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  2. Indian psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_psychology

    Indian psychology refers to an emerging scholarly and scientific subfield of psychology.Psychologists working in this field are retrieving the psychological ideas embedded in indigenous Indian religious and spiritual traditions and philosophies, and expressing these ideas in psychological terms that permit further psychological research and application.

  3. Narendra Nath Sen Gupta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narendra_Nath_Sen_Gupta

    Laboratory research at the University of Calcutta primarily focused on the areas of depth perception, psychophysics, and attention. [3] As a leading proponent of the scientific nature of psychological research, Sen Gupta was instrumental in the inclusion of psychology as a distinct division of the Indian Science Congress in 1923, and was elected president of the division in 1925.

  4. Physiological psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physiological_psychology

    Various forms of psychology concentrations are included in the sectors of health psychology, forensic psychology, clinical psychology, industrial and organizational psychology, and school psychology. Health psychology is a discipline that understands the psychological, behavioral, and cultural aspects that affect the physical health and ...

  5. First principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_principle

    In philosophy and science, a first principle is a basic proposition or assumption that cannot be deduced from any other proposition or assumption. First principles in philosophy are from first cause [1] attitudes and taught by Aristotelians, and nuanced versions of first principles are referred to as postulates by Kantians.

  6. Samskara (Indian philosophy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samskara_(Indian_philosophy)

    These are viewed as traces or temperament that evolves through the refinement of an individual inner consciousness and expressed personality, and is a form of "being-preparedness" in Vedantic psychology. [10] All physical, verbal and mental activity, according to the Vedanta school of Hinduism, creates Samskara, or traces

  7. The Conscious Mind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Conscious_Mind

    In The Conscious Mind Chalmers argues that (1) the physical does not exhaust the actual, so materialism is false; (2) consciousness is a fundamental fact of nature; (3) science and philosophy should strive towards discovering a fundamental law of consciousness.

  8. Physical change - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_change

    Physical changes occur when objects or substances undergo a change that does not change their chemical composition. This contrasts with the concept of chemical change in which the composition of a substance changes or one or more substances combine or break up to form new substances. In general a physical change is reversible using physical means.

  9. Positivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positivism

    [3] [4] His school of sociological positivism holds that society, like the physical world, operates according to scientific laws. [5] After Comte, positivist schools arose in logic, psychology, economics, historiography, and other fields of thought. Generally, positivists attempted to introduce scientific methods to their respective fields.