![]() Karl Bühler (1879 - 1963) |
![]() Charlotte Bühler (1893 - 1974) |
Karl Bühler held a position at the "Technische Hochschule"
in Dresden from 1918 to 1922. This was, in fact, Karl Bühler's first
full professorship, that in philosophy and pedagogy (in this, he was the
follower of Fritz Schulze - from 1876 to 1908, and Theodor Elsenhaus -
from 1908 to 1918). The scientific background of Karl Bühler was the
Würzburger Schule of "Denkpsychologie", where he was one
of the leading figures. He had started to work with Oswald Külpe in
Würzburg and then had followed his teacher to Bonn and later to Munich.
In Munich he met Charlotte Malachowski, who first studied psychology with
Carl Stumpf in Berlin. On the recommendation of Stumpf she changed - in
the fall 1915 - for Munich and jointed Külpe's group. Only two weeks
after their first meeting Karl made an offer: they became married on the
April 16th, 1916. When the Bühlers left for Dresden at the end of
World War I Charlotte Bühler had just received her Ph.D. (The title
of her first dissertation was "Über Gedankenentehung: Experimentelle
Untersuchungen zur Denkpsychologie"). During their time in Dresden
she wrote her "Habilitationsschrift" titled "Entdeckung
und Erfindung in Literatur und Kunst" under the supervision of Oskar
Walzel. This was the first "Habilitation" of a woman in the history
of German psychology. So, no doubt, Dresden marked a very important step
in the Bühlers' carriers.
There was no independent psychological institute in Dresden before Karl
Bühler arrived. Bühler's assistant in Dresden was Helmut Bocksch
and among his co-workers at the "Allgemeine Abteilung" of the
TH Dresden one finds (since 1919) also privat-dozent Walter Blümenfeld.
The first psychological institute - Institute of Psychotechnics - was founded
by Blümenfeld at the TH Dresden on the 17th of July, 1922, with the
help and the formal participation of Karl Bühler. In Dresden Karl
Bühler's work concentrated on perception. Specifically, he wrote "Die
Erscheinungsweisen der Farben" (1922), a volume that was part of the
"Handbuch der Psychologie". There he formulated his "Duplizitätsprinzip"
which says that all constancy phenomena in perception are based on a two-fold
empirical basis: "Dingprojektionen" und "Umstandskriterien".
In the emphasis on the role of context this is certainly very much alike
to the views of the Berlin school of Gestalt psychology. Kurt Koffka in
particular elaborated on these ideas in the later invariance theory of
constancy which can be found in his "Principles of Gestalt Psychology"
(1935).
Bühler's work on perception and specifically the duplicity principle
later became of utmost importance to his Viennese student and assistent
Egon Brunswik. Brunswik's "Wahrnehmung und Gegenstandswelt" (1934)
is heavily influenced by his teachers ideas. One can argue that Brunswik's
lens model which he developed much later in the United States combined
the duplicity principle with correlation statistics. Bühler's overall
influence on Brunswik marks certainly one of the most important lines of
descent.
At the end of 1922 the Bühlers left Dresden for Vienna where they
founded one of the most flourishing psychological institutes in Europe
[Gerhard Benetka "Psychologie in Wien: Sozial- und Theoriegeschichte
des Wiener Psychologischen Instituts 1922-1938, Wien: WUV, 1995]. The Vienna
Psychological Institute attracted many students and international guests
(e.g., Edward C. Tolman). To elaborate a little bit on the importance of
the Vienna Psychological Institute, here are a few more of its students
during the time of the Bühlers: Lajos Kardos, Josef Krug, Alexander
Willwoll, Paul Lazersfeld, Maria Jahoda, Peter Hofstätter, Else Frenkel
(later Frenkel-Brunswik), Hildegard Hetzer, Lotte Schenk-Danziger, Elsa
Köhler, Käthe Wolf, Hedda Bolgar, Albert Wellek, James Bugenthal,
Henry Wegrocki, and the philosopher Karl Popper (Popper wrote his doctoral
dissertation with Bühler mainly being inspired by his psycholinguistic
ideas). Helmut Bocksch also initially belonged to the group but he returned
to Dresden after several years of work as Karl Bühler's research assistent.
Paul Lazersfeld, who emigrated to the United States (as did the Bühlers
and many of their students) later described the organisational structure
of the Institute ("die Wiener Organisationsform") in very favorable
terms: "In den Jahren vor und nach 1930 war das Wiener Psychologische
Institut in Abteilungen gegliedert, die verschiedenen Assistenten unterstanden,
von denen ich [Lazarsfeld] einer war. Wir vermittelten zwischen den Arbeiten
der Studenten und den allgemeinen Direktiven des Vorstands. Einmal jede
Woche kamen Kandidaten, Assistenten und Professoren in einem Kolloquium
zusammen, um laufende Arbeiten zu überprüfen, wichtige Literatur
von auswärts zu besprechen oder ein neues Manuskript der Bühlers
zu besprechen....Die ganze Konstruktion des Instituts erscheint mir im
Rückblick eine sehr wichtige organisatorische Schöpfung. Sie
garantiert einerseits, dass der Geist der Leitung sich in allen Teilen
auswirkt, und erlaubte gleichzeitig den Assistenten eine freie Entwicklung
ihrer eigenen Interessen" [Lazarsfeld, P. (1959). Amerikanische Beobachtungen
eines Bühler-Schülers. Zeitschrift für exp. und angew. Psychol.,
6, 69-76].
Among the "Abteilungen" were a unit for general psychology run
by Egon Brunswik, a unit for social psychology in which among others Paul
Lazarsfeld and Maria Jahoda took part, and a unit for developmental psychology
headed by Charlotte Bühler. With time she increasingly assumed the
role of an inofficial scientific leader of the institute. In this respect,
her stipends and grants from the Rockefeller Foundation (since 1924) had
immensely supported the institute's broad international contacts and projects.
The breadth of Karl and Charlotte Bühlers' interests can best be seen
by a look at their major publications. Karl's studies in the psychology
of thinking stood at the beginning of his carreer. However one might judge
their worth today (after the "Cognitive Revolution"), they still
constitute (to our knowledge) the earliest attempt at the study of complex
thought in the psychological laboratory and should be seen against the
background of Wundt's program for psychology and Wundt's dismissal of the
study of higher mental processes with the experimental method.
Next there are Bühler's studies on perception and his notion of Gestalt
psychology which he however understood as a competitor to the Berlin school's
view of Gestalt (Wertheimer, Köhler, and especially Koffka). Bühler
was primarily opposed to the extension and, in fact, an over-generalization
of the mainly perceptual phenomenology of Gestalt notion to thinking and
reasoning. Without doubts, this was a continuation of the Würzburger
tradition of cognitive research with its emphasis on the "Unanschaulichen"
in thinking. And as we briefly mentioned earlier this research, in particular,
had a strong influence on Egon Brunswik whose legacy, in turn, remains
quite influential in contemporary psychology. The notion of an ecological
approach to psychology can be readily traced back to Bühler. (We mean
here the Brunswikean notion of ecological validity, not a Gibsonian one.
This later is more indebted to Kurt Koffka who was one of the most important
Gibson's mentors - see e.g. Gibson's preface to his "Ecological Approach
to Visual Perception").
Another important early focus of Bühler's work and collaboration with
Charlotte Bühler was developmental psychology. Bühler wrote the
most read German textbook on the issue (at least until Piaget became available
in the German speaking world) titled "Die geistige Entwicklung des
Kindes" (1918). This textbook appeared in numerous editions and was
translated into many languages (e.g. its Russian translation was preceded
by a very favorable introduction written by Lev Vygotsky). In fact, Bühler
had just finished the book when he came to Dresden (on a personal level
it was inspired by their first child which was about two or three when
they came to Dresden -- this is certainly in good tradition of developmental
psychology!). Bühler's treatment of the mental development of the
child shows a strong concern for the cognitive questions of representation
and language. The study of language under a cognitive perspective eventually
developed into one of Bühler's most important interests which culminated
in his monumental "Sprachtheorie" (1934). In this respect Bühler
is certainly one of the most important forerunners of semiotics and contemporary
cognitive linguistics (see, in particular, works of Fillmore and Lakoff).
A special topic is Bühler's meta-theoretical ideas which he elaborated
in his monograph "Die Krise der Psychologie", certainly a classic
in the history of German-speaking and international psychology. This can
hardly be an accident that at the end of the 20s two other extraordinary
scholars - Kurt Lewin (1927) and Lev Vygotsky (1929) - wrote their-own
versions of texts on the crisis of psychology, mostly with rather different
prospects on the overcoming of the crisis (see on this e.g. Bischof, 1976,
and Velichkovsky, 1988).
Our knowledge of Charlotte Bühler's work is somewhat wanting, so only
a little bit will follow. Charlotte Bühler started out with an interest
in the study of thinking. She had studied (as we already noted) with Carl
Stumpf in Berlin and eventually studied with Oswald Külpe in Munich
until his untimely death on the Christmas of 1915. Her work laid ground
of the life-span concept in developmental psychology. Her book "Das
Seelenleben des Jugendlichen" published during the Dresden period
(1922) already anticipated this approach, which was explicitly formulated
in a later book - "Der menschlichen Lebenslauf als psychologisches
Problem" (1933). Methodologically her studies of children's and adolescents'
diaries are especially notable, also because they influenced the Vienna
school of logical positivism. After the Bühlers' emigration to the
United States she became one of the driving forces in the founding of "Humanistic
Psychology", particularly when she had finally received a full professorship
(in psychiatry) from University of California, Los Angeles (1943).
In 1938, after the Nazis took over in Austria, the Bühlers were forced
out of the country. Karl Bühler was even imprisoned for a short while
by the Nazis for "political and ideological reasons". Mitchell
Ash (1987) has worked out the details of this story showing that it is
not clear whether the Nazis were regarding Bühler as a suspicious
person for his affiliation with the Social-Democrats and the pedagogical
reform movement in Vienna or for his later connections with the conservative
Dollfuss-Schussnigg Regime. Certainly the Bühlers do not appear as
politically straight-lined but connections to the Nazis? There is no indication.
[Ash, M. G. (1987). Psychology and politics in interwar Vienna: The Vienna
Psychological Institute, 1922-1942. In M. G. Ash & W. R. Woodward (Eds.).
Psychology in twentieth-century thought and society. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.] Any attribution of anti-Semitic sentiments is absolutely
untenable, not only was Charlotte Bühler of Jewish descent but also
quite a few of their students at the Institute.
At one point one of us heard an opinion suggesting that Bühler's ideas,
especially his eclectic and biologically inspired outline of an action
theory (as presented in "Die Krise der Psychologie", 1927) was
fitting well with, if not helping along, the Nazis' fascist ideology. This
is again an utterly unconvincing style of argument to us. We don't know
whether this is anywhere in print, in any case, we guess, we have to leave
this to everybody's own judgment. (we are however aware of the fact that
one or the other of their many students later engaged in questionable research
practices.)
As a final point that stress the wide recognition that the Bühlers
received: Karl Bühler had not only been a visiting professor at some
of the most famous American Universities (Johns-Hopkins, Stanford, and
Harvard) but had also a job offer at Harvard University in 1930, Charlotte
Bühler had an offer at the same time at Radcliff-College in Cambridge.
They refused, they simply liked Vienna and the Old World too much. When
in 1938 they were forced by the political development out of Austria they
met with a very different situation in the United States, because the most
positions were already taken by other German and Austrian emigrants.
Since the general orientation of work at the many new institutes of psychology
of the Dresden University of Technology is very much connected with the
solution of applied psychological problems we all might appreciate the
following quote of Karl Bühler, a quote from a speech he gave in 1923
to introduce the research program of his Institute to Viennese school teachers
(many of whom were eager participants in the pedagogical reform movement
in the days of "Red Vienna"): "Der Erkenntnis müssen
die Probleme aus dem Leben erwachsen und für die Erziehungsarbeit
gilt im gleichen Masse wie für die moderne Medizin und die moderne
Industrie der Grundsatz: Es gibt nichts, was praktischer ist als eine gute
Theorie."