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  1.  11
    William James on Consciousness Beyond the Margin.Eugene Taylor - 2011 - Princeton University Press.
    At the turn of the twentieth century, William James was America's most widely read philosopher. In addition to being one of the founders of pragmatism, however, he was also a leading psychologist and author of the seminal work, The Principles of Psychology. While scholars argue that James withdrew from the study of psychology after 1890, Eugene Taylor demonstrates convincingly that James remained preeminently a psychologist until his death in 1910.Taylor details James's contributions to experimental psychopathology, psychical research, and the psychology (...)
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  2. (1 other version)Pure experience: The response to William James.Eugene Taylor & Robert H. Wozniak - 1996 - In Eugene Taylor & Robert H. Wozniak, Pure experience: The response to William James. Bristol: Thoemmes. pp. 338-341.
    The radical empiricism of William James was first formally presented in his seminal papers of 1904, 'Does Consciousness Exist?' and 'A World of Pure Experience'. In James's view, pure experience was to serve as the source for psychology's primary data and radical empiricism was to launch an effective critique of experimentalism in psychology, a critique from which the problem of experimentalism within science could be addressed more broadly. This collection of papers presents James's formal statements on radical empiricism and a (...)
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  3.  72
    William James on a phenomenological psychology of immediate experience: The true foundation for a science of consciousness?Eugene Taylor - 2010 - History of the Human Sciences 23 (3):119-130.
    Throughout his career, William James defended personal consciousness. In his Principles of Psychology (1890), he declared that psychology is the scientific study of states of consciousness as such and that he intended to presume from the outset that the thinker was the thought. But while writing it, he had been investigating a dynamic psychology of the subconscious, which found a major place in his Gifford Lectures, published as The Varieties of Religious Experience in 1902. This was the clearest statement James (...)
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  4. Radical empiricism and the new science of consciousness.Eugene Taylor - 1995 - History of the Human Sciences 8 (1):47-60.
  5.  27
    William James and depth psychology.Eugene Taylor - 2002 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (9-10):9-10.
    William James is best known for his Pragmatism , his Varieties of Religious Experience , and his Principles of Psychology , but little is known about his excursions into depth psychology, meaning a dynamic psychology of inner experience, despite the fact that he claimed in The Varieties that the subconscious was the primary avenue through which ultimately transforming mystical experiences occur. A survey of James's evolving conceptions of consciousness thorough the stages of his career reveals that his theories about the (...)
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  6.  30
    III jsp.Doug Anderson, James Campbell, Ellen Kappy Suckiel & Eugene Taylor - 2003 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17 (4).
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  7. A Perfect Correlation Between Mind and Brain: William James's Varieties and the Contemporary Field of Mind/Body Medicine.Eugene Taylor - 2003 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17 (1):40 - 52.
  8.  21
    A perfect correlation between mind and brain: William James's.Eugene Taylor - 2003 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17 (1).
  9.  10
    Pure experience: the response to William James.Eugene Taylor & Robert H. Wozniak (eds.) - 1996 - Bristol: Thoemmes Press.
    The Key Issues series aims to make available the contemporary responses that met important books and debates on their first appearance. These take the form of journal articles, book extracts, public letters, sermons and pamphlets which provides an insight into the historical relevance and the social and political context in which a publication or particular topic emerged. Each volume brings together some of the key responses to the works.
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  10.  29
    The Ontological Triad in James and Peirce.Eugene Taylor - 2012 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 260 (2):177-186.
    Western analytic philosophers tend to confine themselves almost exclusively to a discussion of William James’s pragmatism, when thirty years ago John McDermott determined that the core of James’s metaphysics was actually radical empiricism. James, in fact, developed a tripartite metaphysics of pragmatism, pluralism, and radical empiricism, which constituted the actualization of his philosophical legacy inherited through Henry James Sr’s Swedenborgianism and Ralph Walled Emerson’s transcendentalism, both of which he opposed, which he tempered through his contacts with Charles Sanders Pierce, Chancy (...)
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  11.  20
    William James as american Plato?Eugene Taylor - 2009 - William James Studies 4.
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  12.  48
    Who Was Frederic William Henry Myers?Eugene Taylor - 2010 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 17 (11-12):11-12.
    The scientific study of consciousness in the late 19th century, which took place in Western countries across disciplines such as neurology, physiology, neuropathology, psychology, psychiatry and philosophy, appears to have striking parallels to current crossdisciplinary developments in the neurosciences. The 19th century period, however, has received little scholarly attention from historians of medicine, psychology, or science. Historians of depth psychology have investigated the area as part of the history of psychiatry, but cleaved most closely to the versions presented by early (...)
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  13. Yoga Psychology and the Samkhya Metaphysic.Eugene Taylor & Judith G. Sugg - 2008 - In K. Ramakrishna Rao, A. C. Paranjpe & Ajit K. Dalal, Handbook of Indian psychology. New Delhi: Campridge University Press India.
     
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