
A compact and approachable guide to the foundations of experimental psychology, this work invites listeners to grasp the essential ideas that shape modern study of the mind. It sidesteps dense philosophical debates, instead highlighting the core concepts and a handful of pivotal findings that illuminate how we think, feel, and perceive. Ideal for anyone stepping into the field, the narration balances clarity with enough depth to spark genuine curiosity.
The opening chapter turns the abstract notion of consciousness into something tangible, using everyday tools like a metronome to illustrate how attention can be measured and described. By walking through simple experiments, the author shows how psychologists break down complex experiences into discrete, observable elements. Listeners will come away with a clear picture of how early psychologists began to map the rhythms of thought, laying the groundwork for the richer investigations that follow.
Full title
An Introduction to Psychology Translated from the Second German Edition
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (218K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-08-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1832–1920
Often called one of the founders of modern psychology, he helped turn the study of the mind into an experimental science. His work at Leipzig made the new field feel concrete, measurable, and academically serious.
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