on Max Wertheimer edit

What are the most interesting theoretical concepts associated with Max?.. and what would you think are the modern-day relevancies? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.166.7.86 (talk) 19:33, 23 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

Hi everyone. I am a psychology major new to wikipedia, and I have been assigned to revamp this page. I have began drafting additions in information I have researched, but in regards to the information already here I am having trouble finding the original sources. Does anyone know where I could check these sources? Any advice given would be appreciated. Thanks. mflynn2 (talk) 13:57, 21 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

Contrast edit

Here's part of the second paragraph at present:

"The classic Gestalt example is a soap bubble, whose spherical shape is not defined by a rigid template, or a mathematical formula, but rather it emerges spontaneously by the parallel action of surface tension acting at all points in the surface simultaneously. This is in contrast to the "atomistic" principle of operation of the digital computer, where every computation is broken down into a sequence of simple steps, each of which is computed independently of the problem as a whole."

What a poor contrast! If anything, the emergent form of the bubble from interactions between molecules is similar to that of a computer, in that computer users are unconcerned with bits and register-shifting, but regard the computer as a whole. Unfree (talk) 15:32, 26 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

File:Max Wertheimer.jpg Nominated for Deletion edit

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Style (tho that may not be the key point that I'm trying to raise) edit

   We have a 'graph that ends with

The family became citizens as well; that's why Max Wertheimer is referred to as a German-American psychologist.[1]

whose unsuitability probably extends well beyond the informality of the contraction. I doubt I'll be hunting down the source to confirm it's not being misrepresented, but at least I can "drop a flag on the play". E.g., "that's why" is unlikely to be suitable tone for the article even if it's a direct quote from a RS. (Don't confuse talk-page banter w/ WP text!)
--Jerzyt 03:59, 8 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ Michael Wertheimer, A Brief History of Psychology. 4th edition. Fort Worth TX: Harcourt Brace, 2000