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Gestalt |
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GestaltConcept of a unified whole that is greater than, or different from, the sum of its parts; that is, a complete structure whose nature is not explained simply by analysing its constituent elements. A chair, for example, will generally be recognized as a chair despite great variations between individual chairs in such attributes as size, shape, and colour. Gestalt psychology regards all mental phenomena as being arranged in organized, structured wholes, as opposed to being composed of simple sensations. For example, learning is seen as a reorganizing of a whole situation (often involving insight), as opposed to the behaviourists' view that it consists of associations between stimuli and responses. Gestalt psychologists' experiments show that the brain is not a passive receiver of information, but that it structures all its input in order to make sense of it, a belief that is now generally accepted; however, other principles of Gestalt psychology have received considerable criticism. The term ‘Gestalt’ was first used in psychology by the Austrian philosopher and psychologist Christian von Ehrenfels in 1890. Max Wertheimer, Wolfgang Köhler, and Kurt Koffka (1886–1941) were cofounders of Gestalt psychology. Gestalt
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| That Kuehn fails, also, to include any selections from Guardini's probing study on Dostoevsky, Religiose Gestalten in Dostojewskijs Werk (1951), several chapters of which appeared in English translation in the American journal Cross Currents in 1952 and 1956, and also from The Virtues (1963, 1967), on "forms of moral life," adds to one's disappointment, especially when an editor sets out to present "the essential Guardini" to a new generation of readers. The elements are defined not so much as single independent units but as gestalten or interrelation of the elements--that is, the elements occur not through the summation of separate sensations but in interrelation with each other. But each theme/horizon concretization is temporary and may have to be modified as other Gestalten are experienced. |
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