David L. Krantz is Professor of Psychology at Lake Forest College. A Fromer Fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in Behavioral Science, be has published articles and books in the social psychology of science and topic related to power, knowing, and life's meaning. He recently completed a book tentatively titled journays and Destinations: Searching for life's Meanings while a Visiting Professor at the University of Ghent, Belgium
What makes you better than yesterday? If it is the last day of your life, what will you do to make i...
Robert J. Sternberg, IBM Professor of Psychology and Education, Yale University\u27s Psychology Depa...
The question about what is science, and how it should be done, has been a philosophical matter for c...
David L. Krantz is Professor of Psychology at Lake Forest College. A Fromer Fellow at the Center for...
During the fall of 2012, my first semester in the newly developed doctoral program Psychology: Consc...
Most psychologists today come across the name of William Stern only in historical footnotes, and tha...
titled Scientific cognition and cultural evolution: theoretical tools for integrating social and cog...
This article discusses how it is possible to think with the world in educational research. How can t...
[Extract] In early 1974, I had my first meeting with my future social psychology supervisor at the U...
I propose to take a more proximate and micro-contextual approach to the history of cultural psycholo...
American sociologist Howard Becker stands out for his rejection of theory and his attachment to eth...
On March 26, 2019, at the 12th Geneva Conference on Personality-centered Medicine, I had the opportu...
This is an interview with Michael Wertheimer, professor emeritus at the University of Colorado at Bo...
Today’s approaches to the study of the human mind are divided into seemingly opposed camps. On one s...
When one looks at the intellectual landscape of the modern university, at the scholarly and scientif...
What makes you better than yesterday? If it is the last day of your life, what will you do to make i...
Robert J. Sternberg, IBM Professor of Psychology and Education, Yale University\u27s Psychology Depa...
The question about what is science, and how it should be done, has been a philosophical matter for c...
David L. Krantz is Professor of Psychology at Lake Forest College. A Fromer Fellow at the Center for...
During the fall of 2012, my first semester in the newly developed doctoral program Psychology: Consc...
Most psychologists today come across the name of William Stern only in historical footnotes, and tha...
titled Scientific cognition and cultural evolution: theoretical tools for integrating social and cog...
This article discusses how it is possible to think with the world in educational research. How can t...
[Extract] In early 1974, I had my first meeting with my future social psychology supervisor at the U...
I propose to take a more proximate and micro-contextual approach to the history of cultural psycholo...
American sociologist Howard Becker stands out for his rejection of theory and his attachment to eth...
On March 26, 2019, at the 12th Geneva Conference on Personality-centered Medicine, I had the opportu...
This is an interview with Michael Wertheimer, professor emeritus at the University of Colorado at Bo...
Today’s approaches to the study of the human mind are divided into seemingly opposed camps. On one s...
When one looks at the intellectual landscape of the modern university, at the scholarly and scientif...
What makes you better than yesterday? If it is the last day of your life, what will you do to make i...
Robert J. Sternberg, IBM Professor of Psychology and Education, Yale University\u27s Psychology Depa...
The question about what is science, and how it should be done, has been a philosophical matter for c...