James william gibson biography sample
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Surface Tension
What is it that you think you do especially well?
Observe other people doing things. Mostly with things; not necessarily so well with other people, though I think as I’ve gotten older I’ve got better at that.
Why has that been a particular fascination?
I don’t know. It just seems to be the way I’m made.
When I was a child, I moved very abruptly at the age of eight to my mother’s home town in the very ungenteel south-west of Virginia, where her family had been forever. The culture I moved into was dense and peculiar – it was like moving into a Welsh village if you aren’t Welsh. I was foreign to it and didn’t understand it.
I think at that point I began consciously to decipher the various codes that were going on in society around me. I think that was a formative experience. Most children learn the codes naturally and take them for granted, but I had an experience of dislocation in a culture that was inherently xenophobic. Well, ‘xenophobic’ is not quite
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James Gibson, 1816-1897
Papers, 1832-1894
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- Davie Bethune to Mrs. Norse, A.L.S., May 24, 1797 (Transfer from acc. #12810(1))
- Davie Bethune to Joseph Norse, A.L.S., April 26, 1821 (Transfer from acc. #12810(2))
- S.T. Tanner to Samuel Stevens, A.L.S., April 27, 1829 (Transfer from acc. #12810(3))
- D. Wilson to Jane Woodworth, A.L.S., May 21, 1838 (Transfer from acc. #12810(4))
- Lease, January 17, 1800. Goldsbrow Banyar to Walter Martin, Lot
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James J. Gibson
American psychologist (1904–1979)
James Jerome Gibson (; January 27, 1904 – December 11, 1979) was an American psychologist and is considered to be one of the most important contributors to the field of visual observation. Gibson challenged the idea that the nervous struktur actively constructs conscious visual perception, and instead promoted ecological psychology, in which the mind directly perceives environmental stimuli without additional cognitive construction or processing.[1] A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked him as the 88th most cited psychologist of the 20th century, tied with John Garcia, David Rumelhart, Louis Leon Thurstone, Margaret Floy Washburn, and Robert S. Woodworth.[2]
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]James Jerome Gibson was born in McConnelsville, Ohio, on January 27, 1904, to Thomas and Gertrude Gibson.[3] He was the oldest of three children and had two younger brothers