
by Dewey, John
John Dewey's Psychology introduces the study of mind through the lens of experience, habit, learning, and practical inquiry. Rather than treating mental life as an abstract machine, Dewey connects perception, attention, emotion, and action to the ways people adapt, learn, and make sense of the world around them.
Readers interested in psychology, education, philosophy, and the history of American thought will find this book useful as an early statement of Dewey's approach. It suits students who want context for pragmatism and progressive education, as well as general readers curious about how psychological ideas entered classroom and social theory. The appeal lies in its practical intelligence and its focus on mind as active, situated, and developmental.
No posts about this book yet. Be the first in the app!