Doin Broché 1986 In-8 (18 x 24 cm), broché, 433 pages ; pliures au premier plat, frottements aux coiffes, mors et bords des plats, rousseurs aux contreplats, par ailleurs intérieur frais, assez bon état général. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
Hardy-Baylé Marie-Christine Hardy Patrick
Reference : 176890
(2005)
ISBN : 2738116388
Odile Jacob 2005 17x11x1cm. 2005. Poche. 200 pages. envois en suivi pour la france et l'etranger Bon Etat
Toulouse, Privat, Regards, 1978. In-8 (210x135mm) broché, 286 p. Très bon état général.
Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1987, un volume in 8 relié en pleine toile éditeur, jacquette conservée, 13pp., 335pp., figures dans le texte
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- The pre-1860 legacy - Language localization and the problem of asymmetry - Left-right polarities of mind and brain - The post-BROCA case for "duality of mind" : basic issues and themes - Left-brain versus right-brain selves and the problem of the corpus callosum - The "experimental evidence" : metalloscopy and hemi-hypnosis - The HUGHLILNGS JACKSON perspective - FREUD and JACKSON's double brain - The fate of the double brain**9027/G3
P;, Ducauroy, 1802, 2 volumes in 8 reliés en demi-basane rouge, dos ornés de filets dorés (reliures de l'époque), (quelques rousseurs), T.1 : 10pp., 402pp., T.2 : (2), 430pp.
---- EDITION ORIGINALE de cette traduction de l'ouvrage de HARTLEY par l'Abbé SICARD, successeur de l'ABBE DE L'EPEE à la tête de l'institut des sourds-muets ---- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- "THE FOUNTAINHEAD OF SOMME THE MOST IMPORTANT IDEAS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL, BIOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL THOUTHT". (DSB) ---- "HARTELY wrote one important work, Observations on man, his frame, his duty and his expectation... The first volume of Observations is a tour de force which considers every significant topic in neurophysiology and human and comparative psychology, explained in terms of the development of complex ideas and habits from simple sensations and their repeated juxtapositions in experience. Mental associations were paralleled by vibrations of particles in the nervous system that persisted in the form of smaller 'vibratuncles' which provided the physical basis for memory... The significance of Hartley's work did not lie in any new empirical findings but in a set of assumptions and a framework for approaching the phenomena of life and mind. In the century following the publication of Observations, the work came to be seen as the fountainhead of some of the most important ideas in biological, psychological and social thought. Viewed in a narrow perspective, it was the first published work in english to use the term "psychology" in its modern sense. Hartley's principles provides the conceptual framework for the associationist tradition in modern psychology, including learning theory and psychoanalysis. His speculations about the physiology of the nervous system laid the foundations for the dominant sensory-motor interpretation of neuro-physiology and the experimental localization of functions in the cerebral cortex. It is misleading, however, to separate the psycholo-physiological from the more general aspects of Hartley's influence. His book is the central document in the history of attempts to apply the categories of science to the study of man and society... Considered conceptually, Hartley's was the first systematic elaboration of the explanatory principle that came to play an analogous role in the biological and human sciences to the concept of gravity or attraction in the physicochemical sciences. His unification of sensation, motion, association, and vibrations in a coherent mechanistic theory of experience and behavior provided the grounds for the secularization of the concepts of adaptation and utility... Erasmus Darwin used Hartley's mechanisms as the basis for his theory of evolution and for his system of medical classification in Zoonomia... Müller drew on Hartley's motor theory of learning, which was by then gaining support from findings in experimental neurophysiology. A. Bain integrated Hartley's sensory-motor physiology with the mainstream of the english tradition of associationist psychology. Théories of evolution also drew on Hartleian mechanisms. Thus, Spencer's evolutionary theory extended associationist learning theory from the experience of the individual to that of the race. J. Hughlings Jackson applied these conceptions to the physiology and pathology of the brain, while David Ferrier applied them to the experimental localization of cerebral functions...". (DSB VI p. 139) ---- Zilboorg pp. 192, 282, 397 - Norman N° 1003 english ed. - Hunter & Macalpine pp. 379/382 - MacHenry**2584/F2
Reims, Delaistre, 1755, 2 volumes in 8 reliés en plein veau moucheté, dos orné de fers dorés, tranches rouges, (reliures de l'époque), (une coiffe légèrement émoussée, petit travail de vers à la partie inférieure du dos au tome 1), T.1 : 36pp., 502pp., T.2 : 8pp., (1), 474pp., (6)
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- BON EXEMPLAIRE ---- "THE FOUNTAINHEAD OF SOMME THE MOST IMPORTANT IDEAS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL, BIOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL THOUTHT". (DSB) ---- "HARTELY wrote one important work, Observations on man, his frame, his duty and his expectation... The first volume of Observations is a tour de force which considers every significant topic in neurophysiology and human and comparative psychology, explained in terms of the development of complex ideas and habits from simple sensations and their repeated juxtapositions in experience. Mental associations were paralleled by vibrations of particles in the nervous system that persisted in the form of smaller 'vibratuncles' which provided the physical basis for memory... The significance of Hartley's work did not lie in any new empirical findings but in a set of assumptions and a framework for approaching the phenomena of life and mind. In the century following the publication of Observations, the work came to be seen as the fountainhead of some of the most important ideas in biological, psychological and social thought. Viewed in a narrow perspective, it was the first published work in english to use the term "psychology" in its modern sense. Hartley's principles provides the conceptual framework for the associationist tradition in modern psychology, including learning theory and psychoanalysis. His speculations about the physiology of the nervous system laid the foundations for the dominant sensory-motor interpretation of neuro-physiology and the experimental localization of functions in the cerebral cortex. It is misleading, however, to separate the psycholo-physiological from the more general aspects of Hartley's influence. His book is the central document in the history of attempts to apply the categories of science to the study of man and society... Considered conceptually, Hartley's was the first systematic elaboration of the explanatory principle that came to play an analogous role in the biological and human sciences to the concept of gravity or attraction in the physicochemical sciences. His unification of sensation, motion, association, and vibrations in a coherent mechanistic theory of experience and behavior provided the grounds for the secularization of the concepts of adaptation and utility... Erasmus Darwin used Hartley's mechanisms as the basis for his theory of evolution and for his system of medical classification in Zoonomia... Müller drew on Hartley's motor theory of learning, which was by then gaining support from findings in experimental neurophysiology. A. Bain integrated Hartley's sensory-motor physiology with the mainstream of the english tradition of associationist psychology. Théories of evolution also drew on Hartleian mechanisms. Thus, Spencer's evolutionary theory extended associationist learning theory from the experience of the individual to that of the race. J. Hughlings Jackson applied these conceptions to the physiology and pathology of the brain, while David Ferrier applied them to the experimental localization of cerebral functions...". (DSB VI p. 139) ---- Zilboorg pp. 192, 282, 397 - Norman N° 1003 english ed. - Hunter & Macalpine pp. 379/382 - MacHenry**2583/ARM2D-8125/ARB5-5561/ARB4
Erlangen, Ferdinand Enke 1869, 240x155mm, VII- 764Seiten, Basil-Halbledereinband. Plats papier marbré. Etiquette de titre en lettres dorées au dos. Filets or. Dos et charnière légèrement frottés. Intérieur propre. Schönes Exemplar.
La Découverte 2002 14x22x1cm. 2002. Broché. 128 pages. Bon Etat intérieur propre
Ed de l'eclat 1987 12x18x0cm. 1987. Broché. 122 pages. Bon Etat intérieur propre
Gefen, 1994, 328 pp., cartonné, coins abîmés, coiffes légèrement enfoncées, nom et adreese en première page, état correct.
Phone number : 0033 (0)1 42 23 30 39
Couverture souple. Broché. 248 pages.
Livre. Editions Le cavalier bleu (Collection : Idées reçues), 2013.
CIBA. 1985. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos très frotté, Intérieur acceptable. 420 pages augmentées de quelques planches en noir et blanc.. . . . Classification Dewey : 619.89-Psychiatrie
3 PHOTOS DISPONIBLES. SOMMAIRE : ANTOINE ROYER-COLLARD / ETIENNE PARISET / JEAN ESQUIROL / FELIX VOISIN / ULYSSE TRELAT / FRANCOIS LEURET / LOUIS CALMEIL / ANTOINE BAYLE / ACHILLE FOVILLE / CASIMIR PINEL / ETC. Classification Dewey : 619.89-Psychiatrie
CIBA. 1985. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 420 pages - nombreux facs similés .. . . . Classification Dewey : 619.89-Psychiatrie
Avant propos du Professeur Yves Pélicier. Classification Dewey : 619.89-Psychiatrie
Mercure de france 1932 in8. 1932. Broché. 240 pages. Bon Etat
Masson et Cie éditeurs 1938 827p illustrées format 24,5x17cm
Reliure avec traces d'usure, intérieur avec tampons au début et chiffre sur la page de titre sinon propre et en bon état
EDITIONS BEYAERT. 1936. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos fané, Intérieur frais. 210 pages. Dos plié. Mors légèrement fendus au niveau des coiffes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 619.89-Psychiatrie
Traduit du néerlandais par P. Ghyssaert, recteur du sanatorium Elisabeth à Syssele. Classification Dewey : 619.89-Psychiatrie
Un volume de 166 pages, format 155 x 230 mm, illustré, broché couverture couleurs, publié en 1981, Editions Médicales Fournier Frères, bon état
Phone number : 04 74 33 45 19
Un volume de 88 pages, format 155 x 230 mm, illustré, broché couverture couleurs, publié en 1982, Editions Médicales Fournier Frères, bon état
Phone number : 04 74 33 45 19