Henry Rutgers Marshall

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Henry Rutgers Marshall (born July 22, 1852 in New York , † May 3, 1927 in New York) was an American architect and psychologist .

He studied at Columbia University and worked as an architect from 1876 and in New York from 1878. Here he taught aesthetics, first 1894–95 at Columbia University, later 1915–1916 at Princeton University . A successful architect, he was President of the New York Regional Association of the American Institute of Architects from 1902-04.

However, he became known as a psychologist. He was honored with honorary degrees from the Rutgers and Hobart Universities, and in 1907 he became the first non-specialist president of the American Psychological Association .

Works

  • Pain, Pleasure, and Aesthetics . 1894
  • Aesthetic principles . 1895
  • Instinct and Reason . 1898
  • Consciousness . 1909
  • War and the Ideal of Peace . 1915
  • The field of aesthetics psychologically considered Mind (NS) 1 (1892) 3, 358-378; 1 (1892) 4, 453-469
  • The definition of desire . Mind (NS) 1 (1892) 3, 400 - 403
  • Hedonistic aesthetics . Mind (NS) 2 (1893), 15 - 41