Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Psychology Essays

Toward Unification in Psychology

The First Banff Conference on Theoretical Psychology

edited by Joseph Royce

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Dec 1970
Category
Essays, Research & Methodology, General
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781487577506
    Publish Date
    Dec 1970
    List Price
    $46.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

The first Banff Conference on Theoretical Psychology, which led to the establishment of the University of Alberta’s Center for Advanced Study in Theoretical Psychology, was held 9-12 April 1965, at the university’s mountain retreat in the Canadian Rockies. The aim of the conference was to take the first steps toward defining areas of common ground among diverse theories of psychology, with a view to making more integrated and comprehensive statements about behaviour. The meeting was the first phase of long-range commitment which the Center proposes to make the advancement of theoretical psychology.
This was a working conference – a manifestation of the kind of activity on which the Center will focus in the years ahead. The papers presented ranged from the general-theoretical-metatheoretical statements of Royce, Rozeboom, and Galanter, through the biological viewpoint of Bartley and the systems orientation of von Bertalanffy and Frank, to the phenomenology of MacLeod and the existential outlook of the philosopher Tennessen.
These papers are contained in this volume, whose major concern is to display the full spectrum of theories of psychology and at the same time, point the ways to integration. Thus, while the contributions hold no illusions regarding the idea of uniting the fragmented diversity called psychology, they are convinced that a more equitable balance between the rational and empirical will move the discipline toward unification. Feedback from the seventy auditors who attended the conference indicates that the book will interest everyone concerned with clarifying our at present chaotic understanding of behaviour. It will appeal to psychologists of all persuasions, and philosophers who are interested in the foundation of psychology. It has a great deal to offer students concerned with the theoretical and philosophical foundations of psychological behaviour theory, and the related disciplines of psychiatry, biology, anthropology, and sociology.

About the author

JOSEPH R. ROYCE studied at the University of Chicago, receiving his PH.D. in 1951. From 1960 to 1967 he was Head of the Department of Psychology at the University of Alberta where he founded the Center for Advanced Study in Theoretical Psychology. He is Director of the Center, and Professor of Psychology at the University. He has written some 50 journal articles, has contributed chapters to over a dozen books, and is the author of The Encapsulated Man.

Joseph Royce's profile page