Jonathan Schull,
"William and the World Wide Web"

Schull, a biological psychologist, has perceived something in William James which has gone unnoticed -- or at least largely unappreciated -- before, namely, the extent to which James's thought is based in his own special way of construing the import of natural selection for the theory of mind and self and -- his special focus in this paper -- the possible significance of this for understanding the potentialities of the world wide web. There is another paper [via the Wayback Machine] available on the web which develops the theoretical basis more extensively, with much pertinent quotation from the Principles of Psychology and other relevant works of James.

GO TO SCHULL'S PAPER
(via the Wayback Machine)
or
Go back to LINKS page


Queries, comments, and suggestions to
http://www.cspeirce.com/menu/links/schull.htm
Page last modified in content August 26, 1998
Modified by BU June 27, 2011, last on July 2, 2011

Top of the Page