Thanks, Rainer, for the reference, I'll look it up.
Incidentally, if anyone's interested in which the other twelve influential
theorists are... here's the list I chose! Most, but not all, are somewhat
predictable I guess...
Vigo (ratherneglected, except by our Irish colleagues)
Wundt
James
Brentano
Freud
Watson
Sullivan (also somewhat neglected, especially, surprisingly, by the social
constructivists!)
Hull
Milosz (Who he? A literatus rather than a psychologist, Nobel prize-winner
for "The Captive Mind", which described the intellectual and emotional
response to Stalinist totalitarianism: how does one _act_ on one's
constructions, when their societal interpretation (which provides one form
of validation) is at variance with the personal integrity involved in one's
free elaboration of personal options)
Pribram (who also stands for Hebb, as it were)
Skinner
Perls
kind regards,
Devi Jankowicz
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