Henry Rutgers Marshall

Henry Rutgers Marshall ( born July 22, 1852 in New York; † May 3, 1927 in New York ) was an American architect and psychologist. He studied at Columbia University and worked as an architect in 1876, 1878 in New York. Here he taught aesthetics, first in 1894-95 at Columbia, and later from 1915 to 1916 at Princeton University. As a successful architect, he was 1902-04 president of the New York regional alliance of the American Institute of Architects. However, he was known as a psychologist. The faculties of the Universities of Rutgers and Hobart awarded him an honorary corresponding academic title and he was even in 1907 as the first professional stranger president of the American Psychological Association.

Works

  • Pain, Pleasure, and Aesthetics. 1894
  • Æsthetic Principles. 1895
  • Instinct and Reason. 1898
  • Consciousness. 1909
  • War and the Ideal of Peace. 1915
  • The field of æsthetics psychologically Considered Mind (NS ) 1 ( 1892) 3, 358-378; 1 (1892 ) 4, 453-469
  • The definition of desire. Mind ( N. S. ) 1 ( 1892) 3, 400-403
  • Hedonistic Aesthetics. Mind ( N. S. ) 2 ( 1893), 15-41
  • Architect ( United States)
  • Psychologist
  • Member of the American Psychological Association
  • Americans
  • Born in 1852
  • Died in 1927
  • Man
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