Walter Bowers Pillsbury
Walter Bowers Pillsbury (July 21, 1872 – June 3, 1960) was an American psychologist, born at Burlington, Iowa. He studied for two years at Penn College, Oskaloosa, Iowa, graduated from the University of Nebraska (1892), and took his Ph.D. at Cornell University (1896). Pillsbury taught at the University of Michigan after 1897, in 1905–1910 as junior professor of philosophy and director of the psychological laboratory and afterward as professor of psychology. In 1908–1909 he lectured at Columbia. He served as president of the Western Philosophical Association in 1907 and of the American Psychological Association in 1910. Besides contributing to the American Journal of Psychology and to The Philosophical Review, he translated, with Edward B. Titchener, Külpe's Introduction to Philosophy (1897) and published:
- L'Attention (1906; English edition, as Attention, 1908; Spanish translation, 1910)
- The Psychology of Reasoning (1910)
- The Essentials of Psychology (1911)
- A History of Psychology (1929)
Sources
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Colby, F.; Williams, T., eds. (1916). "Pillsbury, Walter Bowers". New International Encyclopedia. 18 (2nd ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead. p. 629.
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Educational offices | ||
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Preceded by Charles Hubbard Judd |
19th President of the American Psychological Association 1910-11 |
Succeeded by Carl Emil Seashore |