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         James William:     more books (100)
  1. Talks to teachers on psychology and to students on some of life by James. William. 1842-1910., 1915-01-01
  2. Pragmatism, a new name for some old ways of thinking : popular lectures on philosophy by William, 1842-1910 James, 2009-10-26
  3. Psychology : briefer course by William, 1842-1910 James, 2009-10-26
  4. The varieties of religious experience; a study in human nature. by James. William. 1842-1910., 1902-01-01
  5. A.L.S. about his difficulty in getting a scientific paper. by WILLIAM - (1842 - 1910) JAMES, 1899
  6. Talks to teachers on psychology and to students on some of life by James. William. 1842-1910., 1905-01-01
  7. Talks to teachers and students by William, 1842-1910 James, 2009-10-26
  8. A pluralistic universe : Hibbert lectures at Manchester college on the present situation in philosophy by William, 1842-1910 James, 2009-10-26
  9. Talks to teachers on psychology. and to students on some of life by James. William. 1842-1910., 1912-01-01
  10. Some problems of philosophy a beginning of an introduction to ph by James. William. 1842-1910., 1911-01-01
  11. The will to believe : and other essays in popular philosophy by William, 1842-1910 James, 2009-10-26
  12. Philosophical conceptions and practical results by William, 1842-1910 James, 2009-10-26
  13. The emotions by William, 1842-1910 James, 2009-10-26
  14. William James: Selected Unpublished Correspondence, 1885-1910 by William James, Frederick J. Down Scott, 1986-07

21. Picture History - William James (1842-1910)
William James (18421910) James was an American philosopher who in 1872 joined theHarvard faculty as a lecturer on anatomy and physiology, continuing to teach
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All digital images are available for download as jpeg files at 300 dpi of original size. If you would like an image at a higher resolution, please email us your request at phinfo@picturehistory.com (be sure to include item number). Custom requests may take up to two weeks to be fulfilled and require an additional charge. William James (1842-1910) James was an American philosopher who in 1872 joined the Harvard faculty as a lecturer on anatomy and physiology, continuing to teach until 1907, after 1880 in the department of psychology and philosophy. In 1890 he published his brilliant and epoch-making "Principles of Psychology," in which the seeds of his philosophy are already discernible. James’s fascinating style and his broad culture and cosmopolitan outlook made him the most influential American thinker of his day. Related Categories: Philosophers Physicians Teachers

22. Project Gutenberg Author Record
Project Gutenberg Author record. James, William, 18421910. Titles.
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/james__william__1842-1910.html
Project Gutenberg Author record
James, William, 1842-1910
Titles
Meaning Of Truth Pragmatism Varieties of Religious Experience, a Study in Human Nature
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23. Project Gutenberg Author Index
James, Henry, 18431916. James, William Dobein, 1764-1838. James, William,1842-1910. Jameson, J. Franklin (John Franklin), 1859-1937, Editor. Japan.
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/author_index_J.html
Project Gutenberg
Author Index "J"
Jackman, William James, 1850- Jackson, Helen Hunt, 1830-1885 Jacobsen, J. P. (Jens Peter), 1847-1885 Jaloux, Edmond, 1878-1949 ... Judy, J. M.
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24. Creative Quotations From William James (1842-1910)
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25. William James 1842 1910
William James 1842 1910 bMS Am 1092.1. James, William, 18421910. CorrespondenceGuide. Houghton Library, Harvard College Library.
http://www.tokoimports.com/car-mods.htm

26. - Great Books -
William James (18421910), American philosopher, son of the Swedenborgiantheologian Henry James, and brother of the novelist Henry
http://www.malaspina.com/site/person_682.asp
William James
American philosopher, son of the Swedenborgian theologian Henry James, and brother of the novelist Henry James , was born on the 11th of January 1842 at New York City. He graduated M.D. at Harvard in 1870. Two years after he was appointed a lecturer at Harvard in anatomy and physiology, and later in psychology and philosophy. Subsequently he became assistant professor of philosophy (1880 - 1885), professor (1885 - 1889), professor of psychology (1889 - 1897) and professor of philosophy (1897 - 1907). In 1899 - 1901 he delivered the Gifford lectures on natural religion at the university of Edinburgh, and in 1908 the Hibbert lectures at Manchester College, Oxford. With the appearance of his Principles of Psychology (2 vols., 1890), James at once stepped into the front rank of psychologists as a leader of the physical school, a position which he maintained not only by the brilliance of his analogies but also by the freshness and unconventionality of his style. In metaphysics he upheld the idealist position from the empirical standpoint. Beside the Principles of Psychology , which appeared in a shorter form in 1892 (Psychology), his chief works are: The Will to Believe Human Immortality (Boston, 1898);

27. WILLIAM JAMES 1842-1910
William James 18421910. 1842 Born in New York City, January 11, theson of Henry James, an unorthodox mystic. The life of the James
http://web.carroll.edu/msmillie/philocontempo/Jamesbio.html
WILLIAM JAMES 1842-1910 Born in New York City, January 11, the son of Henry James, an unorthodox mystic. The life of the James family was "creative anarchy," moving often, wandering back and forth across the Atlantic, and entertaining the intellectual figures of the day such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Washington Irving, and Oliver Wendell Holmes. 1852-1860 Attends school in New York, private tutors in England and France, school and private tutors in Switerland and Germany. 1860 Studies painting with W. M. Hunt, Newport, R.I. 1861 Enters Lawrence Scientific School, Harvard University, a chemistry major. 1864 Enters Harvard Medical School. 1865-1866 Joins the Agassiz expedition to Brazil. 1869 Receives his MD from Harvard. A period of ill-health and recovery follows. 1872 Appointed instructor in anatomy and physiology at Harvard. 1875 Begins teaching psychology at Harvard. 1876 Assistant professor of physiology. 1878 Marries Alice Howe Gibbens in Boston, July 20. They had five children. Begins writing treatise on psychology. 1879 Begins teaching philosophy; made assistant professor of philosophy in 1880, professor in 1885 (!)

28. WILLIAM JAMES 1842-1910
William James PHILOSOPHY For James, the individual's personal viewpoint and attitudeare of major importance in philosophy—philosophy was a matter of
http://web.carroll.edu/msmillie/philocontempo/Jamesphilo.html
WILLIAM JAMES
PHILOSOPHY

PRAGMATISM AND PHILOSOPHY Like Peirce, pragmatism is a method, specifically for solving those problems that interfere with "feeling at home in the universe." [Peirce would call this "genuine doubt."] Abstract philosophy wasn’t relevant or immediate, it didn’t deal with "living issues." "The whole function of philosophy ought to be to find out what definite difference it will make to you and me, at definite instants of our life, if this world-formula or that world-formula be the true one." There is a moral undertone here: People are struggling with their lives, they have almost a right to ask philosophers: "What difference does the theory of forms make to me, now ? How is my life different if a tree falling in the forest does or does not make a sound? What practical difference does it make to me if the mind or the body are two different substances?" James went beyond a "mere" theory of meaning, using pragmatism to present a moral theory and even to make a case for religious belief. As a method, James saw pragmatism using both empirical and rational criteria. The accompanying "temperaments" of rationalism or empiricism alone do little satisfy the philosophical needs of the

29. William James.Com The PK Man, More Than A Bookstore
William James, 18421910. Links to information about William James A Viewof William James William James (1842 - 1910) William James Site.
http://www.williamjames.com/
In psychology, physiology, and medicine, wherever a debate between the mystics and the scientifics has been once for all decided, it is the mystics who have usually proved to be right about the facts, while the scientifics had the better of it in respect to the theories. William James, 1842-1910 William James Bookstore
INQUIRY INTO THE NATURE AND POWER OF HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS

This bookstore is dedicated to the pioneering spirit of America 's first and greatest psychologist, William James. Here you will find a great selection of books available in psychical research, parapsychology, human potential, consciousness research, transpersonal psychology, religious psychology, metaphysics and related areas of philosophy, psychology, health, science, business and spiritual culture. Click here to see some of the classic books in the field of consciousness exploration. Click here for a list of important, contemporary pioneers of consciousness research and practice. Includes links to photos, audio clips, interviews with authors and available books. Click here for information on our featured, new book

30. WILLIAM JAMES (1842-1910)
Functionalism. Week 10. William James (18421910). The psychological popeof the New World . James. In 1900 ranked America's foremost psychologist.
http://www.umpi.maine.edu/~sheppard/475/09Hergen.html
Functionalism Week 10 WILLIAM JAMES (1842-1910) "The psychological pope of the New World" James In 1900 ranked America's foremost psychologist "[the] only philosopher in danger of becoming an American icon" (Lears, 1987) Who was he? Born in New York City-grandson of a Scotch-Irish immigrant
    Grandfather arrived penniless, but through hard work and shrewd investment became 2nd richest man in New York State
Henry James, Senior Swedenborgian minister "the best talker in America" James’s Childhood in wealthy/cultivated Irish-American family; "transatlantic infancy" Fluent in French at 14 Fluent in German at 18 Education Considered art as profession entered Lawrence Scientific School at Harvard Study in Brazil joined Agassiz expedition study of plants and fishes William's career Taught at Harvard
    physiology psychology philosophy
Brilliant, vivid lecturer Original Thinker, Relation between mind and body Role of emotion in body Nature of consciousness Importance of will Clear, vivid language
    Habit as "the enormous fly-wheel of society, its most precious conservative agent."

31. The Political Graveyard: Politicians Who Died In 1910
William W. Dixon (18381910); Jonathan P. Dolliver (1858-1910); William FranklinDraper (1842-1910); James F. Epes (1842-1910); William Everett (1839-1910); Wallace
http://politicalgraveyard.com/chrono/died-1910.html
Questions? Return to The Political Graveyard main page
Politicians Who Died in 1910
Arranged By Name: Arranged By Date (where known):

32. The Political Graveyard: Index To Politicians: Heebner To Hefron
Hefferman, William J. of Brooklyn, Kings County, NY Heflin, Thomas See James ThomasHeflin; Hefner, Bill See Hefron, David J. (18421910) Born in Jennings County
http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/heebner-hefron.html
Questions? Return to The Political Graveyard main page
Index to Politicians: Heebner to Hefron

33. William James (1842-1910)
First Previous Next Last Index. Slide 14 od 21.
http://www.human.pefri.hr/~mlat/uvodp/korijeni/sld014.htm

34. William James Home
William James (18421910). WWW Links. Emory University Education WilliamJames. William James. William James (1842-1910). BACK TO BIOGRAPHIES.
http://www.redeemer.on.ca/~psychist/behavioral_psych/James/James.htm
William James (1842-1910)
Behaviourism home Biographies Timeline/Key Issues and Events Worldview Commitments ... Related Links William James was born in New York City on January 11, 1842, to an affluent, cosmopolitan, and deeply religious family. His father Henry dabbled in theology, doted on his five children, was well connected to literary and philosophical luminaries of the day, and often took the family for extended stays in Europe. Henry was a devoted father and sought to provide his children with the sort of education that might enable them some day to outdistance their countrymen both in scholarship and in breadth of knowledge. To do this, he enrolled them in fine schools, obtained for them gifted tutors, and saw to it that they frequented museums, attended lectures, and the theatre with regularity. William and two of his siblings would give fruit to their father's liberal educational efforts. At the age of twenty-seven, William James completed medical school. After graduation, James did not practice because of his poor health. He spent his time studying psychology and was troubled by the differences between his scientific views of the mind and the world and his father's mystical and spiritual views. In 1870, he had an abrupt emotional crisis. In 1872, nearing thirty, Harvard's president, Charles Eliot, a neighbour, invited him to teach physiology at Harvard. James accepted, and remained there for thirty-five years. His acceptance signalled the start of a prestigious career. James became a gifted teacher, a skilled orator, and a monumental thinker and writer. It signalled the renewal of his spirit. His students described him as a rigorous instructor, a lively and humorous lecturer, and a caring soul mate.

35. MITECS: James, William
William James (18421910) was born in New York City into a cultivated, liberal,financially comfortable and deeply religious middle-class family.
http://cognet.mit.edu/MITECS/Articles/lyons/
James, William
William James (1842-1910) was born in New York City into a cultivated, liberal, financially comfortable and deeply religious middle-class family. It was also a very literary family. His father wrote theological works, his brother Henry became famous as a novelist, and his sister Alice acquired a literary reputation on the posthumous publication of her diaries. As his parents took to traveling extensively in Europe, William James was educated at home and in various parts of Europe by a succession of private tutors and through brief attendance at whatever school was at hand. After an unsuccessful attempt to become a painter in Newport, Rhode Island, James began to study comparative anatomy at the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard University. After a few years, James moved to the Harvard Medical School, graduating in medicine in 1869.
See also
Additional links
William Lyons
References
Bird, G. (1986).

36. Biografias
Translate this page James, William (1842-1910), William James, hermano del famoso escritorHenry James y profesor de medicina, filosofía y psicología
http://www.psicoactiva.com/bio/bio_9.htm

37. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > J
Rainsford), 1801?1860; James, George Wharton, 1858-1923; James, Henry,1843-1916; James, William, 1842-1910; James, William Dobein, 1764
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

38. William James
William James. James, William (18421910), American philosopher andpsychologist, who developed the philosophy of pragmatism. James
http://lyyra.kempele.fi/filosofia/james.html
William James
J ames, William (1842-1910), American philosopher and psychologist, who developed the philosophy of pragmatism. James was born in New York City on January 11, 1842. His father, Henry James, Sr. (1811-82), was a Swedenborgian theologian; one of his brothers was the great novelist Henry James. William James attended private schools in the U.S. and Europe, the Lawrence Scientific School at Harvard University, and the Harvard Medical School, from which he received a degree in 1869. Before finishing his medical studies, he went on an exploring expedition in Brazil with the Swiss-American naturalist Louis Agassiz and also studied physiology in Germany. After three years of retirement due to illness, James became an instructor in physiology at Harvard in 1872. After 1880 he taught psychology and philosophy at Harvard; he left Harvard in 1907 and gave highly successful lectures at Columbia University and the University of Oxford. James died in Chocorua, New Hampshire, on August 26, 1910.
Psychology
James's first book, the monumental Principles of Psychology (1890), established him as one of the most influential thinkers of his time. The work advanced the principle of functionalism in psychology, thus removing psychology from its traditional place as a branch of philosophy and establishing it among the laboratory sciences based on experimental method.

39. Boeken Van En Over William James
Auteur William James 18421910; Joanna Petronella Wesselink-van Rossum Jaar 1907Uitgever Utrecht Leijdenroth Annotatie Boek wordt verfilmd Het beroemde
http://www.home.zonnet.nl/williamjames/Boeken.html
De Amerikaanse psycholoog en filosoof William James (1842-1910) is een van de grondleggers van het pragmatisme, een filosofische opvatting waarin de menselijke ervaring centraal staat. James verrichtte onderzoek naar emotie en geheugen en onderzocht de relatie tussen religie en karakter.
William James wijst in zijn boekje On Vital Reserves uit 1900 erop dat 'het menselijk individu... doorgaans ver binnen zijn grenzen leeft; hij bezit verschillende soorten vermogens, waarvan hij uit gewoonte echter geen gebruik maakt'. James identificeert het centrale menselijke probleem als 'een ingewortelde gewoonte van minderwaardigheid ten aanzien van het volledige zelf'. Terwijl Freud probeerde te bewijzen dat een mensveel hulpelozer is dan wij aannemen, probeerden James en zijn navolgers aan te tonen dan de mens veel sterker is dan hij zich realiseert en dat de genezing van zijn neurosen afhangt van de mate waarin hij tot dit besef komt. William James: The Varieties of Religious Experience ; a study in human nature (1902), edited with an Introduction of Martin E. Marty, Harmondsworth, 1982 William James: Varianten van religieuze beleving , een onderzoek naar de menselijke aard, Zeist/Arnhem/Antwerpen 1963 William James: Selected Writings ; introduction by Robert Coles, Incuded What Pragmatism means and The Varieties of Religious Experience, New York 1997

40. Selected Twentieth Century Works: J
23.8 cm. James, William, 18421910. James, William, 1842-1910. The will tobelieve, and other essays in popular philosophy, by William James.
http://www.thebakken.org/library/books/20j.htm
Books and Manuscripts
Selected Twentieth Century Works: J
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Jacobson, Edmund, Progressive relaxation: a physiological and clinical investigation of muscular states and their significance in psychology and medical practice, by Edmund Jacobson. 2d ed. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, c1938. xvii, 493, [1] p. illus., diagrs. 23.2 cm. Provenance: Owner signature, "P. A. Anderson, 1948". Jacoby, George W Electricity in medicine; a practical exposition of the methods and use of electricity in the treatment of disease, comprising electrophysics, apparatus, electrophysiology and electropathology, electrodiagnosis and electroprognosis, general electrotherapeutics and special electrotherapeutics, by George W. Jacoby and J. Ralph Jacoby. Philadelphia, P. Blakiston's Son, c1919. xxii, 612 p. illus., diagrs. 23.8 cm. James, William, A pluralistic universe; Hibbert lectures at Manchester College on the present situation in philosophy, by William James. New impression. New York, Longmans, Green, 1928, c1909. v, [1], 404, [1] p. 21.7 cm.

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