Philip Johnson-Laird
Philip N. Johnson-Laird (born 12 October 1936) is a professor at Princeton University's Department of Psychology and author of several notable books on human cognition and the psychology of reasoning.[1]
He was educated at Culford School and University College London where he won the Rosa Morison Medal in 1964 and a James Sully Scholarship between 1964–66. He achieved a BA there in 1964 and a PhD in 1967. He was elected to a Fellowship in 1994.
He is currently the Stuart Professor of Psychology at Princeton University's Department of Psychology
His entry in Who's Who (2007 edition) records the following career history:
- Ten years of miscellaneous jobs, as surveyor, musician, hospital porter (alternative to National Service), librarian, before going to university.
- Assistant Lecturer, then Lecturer, in Psychology, UCL, 1966–73
- Visiting Member, Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, 1971–72
- Reader, 1973, Professor, 1978, in Experimental Psychology, University of Sussex
- Visiting Fellow, Stanford University, 1980
- Assistant Director, MRC Applied Psychology Unit, Cambridge University, 1983–89
- Fellow, Darwin College, Cambridge, 1984–89
- Visiting Professorships: Stanford University, 1985; Princeton Univ., 1986.
Johnson-Laird is a Fellow of the American Philosophical Society, a Fellow of the Royal Society, a Fellow of the British Academy, a William James Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science, and a Fellow of the Cognitive Science Society. He has been awarded honorary doctorates from: Göteborg, 1983; Padua, 1997; Madrid, 2000; Dublin, 2000; Ghent, 2002; Palermo, 2005. He won the Spearman Medal in 1974, the British Psychological Society President's Award in 1985, and the International Prize from Fyssen Foundation in 2002.
Along with several other scholars, Johnson-Laird delivered the 2001 Gifford Lectures in Natural Theology at the University of Glasgow, published as The Nature and Limits of Human Understanding (ed. Anthony Sanford, T & T Clark, 2003). He has been a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences since 2007.
References
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Selected publications
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- Pages with reference errors
- Use dmy dates from September 2010
- 1936 births
- Living people
- People educated at Culford School
- Alumni of University College London
- Princeton University faculty
- Consciousness researchers and theorists
- Cognitive scientists
- Cognitive psychologists
- American psychologists
- British psychologists
- Fellows of Darwin College, Cambridge
- Academics of University College London
- Fellows of the Royal Society
- British expatriate academics in the United States
- Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences
- Members of the American Philosophical Society