James Ward (27 January 1843 - 4 March 1925) was an
English psychologist and
philosopher. He was born in
Kingston upon Hull, the eldest of nine children. His father was an unsuccessful merchant. Ward was educated at the
Liverpool Institute and Mostyn House, but his formal schooling ended when his father became bankrupt.
Apprenticed to a
Liverpool architect for four years, Ward studied Greek and logic and was a Sunday School Teacher. In 1863 he entered
Spring Hill College, near
Birmingham, to train for the
Congregationalist ministry. An eccentric and impoverished student, he remained at Spring Hill until 1869, completing his theological studies as well as gaining a
University of London BA degree.
In 1869-70 Ward won a scholarship to Germany, where he attended the lectures of
Isaac Dormer in
Berlin before moving to
Göttingen to study under
Hermann Lotze. On his return to Britain Ward became minister at
Emmanuel Congregational Church in
Cambridge, where his theological liberalism unhappily antagonised his congregation. Sympathetic to Ward's predicament,
Henry Sidgwick encouraged Ward to enter
Cambridge University. Initially a
non-collegiate student, Ward won a scholarship to
Trinity College in 1873, and achieved a first class in the moral sciences tripos in 1874. With a dissertation entitled 'The relation of physiology to psychology', Ward won a Trinity fellowship in 1875. Some of this work,
An interpretation of Fechner's Law, was published in the first...
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