaches were made in France during the Enlightenment whilst some modern ideas were also being anticipated in Scotland. The search for laws of mind and society began in nineteenth-century Europe and, by the end of the century, it changed direction. Darwinian theory made a powerful impact on the emerging discipline and the centre of gravity began to move to America where it reached maturity during the inter-war period. A History of Social Psychology is viewed against a background of radical social and political changes and includes sketches of the major figures involved in its rise.
Preface
Part I. Eighteenth Century
Enlightenment Precursors
1. France. A short-lived dawn of empirical social science
2. Britain. Interpersonal relations and cultural differences
Part II. Nineteenth Century
The Gestation of Social Psychology in Europe
3. Germany. Herbart's and his followers' societal psychology
4. France and Belgium. Adventurous blueprints for a new social science
5. Britain. Logic, evolution, and the social in mind
6. France. Crowd, public, and collective mentalities
7. Germany. In the shadow of Wundt
8. America. Darwinian social psychology crosses the Atlantic
Part III. Twentieth Century
Towards Maturity in America
9. Was 1908 a crucial date?
10. Social psychology becomes empirical
groups (social facilitation) and attitudes
11. The wider panorama of social psychology by the mid-thirties
12. Highlights of the inter-war years
Concluding reflections.