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  1. James Ward (born Jan. 27, 1843, Hull, Yorkshire, Eng.—died March 4, 1925, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire) was a philosopher and psychologist who exerted a major influence on the development of psychology in Great Britain.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. James E. Ward Jr. is a pastor, author, visionary, and entrepreneur who has emerged as a mainstream, conscionable voice of spiritual and moral truth. James has affectionately become known as America’s Zero Victim Pastor and leading expert on the subject of Zero Victim thinking.

  3. Jul 18, 2009 · The philosophy of the Cambridge Professor James Ward (1843–1925)—now a largely forgotten figure but once a very respected thinker—is an attempt at overcoming these difficulties by combining the idealistic standpoint with a pluralistic metaphysics.

  4. James Ward (1843-1925) was an English psychologist and philosopher who exerted a major influence on the development of psychology in Great Britain.

  5. (1843–1925) English philosopher of mind, who established first psychology laboratory in Cambridge. An opponent of mechanical associationist psychology, Ward instead highlighted the active powers of the mind, including will and attention. He was the first to hold the Cambridge chair later occupied by Moore and Wittgenstein.

  6. BY the death of Dr. James Ward, Cambridge has lost one of its most distinguished teachers and British philosophy a man who by general acknowledgment was, along with the late Mr. F. H....

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  8. The philosophy of the Cambridge Professor James Ward, now a largely forgotten figure but once a very respected thinker, is one of the most significant attempts made in that period to combine the idealistic standpoint with a pluralistic metaphysics.