Page:Mary Whiton Calkins - A First Book in Psychology (1st edition, 1902 printing).pdf/11

Rh teaching. A list of the text-books and monographs, by which I have especially profited, would be very long, but would certainly include the names of Külpe, Titchener, Ward, Stout, Brentano, and Flechsig. I owe, also, more than I can well express to the viva voce suggestions and criticisms of my colleague, Professor Mary S. Case, and of my former teacher, Professor Edmund C. Sanford. And, finally, my warm thanks are due to my father, who has indefatigably read manuscript and proof, to Mrs. C. L. Franklin, who has read the discussion of color-theories, and to my colleague, Dr. E. A. McC. Gamble, who has added a section to the Appendix and has critically read most of the manuscript. To Dr. Gamble’s criticism of the chapters on sensation and on affection, I am especially indebted. Figures, , , , , , , , , and , which illustrate portions of the text, are reproduced or adapted, by the kind permission of Henry Holt and Co., from James’s “Principles of Psychology” and “Briefer Psychology” and from Martin’s “Human Body.”