James Ward (psychologist)

James Ward

James Ward (27 January 1843 – 4 March 1925) was an English psychologist and philosopher.[1] He was a Cambridge Apostle.

Life

He was born in Kingston upon Hull, the eldest of nine children. His father was an unsuccessful merchant. Ward was educated at the Liverpool Institute and Mostyn House, but his formal schooling ended when his father became bankrupt.

Apprenticed to a Liverpool architect for four years, Ward studied Greek and logic and was a Sunday School Teacher. In 1863, he entered Spring Hill College, near Birmingham, to train for the Congregationalist ministry. [2] An eccentric and impoverished student, he remained at Spring Hill until 1869, completing his theological studies as well as gaining a University of London BA degree.

In 1869–1870, Ward won a scholarship to Germany, where he attended the lectures of Isaac Dormer in Berlin before moving to Göttingen to study under Hermann Lotze. On his return to Britain Ward became minister at Emmanuel Congregational Church in Cambridge, where his theological liberalism unhappily antagonised his congregation. Sympathetic to Ward's predicament, Henry Sidgwick encouraged Ward to enter Cambridge University. Initially a non-collegiate student, Ward won a scholarship to Trinity College in 1873, and achieved a first class in the moral sciences tripos in 1874.[3] With a dissertation entitled 'The relation of physiology to psychology', Ward won a Trinity fellowship in 1875. Some of this work, An interpretation of Fechner's Law, was published in the first volume of the new journal Mind (1876).

For the rest of his life, the Dictionary of National Biography reports that he

held himself aloof from all institutional religion; but he did not tend towards secularism or even agnosticism; his early belief in spiritual values and his respect for all sincere religion never left him.

During 1876–1877 he returned to Germany, studying in Carl Ludwig's Leipzig physiological institute. Back in Cambridge, Ward continued physiological research under Michael Foster, publishing a pair of physiological papers in 1879 and 1880.

However, from 1880 onwards Ward moved away from physiology to psychology. His article Psychology for the ninth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica was enormously influential – criticising associationist psychology with an emphasis upon the mind's active attention to the world.

He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1919 to 1920; his wife Mary (née Martin) was a member of the Ladies Dining Society in Cambridge, with 11 other members.

His students included George Stout.[4]

Ward died in Cambridge, and was cremated at Cambridge Crematorium.

Philosophy

Ward defended a philosophy of personalistic panpsychism based on his research in physiology and psychology which he defined as a "spiritualistic monism".[5][6] In his Gifford Lectures and his book Naturalism and Agnosticism (1899) he argued against materialism and dualism and supported a form of panpsychism where reality consists in a plurality of centers of activity.[7] Ward's philosophical views have a close affinity to the pluralistic idealism of Leibniz.[8][9] Ward had believed that the universe is composed of "psychic monads" of different levels, interacting for mutual self- betterment.[10] His theological views have been described by some as a "personal panentheism".[11]

References

  1. James Ward (1843–1925)
  2. Chisholm 1911.
  3. "Ward, James (WRT872J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. "Stout, George, Frederick (STT879GF)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  5. Vergilius Ture Anselm Ferm A history of philosophical systems Littlefield, Adams, 1968
  6. James Ward The Realm of Ends: Or Pluralism and Theism Reprint Edition, 2011, Cambridge University Press, p. 13 ISBN 0521235502
  7. James Ward Naturalism and Agnosticism New York: Macmillan Company, 1899
  8. Ninian Smart; John Clayton (1 July 1988). Nineteenth-Century Religious Thought in the West:. Cambridge University Press. p. 297. ISBN 978-0-521-35965-8. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  9. The New Cambridge Modern History: The era of violence, 1898–1945, edited by David Thomson University Press, 1960, p. 135
  10. Hugh Joseph Tallon The concept of self in British and American idealism 1939, p. 118
  11. John W. Cooper (1 November 2006). Panentheism, the Other God of the Philosophers: From Plato to the Present. Baker Academic. pp. 133–. ISBN 978-0-8010-2724-6. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
Attribution

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