“It is safe to say that Professor Titchener’s ‘Experimental psychology’ is much the most important general work on the subject yet published by an English writer.” H. B. Alexander.
+ + Bookm. 22: 641. F. ’06. 760w.
“Professor Titchener’s is the most complete guide to quantitative work in psychology that we have in English, and will be indispensable as a reference book in laboratories where the course as a whole cannot be followed.”
+ + Ind. 61: 261. Ag. 2, ’06. 180w. + + Nation. 83: 98. Ag. 2, ’06. 100w.
“Professor Titchener may congratulate himself not only on having completed a long and arduous labor, but also upon having produced a veritable bible for his experimental colleagues.” Edmund C. Sanford.
+ + + Phys. R. 15: 424. Jl. ’06. 1080w.
“The work amply deserves to be adopted, for firstly, it is specifically planned to afford just that discipline that American psychology to-day lacks, and secondly, this plan is worked out to the last practical detail with remarkable skill and a prodigious amount of care.” Edwin B. Holt.
+ + – Psychol. Bull. 3: 93. Mr. 15, ’06. 1830w.
“The author has accomplished the most arduous and difficult task with such distinguished success as to put the coming generation of psychologists under lasting obligation to him.” James R. Angell.
+ + + School R. 14: 155. F. ’06. 350w.