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  1. Carl Lange 1834 – 1900 A Founding FatherofNeurology,Psychophysiology and Lithium Therapy A Biographical Portrait * by Johan Schioldann . Carl Georg Langewas born December 4, 1834, at Vordingborg, into the Danish artistic and scientific elite. His father, Frederik Lange (1798-1862), was a theologian, classical scholar and educationalist.

  2. Presents selections from some of the most essential features of the psychological doctrines of Carl Georg Lange. A history of psychology is provided based upon extracts from The Emotions, translated from the German of H. Kurella by Benjamin Rand.

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  4. Carl Lange (physician) Carl Georg Lange (4 December 1834 – 29 May 1900) was a Danish physician who made contributions to the fields of neurology, psychiatry, and psychology . Born to a wealthy family in Vordingborg, Denmark, Lange attended medical school at the University of Copenhagen and graduated in 1859 with a reputation for brilliance. [1]

  5. Carl George Lange. Carl George Lange (1834 - 1900) was a Danish physician and psychologist who made significant contributions to the field of psychology, particularly in the area of emotion and its physiological underpinnings. He proposed the theory, along with James that a person's emotional experience follows his/her behavior.

  6. www.nature.com › articles › 110730b0The Emotions | Nature

    By Carl G. Lange William James. (Psychology Classics, vol. I.) Pp. 135. (Baltimore, Md.: Williams and Wilkins Co., 1922.) 4 dollars. WILLIAM JAMES and Carl Lange, investigating the problem of the ...

  7. Carl Georg Lange (1885/1912) Translated by Benjamin Rand. [ Classics Editor's note: This translation of a passage from Lange's Om Sindsbevaegelser (1885) from Lange's Ueber Gemüthsbewegungen. Eine psycho-physiologische Studie (1887), first appeared in Rand, Benjamin (Ed.) (1912). The Classical Psychologists (pp. 672-684). Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

  8. WILLIAM JAMES and Carl Lange, investigating the problem of the emotions, independently and within a year, arrived at a very similar point of view with regard to the relation between the emotion as experienced by the subject and its bodily expression. The theory, generally known as the James-Lange theory, inverts the usual common-sense sequence which would say that we cry because we are sorry ...

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