Donald Olding Hebb, 22 July 1904 - 20 August 1985

1996 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. 193-204 ◽  

Donald Olding Hebb was born in the small coastal village of Chester Basin, near Lunenberg, Nova Scotia, Canada. He attended Dalhousie University and graduated with a B.A. in English, intending to become a writer. After teaching for several years he enrolled as a part-time graduate student in psychology at McGill University (Montreal) and received an M.A. He then moved to the University of Chicago, where he studied under Karl Lashley. He accompanied Lashley to Harvard the next year, receiving his Ph.D. a year later. After postdoctoral work at Harvard, Hebb was appointed a Fellow of the Montreal Neurological Institute for two years to study the effects of brain operations on intelligence, after which he spent three years as a lecturer and assistant professor at Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario. Hebb was then invited to study emotion in chimpanzees, at the Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology, by Lashley, who had just been appointed Director, and he spent the next five years there. It was during this time that Hebb wrote The organization of behavior (7), a book that was to have an enormous influence on a generation of psychologists and neuroscientists. In 1947 Hebb returned to McGill as Professor of Psychology and became the Chairman of the Department the next year. He remained at McGill until his retirement in 1974, when he returned to his birthplace. He died of heart failure during a hip operation in 1985.

2016 ◽  
Vol 134 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-115
Author(s):  
Brian Hurley

As a graduate student at the University of Chicago in the mid-1950s, Edwin McClellan (1925–2009) translated into English the most famous novel of modern Japan, Kokoro (1914), by Natsume Sōseki. This essay tells the story of how the translation emerged from and appealed to a nascent neoliberal movement that was led by Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992), the Austrian economist who had been McClellan’s dissertation advisor.


1966 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Charles L. Chaney

The Rev. Charles L. Chaney is pastor of the First Baptist Church of Palatine, Illinois, and a graduate student at the University of Chicago Divinity School. Father Jean Danielou is on the faculty of the Paris Institut Catholique.


2005 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 53-59
Author(s):  
R.H. Estey

William P. Fraser, the first Canadian-born plant pathologist-mycologist to be internationally recognized as such, began as an amateur collector of fungi, with emphasis on the plant rusts, while teaching school in his home province, Nova Scotia. He then became a widely acclaimed authority on the rusts and a professional plant pathologist-mycologist. He taught plant pathology and mycology, first at McGill University and then, after an interval as head of the first plant pathology laboratory in Western Canada, at the University of Saskatchewan. Fraser was a Canadian pioneer in research on physiological races of wheat rust; in the culture of heteroecious rust fungi, in forest pathology, and in the study of root and smut diseases of grasses in Western Canada.


Author(s):  
Dougal McNeill

Introduction  Dougal McNeill is a Senior Lecturer, School of English, Film, Theatre, and Media Studies Shintaro Kono is an Associate Professor at Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo. Alistair Murray is a graduate student in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Chicago.


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