Mary Whiton Calkins
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Mary Whiton Calkins was the first woman to be elected as president of the American Psychological Association in 1905. The majority of her adult life was dedicated to her work in the development of “psychology of selves.” She was very passionate about the relatively new world of psychology and was highly active in the field of philosophy. Mary Whiton Calkins was not deterred in her ambitions because she was a woman, instead she used her struggles to gain a voice and to speak out against the oppression of women during the 1920s.
Born in 1863 to a Presbyterian minister and his wife, she grew up in a very tight-knit family as the oldest of five children. In 1880, the family moved to Massachusetts where they settled and built a home. Marys father wanted the best for his daughter, and designed and supervised Marys education until she graduated in 1882. Upon graduation, Mary attended Smith College with an advanced standing as a sophomore. In 1893, Marys sister passed away and Mary dropped out of college for a season, taking her classes through private lessons at home. Mary returned to Smith College in 1884 as a senior and graduated with a concentration on philosophy and classics. In 1886, two years after graduation from college, the Calkins family went to Europe for a holiday that lasted for sixteen months. Mary continued to expand her knowledge of the classics and upon returning to America, her father arranged an interview with the President of Wellesley College. Mary was offered the position as a tutor in Greek in the fall of 1887 and remained there for three years until the Department of Philosophy at Wellesley discovered her gift of teaching. Mary began teaching in the
Philosophy Department as a teacher of Psychology, a sub discipline of Philosophy.
In 1898, Calkins was promoted to Professor of the Philosophy Department where she wrote several papers on Philosophy and Psychology. She wrote four books, including, An Introduction to Psychology (1901); The Persistent Problems of Philosophy (1907), The Good Man and the Good (1918).
Calkins major contribution to psychology was the development of a system of self-psychology . Her own work in the field dealt primarily with such topics as space and time consciousness, emotion, association, color theory and dreams. Her theory held, in contrast to behaviorist views then in the ascendant, that the conscious self is the central fact of psychology. In the field of philosophy she acknowledged Royces idealism as the chief influence leading her to her own system of “personalistic absolutism.” (Furumoto, 1980) Two forms of psychology at the time were “aromistic psychology” and the “science of the selves,” a theory that Caulkins was the first to discover. Her definition of the “science of the selves” is:
“All sciences deal with facts, and there are two great