Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology

The Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology is an American learned society. It promotes philosophy and psychology in the Southern United States.

Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology
Formation1904 (1904)
Websitesouthernsociety.org

History

The Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology was co-founded by 36 charter members in 1904.[1][2] James Mark Baldwin served as its first president from 1904 to 1908.[1] Its second president in 1909 was J. Macbride Sterrett, followed by its third president, Albert Lefevre, in 1910.[1] Its fourth president in 1911 was Edward Franklin Buchner, followed by its fifth president in 1912, Shepherd Ivory Franz, and its sixth president, Robert Morris Ogden, in 1913.[1] They were followed by the seventh President, H. J. Pearce, in 1914, and the eighth President, John B. Watson, in 1915.[1]

gollark: Yes, they are very good.
gollark: I used mods a bit back in ye olden jar-opening days. I think there were also a bunch of competing modloaders around.
gollark: It was also very annoying, but I think it's more of a joke/nostalgia thing.
gollark: Also, 1-based indexing is evil, yes.
gollark: Though I dislike how Python has so many weird syntax special cases and features; Lua's is comparatively simple.

References

  1. "Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology". Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  2. Scientific and Technical Societies of the United States, National Academies, 1968, volume 8, p. 175



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