James Mark Baldwin (Columbia, South Carolina, 1861–1934) was an American philosopher and psychologist who was educated at Princeton under the supervision of Scottish philosopher James
McCosh. He made important contributions to early psychology, psychiatry, and to the theory of evolution.
Biography
Early life
Using the opportunity offered by the Green Fellowship in Mental Science awarded to him at Princeton he went to study in
Germany with Wilhelm Wundt at Leipzig and with Friedrich Paulsen at Berlin. (1884-1885).
In 1885 he became Instructor in French and German at the Princeton
Theological Seminary. He translated Théodule-Armand Ribot's "German
Psychology of Today" and wrote his first paper "The Postulates of a Physiological Psychology". Ribot's work traced the
origins of psychology from Kant through Herbart, Fechner, Lotze to Wundt.
In 1887,while working as a professor of philosophy at Lake Forest College he
married Helen Hayes Green, the daughter of the President of the Seminary. At Lake Forest he published the first part of his
"Handbook of Psychology (Senses and Intellect)" in which he directed the attention to the new experimental psychology of
Weber, Fechner and Wilhelm Wundt.
In 1889 he went to the University of Toronto as the Chair of Logic and
Metaphysics. His creation of a laboratory of experimental psychology at Toronto (a first in North
America) coincided with the birth of his daughters Helen (1889) and Elisabeth (1891) which inspired the quantitative and
experimental research on infant development that was to make such a vivid impression on Jean
Piaget and Lawrence Kohlberg through Baldwin's "Mental Development in the
Child and the Race. Methods and Processes" (1894) dedicated to the subject. A second part of "Handbook of Psychology
(Feeling and Will)" appeared in 1891.
During this creative phase Baldwin travelled to France (1892) to visit the important psychologists Charcot (at the Salpêtrière), Hippolyte Bernheim (at Nancy), and Pierre Janet.
Princeton
In 1893 he was called back to his alma mater, Princeton
University, where he was offered the Stuart Chair in Psychology and the opportunity to establish a new psychology
laboratory. He would stay at Princeton till 1903 working out the highlights of his career reflected in "Social and Ethical
Interpretations in Mental Development. A Study in Social Psychology." (1897) where he took his previous "Mental
Development" to the critical stage in which it survived in the work of Lev Vygotsky,
through Vygotsky in the crucial work of Alexander Luria, and in the synthesis of both by
Aleksey Leontyev.
Baldwin complemented his psychological work with philosophy, in particular epistemology
his contribution to which he presented in the presidential address to the American Psychological Association in 1897. By then the
work on the "Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology" (1902) had been announced and a period of intense philosophical
correspondence ensued with the contributors to the project: William James,
John Dewey, Charles Sanders Peirce, Josiah Royce, George Edward Moore, Bernard Bosanquet, James McKeen Cattell,
Edward B. Titchener, Hugo Münsterberg,
Christine Ladd-Franklin, Adolf Meyer,
George Stout, Franklin Henry Giddings,
Edward Bagnall Poulton and others.
An important contributor should not be overlooked. Conway Lloyd Morgan was perhaps
closest to understanding the so called "Baldwin Effect". In his "Habit and
Instinct" (1896) he phrased a comparable version of the theory, like he did in an address to a session of the
New York Academy of Sciences (February 1896) in the presence of Baldwin.
(1896/Of modification and variation. Science 4(99) (November 20):733-739). As did Henry Fairfield Osborn (1896/A mode of evolution requiring neither natural selection nor the
inheritance of acquired characteristics. Transactions of the New York Academy of Science 15:141-148). The "Baldwin
Effect", building in part on the principle of "organic selection" proposed by Baldwin in "Mental Development" did only
receive its name by George Gaylord Simpson in 1953. (in: Evolution
7:110-117) (see:Daniel J. Depew in "Evolution and Learning" M.I.T.2003)
In 1899 Baldwin went to Oxford to supervise the completion of the "Dictionary..." (1902). He was awarded an Honorary
Doctorate in Science at the Oxford University. (In the light of the foregoing the
deafning silence with which J.M.Baldwin was later treated in Oxford publications on the Mind may well come to be regarded as one
of the significant omissions in the history of ideas for the 20th century. Compare for example Richard Gregory:"The Oxford Companion to the Mind" first edition 1987)
Johns Hopkins
In 1903, partly as a result of a dispute with Princeton president Woodrow Wilson, partly due to an offer involving more pay and less teaching, he moved to a professorship
of philosophy and psychology at Johns Hopkins University where he re-opened the
experimental laboratory that had been founded by Granville Stanley Hall in 1884 (but had
closed with Hall's departure to take of the presidency of Clark University in
1888).
In Baltimore Baldwin started to work on "Thoughts and Things: A Study of the Development and Meaning of Thought. Or Genetic
Logic" (1906) a densely integrative rendering of his ideas culminating in "Genetic Theory of Reality. Being the Outcome of
Genetic Logic as Issuing in the Aesthetic Theory of Reality called Pancalism" (1915).
In Baltimore also Baldwin was arrested in a raid on a brothel (1908), a scandal that put an end to his American career. Forced
to leave Johns Hopkins he looked for residence in Paris. He was to reside in France till his death in 1934.
Mexico
His first years (1908-1912) in France were interrupted by long stays in Mexico where he
advised on university matters and lectured at the School of Higher Studies at the National University in Mexico City. His " Darwin and the Humanities" (1909) and "Individual and Society" (1911) date
from this period. In 1912 he took permanent residence in Paris.
Paris
Baldwin's residence in France resulted in his pointing out the urgency of American non-neutral support for his new hosts on
the French battlefields of World War I. He published "American Neutrality, Its Cause and
Cure" (1916) for the purpose, and when in 1916 he survived a German torpedo attack on the "Sussex" in the English channel- on the return trip from a visit to William Osler
at Oxford- his open telegram to the President of the United States on the affair became frontpage news (New York Times).
With the entry of America in the war (1917) he helped to organize the Paris branch of the American Navy League, acting as
its Chairman till 1922. In 1926 his memoirs "Between Two Wars (1861-1921)" were published. He died in Paris on 9 November
1934.
Baldwin and Maine de Biran
In 1924 Baldwin's stay in Paris coincided with the commemoration by the "Société Française de Philosophie" of the 100th
anniversary of the death of Maine de Biran (1776-1824).
At the proceedings a lecture was held by Henri Delacroix: "Maine de Biran et l'école Medico-psychologique". The paper
highlights the work of Maine de Biran for medical psychology prompted by Antoine Royer-Collard (not to be confused with
his brother Pierre Royer-Collard), who headed the mental asylum of Charenton and had asked de Biran to look into the curriculum for mental
pathology at the "École Medicale" (1819). (i.e. "Considerations sur les principes d'une
division des faits psychologiques et physiologiques" in vol. XV, Tisserand ed)
Maine de Biran had always been acutely aware of the dynamogenic origin of "aperception" in consciousness. In his own words:
- " In taking the term perception in its true psychological sense, we will say that the connection (French:connexité) of
will and motion that constitutes immediate internal aperception is not the object but the proper subject of all external
perception, or of what Locke and Condillac generally call sensation.(...) In order to perceive the self has to exist for
itself or the personality to have commenced; the self does not exist but in willed effort, and actual willed effort does not
manifest itself as fact but by its immediate effect in consciousness, motion or muscular sensation thus being perceived
(French:aperçue) in connection with its cause and understood in the same unity of consciousness."
- (Maine de Biran "Réponses a Stapfer /première objection" -1818)
In "History of psychology: A scetch and an interpretation" (1913) Baldwin analysed the significance of Maine de Biran
as follows:
- "He proceeded from the Augustinian postulate 'volens sum', founding this
intuition upon the opposition felt in experiences of voluntary effort against
resistance. He went further than Laromiguière in developing what have been called
'dynamic categories' -force, cause, substance, etc- from these original expieriences of personal activity. This is, in its results, in
sharp contrast with the Humian derivation of these ideas; but it employs the weapons of Hume,
since it reposes upon the activities which Hume summarised in his theory of habit. If we say with Hume that habit is that element by which psychic contents are bound together in unity and connection, then we may go on
to a further analysis of habit on the functional side. This is the procedure of certain modern psychologists who agree with Hume
that habit results in a solidification of contents; by these psychologists habit in turn is analysed into modes of synergy and
assimilation in 'motor processes', to which perhaps the attention itself is originally due."
Attention to the extent of this topic is justified by contemporary studies of consciousness criticizing Descartes (Antonio Damasio) or reapraising Condillac (Merlin Donald) without reference to the
pioneering efforts of Maine de Biran in constructively criticizing both within the framework of mental development. What
"further analysis of habit on the functional side" meant for Baldwin is currently being debated. (see:Terence Deacon,
1997)
Organic Selection
The idea of organic selection came from the interpretation of the observable data in Baldwin's experimental study of infant
reaching and its role in mental development. Every practice of the infant's
movement intented to advance the integration of behavior favourable to development in the
experimental framework appeared to be selected from an excess of movement in the trial of imitation.
In further stages of development - the ones most critical to an understanding of the evolution of mind- this was graphically
(par excellence !) illustrated in the child's efforts to draw and learning to write. ("Mental Development in the Child
and the Race").
In later editions of "Mental Development" Baldwin changed the term "organic selection" into "functional
selection".
So, from the outset the idea was well linked to the philosophy of mind Baldwin was
emancipating from the models inspired by divine pre-establishment (Spinoza) (Wozniak,
2001)
It is the communication of this profound insight into the practice related nature of dynamogenic development, above all its
integration as a creative factor in the fabric of society, that helped the students of Baldwin to understand what was left of
Lamarck's signature. Singularly illustrated by Gregory Bateson in Mind and Nature (1979) and brilliantly reintegrated in contemporary studies by
Terence Deacon The Symbolic Species: The co-evolution of language and the human
brain (1997).
In human species the faculty of niche building is favoured by a practical intelligence able to
design the circumstances that will put its vital acquirements out of harms way in terms of (lineary predicted) natural selection. It is precisely in the fields of study relating to massive selection pressures against which other species seem to be without defences -biological
development in the face of novel pandemics (AIDS,
mad cow disease)- that the arguments relative to the natural
heredity of intelligent acquirements have resurfaced in a way most challengeing to science.
Psychologist
James Mark Baldwin was prominent among early experimental psychologists (voted by his peers the fifth most important
psychologist in America in a 1902 survey conducted by James McKeen Cattell), but it
was his contributions to developmental psychology that his contributions were
the most important. His step-wise theory of cognitive development was a major influence on the later, and much more widely-known,
developmental theory of Jean Piaget.
His contributions to the young discipline's early journals and institutions were highly significant as well. Baldwin was a
co-founder (with James McKeen Cattell) of Psychological Review (which was founded explicitly to compete with G. Stanley Hall's American Journal of
Psychology), Psychological Monographs and Psychological Index. He was also the founding editor of Psychological Bulletin.
In 1892 he was vice-president of the International Congress of
Psychology held in London, and in 1897–1898 president of the American Psychological Association; he received a gold medal from the Royal Academy of Arts and Sciences of Denmark (1897), and was honorary
president of the International Congress of Criminal Anthropology held in Geneva in 1896.
Baldwin effect
-
Baldwin's most important theoretical legacy is the concept of the Baldwin effect or
"Baldwinian evolution". Baldwin proposed, against Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, that
there is a mechanism whereby epigenetic factors come to shape the genome as much as — or more than — natural selection pressures. In
particular, human behavioural decisions made and sustained across generations as a set of cultural practices ought to be considered among the factors shaping the human genome.
For example, the incest taboo, if powerfully enforced, removes the natural
selection pressure against the possession of incest-favoring genes. After a few
generations without this natural selection pressure, unless such genetic material were profoundly fixed in the genome, it would
tend to diversify and lose its function. Humans would no longer be innately averse to incest, but would rely on their capacity to
internalize such rules from cultural practices.
The opposite case can also be true: cultural practice might selectively breed
humans to meet the fitness conditions of new environments, cultural and physical, which earlier hominids could not have survived.
Baldwinian evolution might strengthen or weaken a genetic trait.
Influence
Baldwin's contribution to this field places him at the heart of contemporary controversies in the fields of Evolutionary psychology and wider Sociobiology. Few people
did more than Robert Wozniak, Professor of Psychology at Bryn Mawr College for the
rediscovery of the significance of James Mark Baldwin in the History of ideas. In his
book Integral Psychology, Ken Wilber
refers to Baldwin as a forerunner of Wilber's theory of integral psychology.
See also
Written work
Apart from articles in the Psychological Review, he wrote:
- Handbook of Psychology (1890), translation of Ribot’s, German Psychology of
To-day (1886);
- Elements of Psychology (1893);
- Social and Ethical Interpretations in Mental Development (1898);
- Story of the Mind (1898);
- Mental Development in the Child and the Race (1896);
- Thought and Things (London and New York,
1906).
He also largely contributed to the Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology
(1901—1905), of which he was editor
in-chief.
External links
References
- Robert H. Wozniak [1]: "Development and Synthesis: An introduction to the Life and Work of James Mark Baldwin" Bryn Mawr
College, 2001 in: History of American Thought-Thoemmes Continuum/The History of Ideas 14/09/2004
- "Evolution and Learning:The Baldwin Effect Reconsidered" edited by Bruce H. Weber and David J. Depew: Cambridge,
Massachusetts 2003 -The MIT Press
Other Resources
Audio
Video
- Documentary film
describing the public controversy that swirled around the hiring of a new professor of philosophy at the University of Toronto in 1889. The debate was focused on the prospect of an American, James
Mark Bakdwin, being hired over a Canadian competitor, James Gibson Hume, who later headed the
Toronto philosophy deparment for 30 years.
Additional Reading
- Gregory Bateson: "Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity" New York, 1979 -E.P.Dutton
- Terence Deacon: "The Symbolic Species: The co-evolution of language and the human brain" USA, 1997 -W.W.Norton / Great Britain,
1997 -Allan Lane The Penguin Press.
- Edward J. Steele, Robyn A. Lindley, Robert V. Blanden: "Lamarck's Signature: How Retrogenes Are Changing Darwin's Natural
Selection Paradigm" Sydney, 1998 -Allan & Unwin Pty Ltd. In: Frontiers of Science -Series Editor Paul Davies.
|
Integral Theory/Integral Thought |
| Integral theorists |
Aurobindo Ghose,
Jean Gebser, Haridas Chaudhuri, Clare Graves, Ervin László, Michael Murphy, Don Beck, Chris
Cowan, Ken Wilber |
| Integral books |
The
Life Divine, The Synthesis of Yoga, Full Circle, Spiral Dynamics, Sex, Ecology, Spirituality |
| Integral themes |
Evolution,
involution, Integral ecology,
Integral politics, Integral psychology,
Integral yoga |
| Influences on integral theory |
James Mark
Baldwin, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Arthur M. Young, Edward Haskell, Erich Jantsch, Stanislav Grof, Rupert Sheldrake, Francisco Varela |
| Integral artists |
Alex Grey, Stuart Davis, Saul Williams |
| Integral organizations |
California Institute of Integral Studies, Integral Institute |
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