Skip to main content
Log in

A Handbook of Child Psychology

  • Books Received
  • Published:

From Nature

View current issue Submit your manuscript

Abstract

IF one turns over the pages of a psychological treatise written a generation or two ago, one finds that what it mostly comes to is a patient analysis of adult consciousness, the method employed being that of introspection. Experimental psychology, involving objective measurement and claiming to be scientific, was slowly making its way, and is now very extensively cultivated. Of child psychology the same can scarcely be said. James Sully's “Studies of Childhood”(1895) was in Great Britain a pioneer book and is still quotable. But certainly not in Great Britain, nor even in the United States, has child psychology received the attention of the ablest investigators to the extent which one would have thought to be its due. Therefore genetic as distinguished from analytic psychology has suffered.

A Handbook of Child Psychology.

Edited by Carl Murchison. (The International University Series in Psychology.) Second edition revised. Pp. xii + 956. (Worcester, Mass.: Clark University Press; London: Oxford University Press, 1933.) 24s. 6d. net.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

A Handbook of Child Psychology . Nature 133, 515–516 (1934). https://doi.org/10.1038/133515b0

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/133515b0

  • Springer Nature Limited

Navigation