Psychology: Briefer Course

audiobook

Psychology: Briefer Course

by William James

EN·~15 hours·30 chapters

Chapters

30 total
1

PSYCHOLOGY

0:12
2

PREFACE.

3:43
3

PSYCHOLOGY. - CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.

14:40
4

CHAPTER II. SENSATION IN GENERAL.

37:19
5

CHAPTER III. SIGHT.

30:38
6

CHAPTER IV. HEARING.

23:07
7

CHAPTER V. TOUCH, THE TEMPERATURE SENSE, THE MUSCULAR SENSE, AND PAIN.

18:27
8

CHAPTER VI. SENSATIONS OF MOTION.

14:42
9

CHAPTER VII. THE STRUCTURE OF THE BRAIN.

21:29
10

CHAPTER VIII. THE FUNCTIONS OF THE BRAIN.

51:06

Description

This concise textbook reshapes a classic work into a classroom‑friendly guide, trimming away historical debates, metaphysical speculation, and lengthy quotations to leave the essential ideas about consciousness. It introduces readers to the basic building blocks of mental life—sensations, emotions, desires, reasoning, and volition—while explaining their causes, conditions, and immediate effects. Brief, clear chapters on the five senses help bridge the gap for students who may be unfamiliar with physiological foundations.

The author arranges the material in a deliberately pedagogic sequence, beginning with the concrete experiences we all share before moving toward more abstract mental elements. By treating psychology as a natural science, the text emphasizes observation and explanation over philosophical abstraction, offering a straightforward path through the subject’s core concepts. The result is a readable, focused study that equips learners with a solid grounding in the fundamentals of the mind.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~15 hours (902K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif, MWS and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2017-08-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

William James

William James

1842–1910

A founding figure in both modern psychology and American pragmatism, he wrote with unusual warmth about the mind, belief, habit, and religious experience. His books still feel lively because they stay close to the messiness of real life.

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