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  2. Harvey A. Carr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvey_A._Carr

    Functionalism and the University of Chicago's psychology program grew tremendously under Carr's influence. He went from his position as assistant professor all the way to chairman of the department, where he held his position from 1926 to 1938. During these years, he supervised graduate students with theses in various areas of psychology.

  3. Horace Mann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horace_Mann

    Horace Mann was born in Franklin, Massachusetts. [4] His father was a farmer without much money. Mann was the great-grandson of Samuel Man. [5]From age ten to age twenty, he had no more than six weeks' schooling during any year, [6] but he made use of the Franklin Public Library, the first public library in America.

  4. Functional psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_psychology

    Structural psychology was concerned with mental contents while functionalism is concerned with mental operations. It is argued that structural psychology emanated from philosophy and remained closely allied to it, while functionalism has a close ally in biology. [4] William James is considered to be the founder of functional psychology. But he ...

  5. Francis Wayland Parker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Wayland_Parker

    Colonel Parker founded the Francis W. Parker School in 1901, with the support of benefactor Anita McCormick Blaine. Parker was born in Bedford, New Hampshire in Hillsborough County. He was educated in the public schools and began his career as a village teacher in New Hampshire at age 16.

  6. James Rowland Angell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Rowland_Angell

    Angell was born on May 8, 1869, in Burlington, Vermont. He was born into one of the stellar academic families in American history. A sixth-generation descendant of Thomas Angell who settled Providence, Rhode Island, James's father, James Burrill Angell, was the president of the University of Vermont and thence president of the University of Michigan.

  7. Edward Thorndike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Thorndike

    Thorndike, born in Williamsburg, Massachusetts was the son of Edward R and Abbie B Thorndike, a Methodist minister in Lowell, Massachusetts. [4] Thorndike graduated from The Roxbury Latin School (1891), in West Roxbury, Massachusetts and from Wesleyan University (B.S. 1895). He earned an M.A. at Harvard University in 1897. His two brothers ...

  8. Max Gluckman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Gluckman

    Gluckman combined the British school of structural-functionalism with a Marxist focus on inequality and oppression, creating a critique of colonialism from within structuralism. In his research on Zululand in South Africa, he argued that the African and European communities formed a single social system, one whose schism into two racial groups ...

  9. Charles Sanders Peirce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Sanders_Peirce

    Peirce was born at 3 Phillips Place in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was the son of Sarah Hunt Mills and Benjamin Peirce , himself a professor of mathematics and astronomy at Harvard University . [ b ] At age 12, Charles read his older brother's copy of Richard Whately 's Elements of Logic , then the leading English-language text on the subject.