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History of the Human Sciences
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The curious rise and fall of experimental psychology in Mind

Christopher D. Green

Christopher D. Green, Department of Psychology, York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada, christo{at}yorku.ca

The journal Mind is now a wholly philosophical journal. At the time of its founding, in 1876, however, its mission was rather different in character. Its aim was to discover whether scientific psychology was a truly viable enterprise and, if so, what its boundaries with philosophy, with other scientific disciplines, and with the earlier generation of discredited attempts at `scientific' studies of the mind (e.g. phrenology, mesmerism) might be. Although at first Mind published mostly philosophical pieces and literature reviews, by the mid-1880s it was publishing primary experimental research, mostly by American psychologists who as yet had few outlets of their own. For a time it was the leading journal of experimental psychology in the English-speaking world. As the international competition among scientific and scholarly journals intensified in the 1890s, however, Mind started to lose its share of experimental contributions, and with the editorial takeover of the journal of George Stout in 1892, the journal soon became one dedicated purely to philosophy.

Key Words: experimental psychology • Great Britain • Mind • 19th-century • philosophy journals

History of the Human Sciences, Vol. 22, No. 1, 37-57 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0952695108099134


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