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  2. Paris in the the Spring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_in_the_the_Spring

    The phrase "Paris in the the Spring" is written with an extra "the". A subject is asked to read the text, and will often jump to conclusions and fail to notice the extra "the", especially when there is a line break between the two thes. [1] The second ‘the’ is skipped because of saccades, jerky movements that eyes make when looking around ...

  3. Henri Bergson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Bergson

    In 1914, the Scottish universities arranged for Bergson to give the famous Gifford Lectures, planning one course for the spring and another for the autumn. Bergson delivered the first course, consisting of 11 lectures, under the title The Problem of Personality, at the University of Edinburgh in the spring of that year. The course of lectures ...

  4. Conceptual change - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conceptual_change

    Conceptual change is the process whereby concepts and relationships between them change over the course of an individual person's lifetime or over the course of history. . Research in four different fields – cognitive psychology, cognitive developmental psychology, science education, and history and philosophy of science - has sought to understand this pro

  5. Repetition (Kierkegaard book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repetition_(Kierkegaard_book)

    Repetition (Danish: Gjentagelsen) is an 1843 book by Søren Kierkegaard, the book was published under the pseudonym Constantin Constantius to mirror its titular theme. . Constantin investigates whether repetition is possible, and the book includes his experiments and his relation to a nameless patient only known as the Young

  6. Stream of consciousness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stream_of_consciousness

    Alexander Bain used the term in 1855 in the first edition of The Senses and the Intellect, when he wrote, "The concurrence of Sensations in one common stream of consciousness–on the same cerebral highway–enables those of different senses to be associated as readily as the sensations of the same sense". [3]

  7. Spring (political terminology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_(political_terminology)

    Political "spring" is a term popularized in the late twentieth century to refer to any of a number of student protests, revolutionary political movements or revolutionary waves. It originated in the European Revolutions of 1848 , which was sometimes referred to as the "Spring of Nations" or "Springtime of the Peoples".

  8. Critical psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_psychology

    Critical psychology is a movement that challenges psychology to work towards emancipation and social justice, and that opposes the uses of psychology to perpetuate oppression and injustice. [ 2 ] Critical psychologists believe that mainstream psychology fails to consider how power differences and discrimination between social classes and groups ...

  9. Associationism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Associationism

    Associationism is the idea that mental processes operate by the association of one mental state with its successor states. [1] It holds that all mental processes are made up of discrete psychological elements and their combinations, which are believed to be made up of sensations or simple feelings. [2]