What this chamber argues
- Psychology studies mind and behavior across subjective and experimental frames.
- It bridges introspection, measurement, learning, and interpretation.
Primary works in this chamber (12)
- Sigmund Freud — The Interpretation of Dreams (1900) — Book
- William James — The Principles of Psychology (1890) — Book
- Carl Jung — Psychology of the Unconscious (1912) — Book
- Ivan Pavlov — Conditioned Reflexes (1927 (English ed.)) — Book
- Wilhelm Wundt — Principles of Physiological Psychology (1874) — Book
- Hermann Ebbinghaus — Memory: A Contribution to Experimental Psychology (1885) — Book
- John B. Watson — Psychology from the Standpoint of a Behaviorist (1919) — Book
- Alfred Adler — The Practice and Theory of Individual Psychology (1920) — Book
- Gustav Fechner — Elemente der Psychophysik (1860) — Book
- Francis Galton — Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development (1883) — Book
- Pierre Janet — L'Automatisme Psychologique (1889) — Book
- John Dewey — Psychology (1887) — Book
Connected chambers
- Philosophy of Science — Evidence and interpretation
- Statistics — Mind ↔ data
- First Novels — The first novels are also the first sustained studies of mind: jealousy in Genji, melancholy in Quixote, isolation in Crusoe.
- First Plays — Aristotle's Poetics already reads tragedy as a study of motive — the hexagonal gallery's upward link to the science of mind.