His 1884 theory of emotions was flawed but highly influential, until its demise at the hands of one of his former students, Walter Bradford Cannon, in 1927. James' magnum opus, The Principles of Psychology (1890), greatly influenced the subsequent development of the field, broached ...
James' notion of "pure experience" provides a philosophical basis for the experience recorder and reproducer (ERR) that is the core of the informational theory of mind and a solution to the "hard" problem of consciousness. The Consciousness of Self ...
s self-esteem but to the public and to his own standards of judgment, which are usually more exacting than the public’s. Justification for his role rests on thepremisethat literary works are not in fact self-explanatory. A critic is socially useful to the extent that society wants, and ...
Theory of value On value, Petty continued the debate begun byAristotle, and chose to develop an input-based theory of value: "all things ought to be valued by two natural Denominations, which is Land and Labour" (p. 44). Both of these would be prime sources oftaxable income. LikeRichard...
The review process is rigorous and recipients are selected by a campuswide committee, a true testament to the esteem in which you are held by your colleagues.” Professor Byrnes was recognized for an academic career pioneering online legal education while authoring a dozen legal treatises, 50 ...
but still be precious in the eyes and in the hands of God. I would gladly trade all the praise and esteem this world has to give just to hear Jesus say about me, “Behold, a man indeed, in whom is no deceit!” By God’s grace, no matter what our positions or worldly titles may...
but still be precious in the eyes and in the hands of God. I would gladly trade all the praise and esteem this world has to give just to hear Jesus say about me, “Behold, a man indeed, in whom is no deceit!” By God’s grace, no matter what our positions or worldly titles may...
however sincerely held. Yet Cowper’s ‘integrity, moderation, candour, humanity [and] disinterestedness gained him the esteem of all good men’. Certainly Arthur Maynwaring* thought he had ‘an integrity very rare in his corrupt age’, and contemporaries described him as a man of learn...
The Faulkner scholar James G. Watson elucidated the biographical and fictional intricacies with the concepts "self-presentation" and "performance": "Self-presentation and performance are manifested in Faulkner's life in his regularly putting himself forward in the guises and disguises of a moment—...