Home
Publishing
DrugRxiv
Drug Repurposing
Network Medicine
About
REPO4EU
Meet the team
Drug Repurposing Research Collection
Conference
Blog
My ScienceOpen
Sign in
Register
Dashboard
Search
Home
Publishing
DrugRxiv
Drug Repurposing
Network Medicine
About
REPO4EU
Meet the team
Drug Repurposing Research Collection
Conference
My ScienceOpen
Sign in
Register
Dashboard
Search
115
views
0
references
Top references
cited by
336
Cite as...
0 reviews
Review
0
comments
Comment
0
recommends
+1
Recommend
0
collections
Add to
0
shares
Share
Twitter
Sina Weibo
Facebook
Email
2,971
similar
All similar
Record
: found
Abstract
: not found
Book
: not found
Principles of topological psychology.
other
Author(s):
Kurt Lewin
Other contributor(s):
Fritz Heider
(Translator),
Grace M. Heider
(Translator)
Publication date:
1936
Publisher:
McGraw-Hill
Read this book at
Publisher
Buy book
Review
Review book
Invite someone to review
Bookmark
Cite as...
There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Related collections
The FAIR data principles
Author and book information
Book
Publication date:
1936
DOI:
10.1037/10019-000
SO-VID:
45266f22-ae83-4176-aff3-b20a839a6ed8
History
Data availability:
Comments
Comment on this book
Sign in to comment
Book chapters
pp. 3
The present state of psychology.
pp. 8
Formulation of law and representation of situation.
pp. 14
General considerations about representing life space.
pp. 18
Content and extent of the psychological life space.
pp. 30
Causal interconnections in psychology.
pp. 41
The psychological life space as space in the sense of mathematics.
pp. 59
Psychological space and psychological dynamics.
pp. 66
The psychological worlds and the physical world.
pp. 76
Mathematical representation and psychological theory.
pp. 87
Concepts of topology fundamental for psychology.
pp. 93
Psychological regions, locomotions, and communications.
pp. 118
Boundaries of psychological regions.
pp. 136
The relative position of two regions.
pp. 155
Structural changes.
pp. 163
The life space as finitely structured space.
pp. 166
The person as a differentiated region in the life space.
pp. 168
Fundamental concepts and coordinating definitions for the representation of the person.
pp. 193
The dimensions of the life space.
Similar content
2,971
Principles for fostering the transdisciplinary development of assistive technologies.
Authors:
Jennifer Boger
,
Piper Jackson
,
Maurice Mulvenna
…
Principles of the GDPR
Authors:
A human biomonitoring (HBM) Global Registry Framework: Further advancement of HBM research following the FAIR principles.
Authors:
Maryam Zare Jeddi
,
Ana Virgolino
,
Peter Fantke
…
See all similar
Cited by
323
The "What" and "Why" of Goal Pursuits: Human Needs and the Self-Determination of Behavior
Authors:
Edward L Deci
,
Richard M. Ryan
Consumer Perceptions of Price, Quality, and Value: A Means-End Model and Synthesis of Evidence
Authors:
Valarie A. Zeithaml
Interdependence, interaction, and relationships.
Authors:
Caryl E. Rusbult
,
Paul A. M. Van Lange
See all cited by