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Kurt Koffka

Kurt Koffka (March 12, 1886 – November 22, 1941) was a German psychologist and professor. He was born and educated in Berlin, Germany; he died in Northampton, Massachusetts, from coronary thrombosis.[1][2] He was influenced by his maternal uncle, a biologist, to pursue science.[1] He had many interests including visual perception, brain damage, sound localization, developmental psychology, and experimental psychology.[1][3] He worked alongside Max Wertheimer and Wolfgang Köhler to develop Gestalt psychology.[1] Koffka had several publications including "The Growth of the Mind: An Introduction to Child Psychology" (1924)[4] and "The Principles of Gestalt Psychology" (1935)[5] which elaborated on his research.

Personal life edit

Kurt Koffka, born March 18, 1886, in Berlin, Germany, was raised by Luis Levy and Emil Koffka.[6] His mother listed herself as Protestant despite having Jewish heritage.[6] His father was a lawyer, and his younger brother, Friedrich Koffka, went on to become a judge.[6] In spite of the prevalence of law in his family, Kurt Koffka decided to pursue science as he was motivated by his maternal uncle, who was a biologist.[1]

Koffka married Mira Klein, a participant in his experimental research, in 1909, but they later divorced.[6] In 1923, he married Elisabeth Ahlgrimm who completed her PhD at Giessen, but they divorced in 1926.[7] He remarried Mira until their second divorce in 1928 when he remarried Elisabeth whom he remained married to until his death.[7] Koffka was forced to alter his lifestyle after developing a heart condition called Coronary thrombosis.[8] However, his condition did not hamper his work ethic as his lecturing and scientific projects occupied his time until he died.[1] Koffka died on November 22, 1941, in Northampton, Massachusetts, and left many of his projects unfinished.[1]

Education edit

Kurt Koffka's academic career began at the school of Wilhelmsgymnasium where he attended from 1892 to 1903.[1] In 1903, Kurt Koffka traveled to Scotland to study at the University of Edinburgh for a year.[1] His time at the University of Edinburgh was crucial as he developed a greater understanding of the English language which was a valuable tool for spreading his message in the future.[1] In 1904, he returned to Berlin where he attended the University of Berlin for three years.[1] He chose to pursue psychology as he believed the subject matter of psychology was best suited towards his interests.[1]

While studying at the University of Berlin, Koffka examined his personal colour vision in Willibald Nagel's physiological laboratory.[1]  He was interested in visual perception due to his own red-green blindness, which led him to study color vision and after-images.[9] This work culminated in Koffka's first publication in 1908 called Untersuchungen an einem protanomalen System [Studies on a protanomalous system].[1] This paper analyzed different properties of colour including contrast as well as the effect of brightness and wavelengths on colour.[1] The figure ground phenomenon was also studied.[1] Koffka completed his dissertation called Experimental-Untersuchungen zur Lehre von Rhythmus [Experimental studies on the teaching of rhythm] securing him his Doctor of Philosophy in 1908.[1] He worked with Carl Stumpf during the pursuit of his doctorate.[1]

Career edit

After receiving his doctorate in 1908, Koffka worked at the University of Würzburg as an assistant to Oswald Külpe who greatly influenced his work.[1] After Külpe left, Koffka continued to work as an assistant to Karl Marbe.[10] In 1910, Koffka became an assistant to Friedrich Schumann at the Psychological Institute in Frankfurt on Main to study the perception of motion, alongside Max Wertheimer and Wolfgang Köhler.[1] Koffka considered this period in his life significant to his scientific development.[1]

Koffka later became a professor at the University of Giessen.[11] The University of Giessen assigned Koffka the Privatdozent title in 1911 and the ausserordentlicher while working with August Messer.[6] Eighteen articles and six experimental works were completed over the twelve years that Koffka spent at Giessen.[1] Koffka spent time at Professor Sommer's Psychiatric Clinic located in Giessen in the midst of World War I.[1] They focused on subjects diagnosed with brain trauma, but focused on aphasia cases. He also studied the localization of sounds to be of aid to the army and navy.[1]

In 1924, Koffka moved to the United States of America and retained a research professor position at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, beginning in 1927.[1] His priority during this time was work regarding visual perception.[1]

In 1932, Uzbekistan was undergoing significant changes as a constituent republic of the Soviet Union, and in just over a decade saw a transition from a feudal aristocracy to a modern developing nation.[1] It was at this time that Koffka traveled there to join others in researching the impact of the rapid pace of social, cultural, and economic development on affected individuals' cognition; the new generation was the first in Uzbek history to be fully literate and receive a formal education.[1] His work did not result in any publications.[1] However, while in Uzbekistan, an illness, diagnosed as relapsing fever, rendered Koffka very ill but, in spite of his condition, he began to work on his book, "The Principles of Gestalt Psychology", which was published in 1935.[1][12] Once this book was completed, Koffka's previous self-limitations were eased as he allowed himself to delve into areas he previously felt were inappropriate for his specialty.[1] This broadened scope was evidenced by his incorporation of psychology in other fields of interest including the arts and ethics.[1] He spent the year 1939-1940 visiting Sir Hugh Cairns at the Nuffield Institute in Oxford.[12]

Contributions to psychology edit

Learning edit

 
The Gestalt principle of proxmity
 
The Gestalt principle of similarity

Koffka believed that most of early learning is what he referred to as, "sensorimotor learning," which is a type of learning which occurs after a consequence.[13] For example, a child who touches a hot stove will learn not to touch it again.[13] Koffka also believed that a lot of learning occurs by imitation, though he argued that it is not necessary to understand how imitation works, but rather to acknowledge that it is a natural occurrence.[13] According to Koffka, the highest type of learning is ideational learning, which makes use of language.[13] Koffka notes that a crucial time in children's development is when they understand that objects have names.[13]

Gestalt psychology edit

Koffka gained his initial interest in Gestalt psychology after participating in Wertheimer's phi phenomenon study. In 1910, Kurt Koffka worked alongside Max Wertheimer and Wolfgang Köhler at the Psychological Institute in Frankfurt.[14] They focused their research on sensory information and memory, and later became the founding fathers of Gestalt psychology.[14] Max Wertheimer is often credited with developing the idea of Gestalt psychology, but they were influenced by Christian von Ehrenfel's idea that a holistic melody is more than a simple combination of various sounds. This later becomes essential to theories of Gestalt psychology which convey that complete perception is more meaningful than its individual parts put together.[3]

The Gestalt Principles were developed to delve into how the human eye perceives visual elements. The principles help to provide ways to understand how complex visual elements can be broken down into simpler parts. The principles also try to demonstrate how the human eye perceives shapes as a single "object" instead of splitting the object into simplified components of the object being seen.[15] Some of the most commonly used principles were proximity, similarity, and continuation. Gestalt principle of proximity discussed that visual elements close to one another will be perceived as a whole.[16] Gestalt principle of similarity establishes that people tend to categorize objects that share the same traits into a group.[16] Gestalt principle of continuity reveals how people perceive lines or curves as a whole if they "touch" one another.[16]

Koffka needed to provide empirical evidence for the new theory. To accomplish this, Koffka formulated a three-stage proposition that revolutionized existing assumptions of psychology:[14]

  1. Perceiving sensory experiences as a combination of individual parts does not align with the actual experience of perception. The school of Gestalt suggests that human sensory experience be viewed as a whole since wholes are more meaningful than the sum of its parts.[14]
  2. It is a mistake to correlate a stimulus with sensation because functionality of a stimulus must be paired with factual information. Stimuli should be correlated to factual content of the perceptive field.[14]
  3. The previous two premises hold that the relationship between the psyche and physical needs to be reconsidered.[14]

In 1922, Kurt Koffka published an article called "Perception: An Introduction to the Gestalt-Theorie" in the Psychological Bulletin to introduce Gestalt psychology to the American academics.[14] The article focused on describing how Gestalt psychology studies various perceptual phenomena using different theories from existing ones. After its publication, it led to the criticisms of Gestalt psychology that it was overly focused on perception, and lacked contribution to overall themes of psychology.[14]

Aesthetic Gestalt (1940) edit

In 1940, Kurf Koffka traveled to Philadelphia and attended a conference at Bryn Mawr which brought together many different well-known figures from different fields of study to approach art from different perspectives.[17] At the time, many subjects such as culture, ecology, evolution, emotion, psychology, knowledge, physiology had been treated as their own independent fields with no connection to one another. Kurt Koffka attempted to make a multidisciplinary theory of art known as Aesthetic of Gestalt.[17] Koffka's presentation at the conference advanced the scientific theory of art, but it is a neglected theory that has mostly been forgotten after its publication.[17]

The main focus in Aesthetic theory is the appreciation of beauty in art pieces. There are 3 components in the relationship: the self (the spectator), the extraordinary art piece, and the connection between the two.[17] Aesthetic of Gestalt illustrates that the self (the individual) sees that there is an important message when observing the art piece.[17] Koffka Identifies three problems with the aesthetic experience. The first is contingency. While behaviourists believe that art naturally evokes an emotional response, Koffka argued that the previous associations must exist to understand that redness for example means passion.[17] This previous association is a rational and intelligible interaction that draws on a look-up table, not blindly resorting to the look-up table.[17] The second problem is with the empathy-based art theories about aesthetic and how the fact that people put their own emotions onto the art piece is paradoxical. In order for an art piece to be appreciated the self must first recognize the emotion they must attribute to the piece.[17] The third problem is that empathy logic implies that emotions projected by the self onto the art piece are to be felt by others. However, just because the person perceives that red is passionate does not mean they are feeling the same passion themselves.[17]

Honours edit

In 2006, members of the Department of Psychology of Justus Liebig University Giessen founded the Kurt-Koffka medal to honour scientists who have made extraordinary advances to the fields of perception or developmental psychology.[18]

Publications edit

"Perception: An Introduction to the Gestalt-theorie" (1922) edit

In 1922, Kurt Koffka published an article called "Perception: An Introduction to the Gestalt-Theorie" in the Psychological Bulletin to introduce Gestalt psychology to the American academics.[14] The article focused on how Gestalt psychology describes three main points which are sensation, association and attention with a different scope than other existing theories.[19] Sensation puts forward the idea of the "bundle-hypothesis" which means that the world is made up of elements that come together to create stimuli in our world.[19] The second listed concept of association is acknowledged by Koffka as the primary factor that decides what is coming and going in regards to our ideas.[19] It is association that puts one idea forward over another idea in our train of thought and ties all those separate elemental ideas together.[19] The final point of attention is described as a "scapegoat" by Koffka. If one's attention fails to notice a stimuli then the correlated response to that stimuli will not happen, even though the stimuli is present.[19] After its publication, Koffka's article led to the criticisms that gestalt psychology it was overly focused on perception, and lacked contribution to overall themes of psychology.[14]

The Growth of the Mind: An Introduction to Child Psychology (1924) edit

One of Koffka's most notable contributions to psychology was his book entitled, "The Growth of the Mind: An Introduction to Child Psychology".[4] The English translation of this book was done by Robert M. Ogden.[4] Koffka had two main goals in writing this book. His first goal was to utilize Gestalt principles to present an innovative view of childhood phenomenon.[4] His second goal was to provide educators with an up to date resource in order to facilitate effective teaching.[4] In this book, Koffka focused on mind development in children and outlined four ways in which development occurs.[4] Firstly, he stated physical movements must become more advanced and precise as children grow older.[4] As infants, we begin with rudimentary motor skills and with development we can engage in more complex physical activities.[4] Secondly, he believed infants must develop their sensory integration skills and learn to become effective perceivers of their environment.[4] Thirdly, Koffka stated that children must utilize their motor and sensory systems as they are dependent on each other to create a coherent whole which is utilized to facilitate appropriate behaviour.[4] Lastly, Koffka thought children must learn to rely on their cognition when acting as opposed to their impulses.[4]

The Principles of Gestalt Psychology (1935) edit

This book addressed applied psychology but mainly focused on the research concerning perception, memory, and learning. Koffka published this book in 1935 and it changed the basic ideas within research involving perception. Veridical perception states that objects people see in the environment will have relatively consistent characteristics such as size, and color.[5] Before this book was published, researchers had assumed that there was no need to explain the features of veridical perception. Koffka rejected the idea that researchers should only focus on illusions within people's perception, because he thought it was always necessary to understand why people perceive objects the way that they do.[5] This book approaches the topic of veridical perception in a phenomenological and holistic manner that supported the Gestalt Principles as well as other research that supported the Gestalt orientation.[5] This work also explored the notion of behavioural environments. A person's behaviour can result from one's own behavioural environment or another person's behavioural environment.[20] This means that someone can see and understand their actions one way and another person could see the same actions and understand them completely differently. Psychologists need to be mindful to view an individual's behaviour from the other individual's behavioural environment rather than their own.[20]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Harrower-Erickson, M. R. (1942). "Kurt Koffka: 1886-1941". The American Journal of Psychology. 55 (2): 278–281. ISSN 0002-9556. JSTOR 1417093.
  2. ^ "Gestalt Theory: Society for Gestalt Theory and its Applications (GTA) - Welcome". www.gestalttheory.net.
  3. ^ a b Sheehy, Noel (2016). Sheehy, Noel; Chapman, Antony J; Conroy, Wenday A (eds.). Biographical Dictionary of Psychology. doi:10.4324/9780203827086. ISBN 9780203827086.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Koffka, Kurt (1925). "The growth of the mind: An introduction to child-psychology". doi:10.1037/13440-000. hdl:2027/uc1.$b93564. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ a b c d Koffka, Kurt, 1886-1941. (2014). Principles of Gestalt psychology. Mimesis International. ISBN 9788857523934. OCLC 1039695390.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ a b c d e Ash, Mitchell G. (1998). Gestalt Psychology in German Culture, 1890-1967: Holism and the Quest for Objectivity. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521646277.
  7. ^ a b Harrower, Molly. Dictionary of American Biography: Supplement III 1941-1945.
  8. ^ "Kurt Koffka | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com.
  9. ^ Wesley, F. (2002). Koffka Kurt. In N. Sheehy, A. J. Chapman, & W. A. Conroy (Eds.), In Biographical Dictionary of Psychology (pp. 329-30). London, UK: Routledge. Retrieved from https://search.credoreference.com/content/topic/koffka_kurt_1886_1941.
  10. ^ Harrower-Erickson, M.R. (1942). Kurt Koffka, 1886-1941. The American Journal of Psychology, 55(2). 278-281.
  11. ^ Wade, Nicholas. (1995). Psychologists in word and image. [publisher not identified]. ISBN 9780262285674. OCLC 956673657.
  12. ^ a b Harrower, Molly Rachel, 1906-1999. (1983). Kurt Koffka, an unwitting self-portrait. University Presses of Florida. ISBN 0-8130-0760-7. OCLC 899107594.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ a b c d e King, D. Brett. (2009). A history of psychology : ideas and context. Pearson/Allyn and Bacon. ISBN 978-0-205-51213-3. OCLC 173299040.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Kohler, W. (1942). Kurt Koffka, 1886-1941. Psychological Review, 49(2). 97-101. doi:10.1037/h0054684
  15. ^ Arnheim, R. (1986). The two faces of gestalt psychology. American Psychologist, 41(7). 820-824. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.41.7.820
  16. ^ a b c Verlaers, K., Wagemans, J., & Overvliet, K. (2015). The effect of perceptual grouping on haptic numerosity perception. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 77(1). 353-367. doi:10.3758/s13414-014-0770-8
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i Spehar, B., van Tonder, G. J. (2017). Koffka's aesthetic gestalt. Leonardo, 50(1). 53-57 Retrieved from [1].
  18. ^ "Kurt-Koffka-Medal awarded to Prof. Roberta Klatzky – CNBC". Retrieved 2019-02-26.
  19. ^ a b c d e "Classics in the History of Psychology -- Koffka (1922)". psychclassics.yorku.ca.
  20. ^ a b Benjafield, John G. (2015). A History of Psychology. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.

External links edit

  • Gestalt psychology website of the international Society for Gestalt Theory and its Applications - GTA
  • Website on Gestalt psychology with biographies of Wertheimer et al.
  • [2]
  • Koffka, Kurt. International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. 1968.

kurt, koffka, march, 1886, november, 1941, german, psychologist, professor, born, educated, berlin, germany, died, northampton, massachusetts, from, coronary, thrombosis, influenced, maternal, uncle, biologist, pursue, science, many, interests, including, visu. Kurt Koffka March 12 1886 November 22 1941 was a German psychologist and professor He was born and educated in Berlin Germany he died in Northampton Massachusetts from coronary thrombosis 1 2 He was influenced by his maternal uncle a biologist to pursue science 1 He had many interests including visual perception brain damage sound localization developmental psychology and experimental psychology 1 3 He worked alongside Max Wertheimer and Wolfgang Kohler to develop Gestalt psychology 1 Koffka had several publications including The Growth of the Mind An Introduction to Child Psychology 1924 4 and The Principles of Gestalt Psychology 1935 5 which elaborated on his research Kurt KoffkaBornMarch 17 1886 1886 03 17 Berlin German EmpireDiedNovember 22 1941 1941 11 23 aged 55 Northampton MassachusettsAlma materUniversity of EdinburghUniversity of BerlinEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolGestalt psychologyBerlin School of experimental psychologyMain interestsSocial psychologyGestalt psychology Contents 1 Personal life 2 Education 3 Career 4 Contributions to psychology 4 1 Learning 4 2 Gestalt psychology 4 3 Aesthetic Gestalt 1940 5 Honours 6 Publications 6 1 Perception An Introduction to the Gestalt theorie 1922 6 2 The Growth of the Mind An Introduction to Child Psychology 1924 6 3 The Principles of Gestalt Psychology 1935 7 References 8 External linksPersonal life editKurt Koffka born March 18 1886 in Berlin Germany was raised by Luis Levy and Emil Koffka 6 His mother listed herself as Protestant despite having Jewish heritage 6 His father was a lawyer and his younger brother Friedrich Koffka went on to become a judge 6 In spite of the prevalence of law in his family Kurt Koffka decided to pursue science as he was motivated by his maternal uncle who was a biologist 1 Koffka married Mira Klein a participant in his experimental research in 1909 but they later divorced 6 In 1923 he married Elisabeth Ahlgrimm who completed her PhD at Giessen but they divorced in 1926 7 He remarried Mira until their second divorce in 1928 when he remarried Elisabeth whom he remained married to until his death 7 Koffka was forced to alter his lifestyle after developing a heart condition called Coronary thrombosis 8 However his condition did not hamper his work ethic as his lecturing and scientific projects occupied his time until he died 1 Koffka died on November 22 1941 in Northampton Massachusetts and left many of his projects unfinished 1 Education editKurt Koffka s academic career began at the school of Wilhelmsgymnasium where he attended from 1892 to 1903 1 In 1903 Kurt Koffka traveled to Scotland to study at the University of Edinburgh for a year 1 His time at the University of Edinburgh was crucial as he developed a greater understanding of the English language which was a valuable tool for spreading his message in the future 1 In 1904 he returned to Berlin where he attended the University of Berlin for three years 1 He chose to pursue psychology as he believed the subject matter of psychology was best suited towards his interests 1 While studying at the University of Berlin Koffka examined his personal colour vision in Willibald Nagel s physiological laboratory 1 He was interested in visual perception due to his own red green blindness which led him to study color vision and after images 9 This work culminated in Koffka s first publication in 1908 called Untersuchungen an einem protanomalen System Studies on a protanomalous system 1 This paper analyzed different properties of colour including contrast as well as the effect of brightness and wavelengths on colour 1 The figure ground phenomenon was also studied 1 Koffka completed his dissertation called Experimental Untersuchungen zur Lehre von Rhythmus Experimental studies on the teaching of rhythm securing him his Doctor of Philosophy in 1908 1 He worked with Carl Stumpf during the pursuit of his doctorate 1 Career editAfter receiving his doctorate in 1908 Koffka worked at the University of Wurzburg as an assistant to Oswald Kulpe who greatly influenced his work 1 After Kulpe left Koffka continued to work as an assistant to Karl Marbe 10 In 1910 Koffka became an assistant to Friedrich Schumann at the Psychological Institute in Frankfurt on Main to study the perception of motion alongside Max Wertheimer and Wolfgang Kohler 1 Koffka considered this period in his life significant to his scientific development 1 Koffka later became a professor at the University of Giessen 11 The University of Giessen assigned Koffka the Privatdozent title in 1911 and the ausserordentlicher while working with August Messer 6 Eighteen articles and six experimental works were completed over the twelve years that Koffka spent at Giessen 1 Koffka spent time at Professor Sommer s Psychiatric Clinic located in Giessen in the midst of World War I 1 They focused on subjects diagnosed with brain trauma but focused on aphasia cases He also studied the localization of sounds to be of aid to the army and navy 1 In 1924 Koffka moved to the United States of America and retained a research professor position at Smith College in Northampton Massachusetts beginning in 1927 1 His priority during this time was work regarding visual perception 1 In 1932 Uzbekistan was undergoing significant changes as a constituent republic of the Soviet Union and in just over a decade saw a transition from a feudal aristocracy to a modern developing nation 1 It was at this time that Koffka traveled there to join others in researching the impact of the rapid pace of social cultural and economic development on affected individuals cognition the new generation was the first in Uzbek history to be fully literate and receive a formal education 1 His work did not result in any publications 1 However while in Uzbekistan an illness diagnosed as relapsing fever rendered Koffka very ill but in spite of his condition he began to work on his book The Principles of Gestalt Psychology which was published in 1935 1 12 Once this book was completed Koffka s previous self limitations were eased as he allowed himself to delve into areas he previously felt were inappropriate for his specialty 1 This broadened scope was evidenced by his incorporation of psychology in other fields of interest including the arts and ethics 1 He spent the year 1939 1940 visiting Sir Hugh Cairns at the Nuffield Institute in Oxford 12 Contributions to psychology editLearning edit nbsp The Gestalt principle of proxmity nbsp The Gestalt principle of similarity Koffka believed that most of early learning is what he referred to as sensorimotor learning which is a type of learning which occurs after a consequence 13 For example a child who touches a hot stove will learn not to touch it again 13 Koffka also believed that a lot of learning occurs by imitation though he argued that it is not necessary to understand how imitation works but rather to acknowledge that it is a natural occurrence 13 According to Koffka the highest type of learning is ideational learning which makes use of language 13 Koffka notes that a crucial time in children s development is when they understand that objects have names 13 Gestalt psychology edit Koffka gained his initial interest in Gestalt psychology after participating in Wertheimer s phi phenomenon study In 1910 Kurt Koffka worked alongside Max Wertheimer and Wolfgang Kohler at the Psychological Institute in Frankfurt 14 They focused their research on sensory information and memory and later became the founding fathers of Gestalt psychology 14 Max Wertheimer is often credited with developing the idea of Gestalt psychology but they were influenced by Christian von Ehrenfel s idea that a holistic melody is more than a simple combination of various sounds This later becomes essential to theories of Gestalt psychology which convey that complete perception is more meaningful than its individual parts put together 3 The Gestalt Principles were developed to delve into how the human eye perceives visual elements The principles help to provide ways to understand how complex visual elements can be broken down into simpler parts The principles also try to demonstrate how the human eye perceives shapes as a single object instead of splitting the object into simplified components of the object being seen 15 Some of the most commonly used principles were proximity similarity and continuation Gestalt principle of proximity discussed that visual elements close to one another will be perceived as a whole 16 Gestalt principle of similarity establishes that people tend to categorize objects that share the same traits into a group 16 Gestalt principle of continuity reveals how people perceive lines or curves as a whole if they touch one another 16 Koffka needed to provide empirical evidence for the new theory To accomplish this Koffka formulated a three stage proposition that revolutionized existing assumptions of psychology 14 Perceiving sensory experiences as a combination of individual parts does not align with the actual experience of perception The school of Gestalt suggests that human sensory experience be viewed as a whole since wholes are more meaningful than the sum of its parts 14 It is a mistake to correlate a stimulus with sensation because functionality of a stimulus must be paired with factual information Stimuli should be correlated to factual content of the perceptive field 14 The previous two premises hold that the relationship between the psyche and physical needs to be reconsidered 14 In 1922 Kurt Koffka published an article called Perception An Introduction to the Gestalt Theorie in the Psychological Bulletin to introduce Gestalt psychology to the American academics 14 The article focused on describing how Gestalt psychology studies various perceptual phenomena using different theories from existing ones After its publication it led to the criticisms of Gestalt psychology that it was overly focused on perception and lacked contribution to overall themes of psychology 14 Aesthetic Gestalt 1940 edit In 1940 Kurf Koffka traveled to Philadelphia and attended a conference at Bryn Mawr which brought together many different well known figures from different fields of study to approach art from different perspectives 17 At the time many subjects such as culture ecology evolution emotion psychology knowledge physiology had been treated as their own independent fields with no connection to one another Kurt Koffka attempted to make a multidisciplinary theory of art known as Aesthetic of Gestalt 17 Koffka s presentation at the conference advanced the scientific theory of art but it is a neglected theory that has mostly been forgotten after its publication 17 The main focus in Aesthetic theory is the appreciation of beauty in art pieces There are 3 components in the relationship the self the spectator the extraordinary art piece and the connection between the two 17 Aesthetic of Gestalt illustrates that the self the individual sees that there is an important message when observing the art piece 17 Koffka Identifies three problems with the aesthetic experience The first is contingency While behaviourists believe that art naturally evokes an emotional response Koffka argued that the previous associations must exist to understand that redness for example means passion 17 This previous association is a rational and intelligible interaction that draws on a look up table not blindly resorting to the look up table 17 The second problem is with the empathy based art theories about aesthetic and how the fact that people put their own emotions onto the art piece is paradoxical In order for an art piece to be appreciated the self must first recognize the emotion they must attribute to the piece 17 The third problem is that empathy logic implies that emotions projected by the self onto the art piece are to be felt by others However just because the person perceives that red is passionate does not mean they are feeling the same passion themselves 17 Honours editIn 2006 members of the Department of Psychology of Justus Liebig University Giessen founded the Kurt Koffka medal to honour scientists who have made extraordinary advances to the fields of perception or developmental psychology 18 Publications edit Perception An Introduction to the Gestalt theorie 1922 edit In 1922 Kurt Koffka published an article called Perception An Introduction to the Gestalt Theorie in the Psychological Bulletin to introduce Gestalt psychology to the American academics 14 The article focused on how Gestalt psychology describes three main points which are sensation association and attention with a different scope than other existing theories 19 Sensation puts forward the idea of the bundle hypothesis which means that the world is made up of elements that come together to create stimuli in our world 19 The second listed concept of association is acknowledged by Koffka as the primary factor that decides what is coming and going in regards to our ideas 19 It is association that puts one idea forward over another idea in our train of thought and ties all those separate elemental ideas together 19 The final point of attention is described as a scapegoat by Koffka If one s attention fails to notice a stimuli then the correlated response to that stimuli will not happen even though the stimuli is present 19 After its publication Koffka s article led to the criticisms that gestalt psychology it was overly focused on perception and lacked contribution to overall themes of psychology 14 The Growth of the Mind An Introduction to Child Psychology 1924 edit One of Koffka s most notable contributions to psychology was his book entitled The Growth of the Mind An Introduction to Child Psychology 4 The English translation of this book was done by Robert M Ogden 4 Koffka had two main goals in writing this book His first goal was to utilize Gestalt principles to present an innovative view of childhood phenomenon 4 His second goal was to provide educators with an up to date resource in order to facilitate effective teaching 4 In this book Koffka focused on mind development in children and outlined four ways in which development occurs 4 Firstly he stated physical movements must become more advanced and precise as children grow older 4 As infants we begin with rudimentary motor skills and with development we can engage in more complex physical activities 4 Secondly he believed infants must develop their sensory integration skills and learn to become effective perceivers of their environment 4 Thirdly Koffka stated that children must utilize their motor and sensory systems as they are dependent on each other to create a coherent whole which is utilized to facilitate appropriate behaviour 4 Lastly Koffka thought children must learn to rely on their cognition when acting as opposed to their impulses 4 The Principles of Gestalt Psychology 1935 edit This book addressed applied psychology but mainly focused on the research concerning perception memory and learning Koffka published this book in 1935 and it changed the basic ideas within research involving perception Veridical perception states that objects people see in the environment will have relatively consistent characteristics such as size and color 5 Before this book was published researchers had assumed that there was no need to explain the features of veridical perception Koffka rejected the idea that researchers should only focus on illusions within people s perception because he thought it was always necessary to understand why people perceive objects the way that they do 5 This book approaches the topic of veridical perception in a phenomenological and holistic manner that supported the Gestalt Principles as well as other research that supported the Gestalt orientation 5 This work also explored the notion of behavioural environments A person s behaviour can result from one s own behavioural environment or another person s behavioural environment 20 This means that someone can see and understand their actions one way and another person could see the same actions and understand them completely differently Psychologists need to be mindful to view an individual s behaviour from the other individual s behavioural environment rather than their own 20 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Harrower Erickson M R 1942 Kurt Koffka 1886 1941 The American Journal of Psychology 55 2 278 281 ISSN 0002 9556 JSTOR 1417093 Gestalt Theory Society for Gestalt Theory and its Applications GTA Welcome www gestalttheory net a b Sheehy Noel 2016 Sheehy Noel Chapman Antony J Conroy Wenday A eds Biographical Dictionary of Psychology doi 10 4324 9780203827086 ISBN 9780203827086 a b c d e f g h i j k Koffka Kurt 1925 The growth of the mind An introduction to child psychology doi 10 1037 13440 000 hdl 2027 uc1 b93564 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d Koffka Kurt 1886 1941 2014 Principles of Gestalt psychology Mimesis International ISBN 9788857523934 OCLC 1039695390 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e Ash Mitchell G 1998 Gestalt Psychology in German Culture 1890 1967 Holism and the Quest for Objectivity Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521646277 a b Harrower Molly Dictionary of American Biography Supplement III 1941 1945 Kurt Koffka Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Wesley F 2002 Koffka Kurt In N Sheehy A J Chapman amp W A Conroy Eds In Biographical Dictionary of Psychology pp 329 30 London UK Routledge Retrieved from https search credoreference com content topic koffka kurt 1886 1941 Harrower Erickson M R 1942 Kurt Koffka 1886 1941 The American Journal of Psychology 55 2 278 281 Wade Nicholas 1995 Psychologists in word and image publisher not identified ISBN 9780262285674 OCLC 956673657 a b Harrower Molly Rachel 1906 1999 1983 Kurt Koffka an unwitting self portrait University Presses of Florida ISBN 0 8130 0760 7 OCLC 899107594 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e King D Brett 2009 A history of psychology ideas and context Pearson Allyn and Bacon ISBN 978 0 205 51213 3 OCLC 173299040 a b c d e f g h i j Kohler W 1942 Kurt Koffka 1886 1941 Psychological Review 49 2 97 101 doi 10 1037 h0054684 Arnheim R 1986 The two faces of gestalt psychology American Psychologist 41 7 820 824 doi 10 1037 0003 066X 41 7 820 a b c Verlaers K Wagemans J amp Overvliet K 2015 The effect of perceptual grouping on haptic numerosity perception Attention Perception amp Psychophysics 77 1 353 367 doi 10 3758 s13414 014 0770 8 a b c d e f g h i Spehar B van Tonder G J 2017 Koffka s aesthetic gestalt Leonardo 50 1 53 57 Retrieved from 1 Kurt Koffka Medal awarded to Prof Roberta Klatzky CNBC Retrieved 2019 02 26 a b c d e Classics in the History of Psychology Koffka 1922 psychclassics yorku ca a b Benjafield John G 2015 A History of Psychology Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Kurt Koffka Gestalt psychology website of the international Society for Gestalt Theory and its Applications GTA Website on Gestalt psychology with biographies of Wertheimer et al 2 Koffka Kurt International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences 1968 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kurt Koffka amp oldid 1220304064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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