All Topics  
Kurt Koffka

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Kurt Koffka



 
 
Kurt Koffka (Berlin
Berlin

Berlin is the Capital of Germany city and one of sixteen States of Germany of Germany. With a population of 3.4 million within its city limits, Berlin is the country's largest city....
, March 18, 1886 - Northampton, November 22, 1941) was born and educated in Berlin and earned his PhD there in 1909 as a student of Carl Stumpf
Carl Stumpf

Carl Stumpf was a germany Philosophy and Psychology.Born in Wiesentheid, he studied with Franz Brentano and Rudolf Hermann Lotze. He had an important influence on Edmund Husserl, the founder of modern Phenomenology , Max Wertheimer, Wolfgang K?hler and Kurt Koffka, co-founders of Gestalt psychology, as well as the renowned Austrian novelis...
. In addition to his studies in Berlin, Koffka also spent one year at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland where he developed his strong fluency in English, a skill that later served him well in his efforts to spread Gestalt psychology beyond German borders.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Kurt Koffka'
Start a new discussion about 'Kurt Koffka'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


Kurt Koffka (Berlin
Berlin

Berlin is the Capital of Germany city and one of sixteen States of Germany of Germany. With a population of 3.4 million within its city limits, Berlin is the country's largest city....
, March 18, 1886 - Northampton, November 22, 1941) was born and educated in Berlin and earned his PhD there in 1909 as a student of Carl Stumpf
Carl Stumpf

Carl Stumpf was a germany Philosophy and Psychology.Born in Wiesentheid, he studied with Franz Brentano and Rudolf Hermann Lotze. He had an important influence on Edmund Husserl, the founder of modern Phenomenology , Max Wertheimer, Wolfgang K?hler and Kurt Koffka, co-founders of Gestalt psychology, as well as the renowned Austrian novelis...
. In addition to his studies in Berlin, Koffka also spent one year at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland where he developed his strong fluency in English, a skill that later served him well in his efforts to spread Gestalt psychology beyond German borders. Koffka was already working at the University of Frankfurt when Max Wertheimer
Max Wertheimer

Max Wertheimer was a Czechs-born Jewish teacher who was one of the three founders of Gestalt psychology, along with Kurt Koffka and Wolfgang K?hler....
 arrived in 1910 and invited Koffka to participate as a subject in his research on the phi phenonemon.

Koffka left Frankfurt in 1912 to take a position at the University of Giessen, forty miles from Frankfurt, where he remained until 1924. Putting his English fluency to the test, Koffka then traveled to the United States, where he was a visiting professor at the Cornell University from 1924 to 1925, and two years later at the University of Wisconsin- Madison. Eventually, in 1927, he accepted a position at the Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he remained until his death in 1941.

Personal life

In 1909, Koffka married Mira Klein, who was an experimental subject in Koffka's research. They remained married until 1923 when he divorced Klein and married Elisabeth Ahlgrimm who had recently finished her Ph.D at Giessen. However, they were divorced in the same year, and Koffka remarried Klein.

Theories on learning


Koffka believed that most of early learning is what he referred to as, "sensorimotor learning," which is a type of learning which occurs after a consequence. For example, a child who touches a hot stove will learn not to touch it again. Koffka also believed that a lot of learning occurs by imitation, though he argued that it is not important to understand how imitation works, but rather to acknowledge that it is a natural occurrence. According to Koffka, the highest type of learning is ideational learning, which makes use of language. Koffka notes that an important time in children's development is when they understand that objects have names.

Works

  • (1922) Perception: An Introduction to the Gestalt Theorie.
  • (1924) Growth of the Mind
  • (1935) Principles of Gestalt Psychology

External links



See also

  • Wolfgang Köhler
    Wolfgang Köhler

    Wolfgang K?hler was a German psychologist who, with Max Wertheimer and Kurt Koffka, founded Gestalt psychology....