Open Directory - Society: History: By Topic: Science: Psychology
See also: - Many full texts available online. - Official site of the APA. Includes contact information for committee members, journal, list of fellows, and selected links. - Searchable by date or keyword. - Affirmation therapy and the healing of the whole person - body, mind, and spirit. The works of the late Dr. Conrad Baars and Dr. Anna Terruwe. - Pioneered moral treatment of insane in Alabama. 1834-1892 - Concerned with the history of psychology and related studies. Includes meetings and list of officers. - Milestones in the treatment of the mentally ill, history of psychological treatments and institutions, and notable persons and publications, from the Middle Ages through 1997. - Compares the development of the field of clinical psychology in South Africa to the rest of the world, as well as the detachment from political and race relations problems from 1994 to 2004. Page also describes the development of the field in general over the years. - ESHHS brings together individuals interested in the history of psychology, anthropology, sociology, economy, and other human sciences. - An interest group within the History of Science Society, which brings together historians of economics, anthropology, psychology, sociology, and medicine. - Information on the life and works of this important pioneer of experimental/physiological psychology. - Features announcements, inquiries and discussion on access to historical sources and their use and interpretation. - The History and Theory of Psychology eprints archive. Gives access to online versions of articles in these areas. Registered users may also deposit appropriate material. - Brief biographies of the all time great psychologists and their work, such as background information about Freud, Pavlov, Maslow, and Allport. - Bulletin board for posting questions and answers about these topics. - A timeline of the development of our understanding of the brain, from 4000 B.C. to 2000 A.D. - Profiles and works of researchers and observers who made important contributions to the field of comparative animal cognition. - Dedicated to promoting interest, education and research in the history of the neurosciences. - Discusses the psychologist's childhood, university days, work at Johns Hopkins, infidelity scandal, advertising job, farm life and later acknowledgments. Includes copies of original photos of people and manuscripts. - Home page of the longest established print journal in the field, with tables of contents back to 1996. - A detailed timeline running from 4000 B.C. to 1997, plus a list of useful reference works and links. - By Robert H. Wozniak, Bryn Mawr College. - Psychological lore and instrumentation with downloadable illustrations showing collections of early psychological laboratory research apparatus. - Based at the UCLA Brain Research Institute. Identifies, collects, and preserves primary source material of twentieth century American neuroscience. - A gateway to events, associations, opportunities, and Internet resources for history and historians of basic, clinical, and behavioral neuroscience. - Information about this Catholic disciple of Freud and Adler who made his own distinctive contributions to psychodynamic theory. Also provides information on related thinkers Anna Terruwe, Conrad W. Baars, and Louis Jugnet. - Condensed edition of Descartes' 'Meditatione', with study notes and glossary - Etext written by a professor in the Psychology Department at Shippensburg University, PA. - From the University of Dayton. Resources on many figures in the history of psychology, and history of psychology trivia. - An annotated bibliography of the models of human cognition of Berkeley, Burton, Hobbes, and Locke. - A resource for the history of the human sciences (especially psychology) and the "experimentalization of life," archiving historical texts and images, as well as new essays. Site is in English, but much of the archived material is in German. - Information on and readings from pioneering American psychologist William James.