William Brown (psychologist)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

William Brown

FRCP (5 December 1881 – 17 May 1952) was a British psychologist
and psychiatrist.

Biography

Brown was born in Slinfold, Sussex. He studied mathematics and philosophy at Christ Church, Oxford. He took medical training at

FRCP in 1930.[1]

In 1936 he became the director of the Institute of Experimental Psychology at

Oxford University. Brown, along with May Smith, Cyril Burt, and John Flügel, were all students of William McDougall while the latter mentioned was a professor at Oxford. He was a Christian and had a lifelong interest in parapsychology. He served on the board of the Society for Psychical Research 1923-1940.[2]

Brown was associated with Harry Price and his National Laboratory of Psychical Research. He attended séances with the medium Helen Duncan at the laboratory and concluded she was fraudulent.[3]

Publications

  • Mind and Personality: An Essay in Psychology and Philosophy (1970)
  • Personality and Religion (1946)
  • War and the Psychological Conditions of Peace (1942)
  • Psychological Methods of Healing; An Introduction to Psychotherapy (1938)
  • Mind, Medicine and Metaphysics: The Philosophy of a Physician (1936)
  • Science and Personality (1929)
  • Suggestion and Mental Analysis: An Outline of the Theory and Practice of Mind Cure (1922)
  • William Brown, 'The psychologist in war-time', Lancet (1939), 1: 1288.
  • William Brown, 'The treatment of cases of shell shock in an advanced neurological centre', Lancet (1918), 2: 197.
  • William Brown, 'War neuroses', Lancet (1919), 2: 833.

References

  1. ^ Valentine, Elizabeth R. (2011). Spooks and Spoofs: Relations Between Psychical Research and Academic Psychology in Britain in the Inter-War Period. History of the Human Sciences 25: 67-90.

Further reading