World War. Miscellaneous. 1916-12-29
Rating |
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Original index title |
World War. Miscellaneous. 1916-12-29 |
Newspaper |
New York times ; 1916-12-29 |
Title |
Sees in psychology means to win war Dr. Hall credits man study with German and French initial superiority . Whole armies of madmen Scientist describes mind changes that bring primal instincts back to soldiers. |
Description |
How applied psychology was responsible for the initial superiority of the German and French troops over the English and Russian, and many other phases of the European war, including the emotions attending the development of the civilian into a solider and mental changes experienced by that soldier upon leaving home, in the training camp, and in the trenches under fire, were discusses in a paper presented to the American Psychological association at Columbia University yesterday in connection with the meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, by Dr. G. Stanley Hall, President of Clark University, and one of the most widely known psychologists of the country. |
Subject Keys |
Northwest history; World War 1; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Dr. G. Stanley Hall; psychology; German soldiers; French soldiers; psychological benefits; psychology of war; primal instincts ; |
Date.Original |
1916-12-29 |
Resource Identifier |
ww2-815 |
Subjects |
Northwest, Pacific -- History -- 20th century World War, 1914-1918. |
Resource Type |
Text |
Genre |
Clippings |
Format.Use |
Image/JPEG2000 |
Source |
World War box 2 |
Language |
English |
Rights |
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0 |
Rights Notes |
Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information. |
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