Gustav Theodor Fechner (; ; 19 April 1801 – 18 November 1887) was a German
physicist,
philosopher
Philosophy ('love of wisdom' in Ancient Greek) is a systematic study of general and fundamental questions concerning topics like existence, reason, knowledge, Value (ethics and social sciences), value, mind, and language. It is a rational an ...
, and experimental
psychologist
A psychologist is a professional who practices psychology and studies mental states, perceptual, cognitive, emotional, and social processes and behavior. Their work often involves the experimentation, observation, and explanation, interpretatio ...
. A pioneer in
experimental psychology
Experimental psychology is the work done by those who apply Experiment, experimental methods to psychological study and the underlying processes. Experimental psychologists employ Research participant, human participants and Animal testing, anim ...
and founder of
psychophysics (techniques for measuring the
mind), he inspired many 20th-century scientists and philosophers. He is also credited with demonstrating the non-linear relationship between psychological
sensation and the physical intensity of a stimulus via the formula:
, which became known as the
Weber–Fechner law.
Early life and scientific career
Fechner was born at
Groß Särchen, near
Muskau, in
Lower Lusatia, where his father, a maternal uncle, and his paternal grandfather were pastors. His mother, Johanna Dorothea Fechner (b. 1774), née Fischer, also came from a religious family. Some biographers consider, that despite these religious influences, Fechner became an atheist in later life,
while the others says that Fechner had his own religious system as a synthesis of Christianity and paganism.
Fechner's father, Samuel Traugott Fischer Fechner (1765-1806) was free-thinking in many ways, for example by having his children be
vaccinated, teaching them Latin, and being a passionate grower of fruit.
He died unexpectedly in 1806, leaving the family destitute. Fechner had an elder brother,
Eduard Clemens Fechner (1799-1861) and three younger sisters: Emilie, Clementine, and Mathilde. Fechner and his brother were then raised for a few years by his maternal uncle—the pastor, before being reunited with his mother and sisters in
Dresden.
Fechner was educated first at
Sorau (now
Żary in Western
Poland
Poland, officially the Republic of Poland, is a country in Central Europe. It extends from the Baltic Sea in the north to the Sudetes and Carpathian Mountains in the south, bordered by Lithuania and Russia to the northeast, Belarus and Ukrai ...
).
In 1817 Fechner studied medicine for six months at the in
Dresden and from 1818 at the
University of Leipzig, the city in which he spent the rest of his life. He earned his PhD from Leipzig in 1823.
In 1834 he was appointed professor of
physics
Physics is the scientific study of matter, its Elementary particle, fundamental constituents, its motion and behavior through space and time, and the related entities of energy and force. "Physical science is that department of knowledge whi ...
at Leipzig. But in 1839, he injured his eyes in the research on afterimages by gazing at the Sun through colored glasses, while studying the phenomena of color and
vision, and, after much suffering, resigned. Subsequently, recovering, he turned to the study of the
mind and its relations with the body, giving public lectures on the subjects dealt with in his books.
Whilst lying in bed, Fechner had an insight into the relationship between mental sensations and material sensations. This insight proved to be significant in the development of psychology as there was now a quantitative relationship between the mental and physical worlds.
Contributions
Fechner published chemical and physical papers, and translated chemical works by
Jean-Baptiste Biot and
Louis Jacques Thénard from
French. He also wrote several poems and humorous pieces, such as the ''Vergleichende Anatomie der Engel'' (1825), written under the pseudonym of "Dr. Mises."
Elemente der Psychophysik
Fechner's epoch-making work was his ''Elemente der Psychophysik'' (1860). He started from the
monistic thought that bodily facts and conscious facts, though not reducible one to the other, are different sides of one reality. His originality lies in trying to discover an exact mathematical relation between them. The most famous outcome of his inquiries is the law known as ''Fechner's Law'', which may be expressed as follows:
:"In order that the intensity of a sensation may increase in arithmetical progression, the stimulus must increase in geometrical progression."
The law has been found to be immensely useful, but to fail for very faint and for very strong sensations. Within its useful range, Fechner's law is that sensation is a logarithmic function of physical intensity.
S. S. Stevens pointed out that such a law does not account for the fact that perceived relationships among stimuli (e.g., papers coloured black, dark grey, grey, light grey, and white) are unchanged with changes in overall intensity (i.e., in the level of illumination of the papers). He proposed, in his famous
1961 paper entitled "To Honor Fechner and Repeal His Law", that intensity of stimulation is related to perception via a power-law.
Fechner's general formula for getting at the number of units in any sensation is ''S'' = ''c'' log ''R'', where ''S'' stands for the sensation, ''R'' for the stimulus numerically estimated, and ''c'' for a constant that must be separately determined by experiment in each particular order of sensibility. Fechner's reasoning has been criticized on the grounds that although stimuli are composite, sensations are not. "Every sensation," says
William James, "presents itself as an indivisible unit; and it is quite impossible to read any clear meaning into the notion that they are masses of units combined."
The Fechner color effect
In 1838, he also studied the still-mysterious perceptual illusion of what is still called the
Fechner color effect, whereby colors are seen in a moving pattern of black and white. The English journalist and amateur scientist
Charles Benham, in 1894, enabled English-speakers to learn of the effect through the invention of the spinning top that bears his name, Benham's top. Whether Fechner and Benham ever actually met face to face is not known.
The median
In his ''Vorschule der Aesthetik'' (1876) he used the method of extreme ranks for subjective judgements. Two years later he published a paper which developed the notion of the
median and is generally credited with introducing the median into the formal analysis of data.
[Keynes, John Maynard; ''A Treatise on Probability'' (1921), Pt II Ch XVII §5 (p 201).] He later explored
experimental aesthetics and attempted to determine the shapes and dimensions of aesthetically pleasing objects, using as a database the sizes of paintings.
Synesthesia
In 1871, Fechner reported the first empirical survey of coloured letter photisms among 73
synesthetes. His work was followed in the 1880s by that of
Francis Galton.
Corpus callosum split
One of Fechner's speculations about consciousness dealt with brain. During his time, it was known that the brain is bilaterally symmetrical and that there is a deep division between the two halves that are linked by a connecting band of fibers called the
corpus callosum. Fechner speculated that if the
corpus callosum were split, two separate streams of consciousness would result - the mind would become two. Yet, Fechner believed that his theory would never be tested; he was incorrect. During the mid-twentieth century,
Roger Sperry and
Michael Gazzaniga worked on epileptic patients with sectioned corpus callosum and observed that Fechner's idea was correct.
Golden section hypothesis
Fechner constructed ten rectangles with different ratios of width to length and asked numerous observers to choose the "best" and "worst" rectangle shape. He was concerned with the visual appeal of rectangles with different proportions. Participants were explicitly instructed to disregard any associations that they have with the rectangles, e.g. with objects of similar ratios. The rectangles chosen as "best" by the largest number of participants and as "worst" by the fewest participants had a ratio of 0.62 (21:34). This ratio is known as the "golden section" (or
golden ratio) and referred to the ratio of a rectangle's width to length that is most appealing to the eye.
Carl Stumpf was a participant in this study.
However, there has been some ongoing dispute on the experiment itself, as the fact that Fechner deliberately discarded results of the study ill-fitting to his needs became known, with many mathematicians, including
Mario Livio, refuting the result of the experiment.
The two-piece normal distribution
In his posthumously published ''Kollektivmasslehre'' (1897), Fechner introduced the Zweiseitige Gauss'sche Gesetz or
two-piece normal distribution, to accommodate the asymmetries he had observed in empirical frequency distributions in many fields. The distribution has been independently rediscovered by several authors working in different fields.
Fechner's paradox
In 1861, Fechner reported that if he looked at a light with a darkened piece of glass over one eye then closed that eye, the light appeared to become brighter, even though less light was coming into his eyes.
[Levelt, W. J. M. (1965). Binocular brightness averaging and contour information. British Journal of Psychology, 56, 1-13. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.2044-8295.1965.tb00939.x] This phenomenon has come to be called Fechner's paradox. It has been the subject of numerous research papers, including in the 2000s. It occurs because the perceived brightness of the light with both eyes open is similar to the average brightness of each light viewed with one eye.
Influence
Fechner, along with
Wilhelm Wundt and
Hermann von Helmholtz, is recognized as one of the founders of modern experimental
psychology
Psychology is the scientific study of mind and behavior. Its subject matter includes the behavior of humans and nonhumans, both consciousness, conscious and Unconscious mind, unconscious phenomena, and mental processes such as thoughts, feel ...
. His clearest contribution was the demonstration that because the mind was susceptible to measurement and mathematical treatment, psychology had the potential to become a quantified science. Theorists such as
Immanuel Kant
Immanuel Kant (born Emanuel Kant; 22 April 1724 – 12 February 1804) was a German Philosophy, philosopher and one of the central Age of Enlightenment, Enlightenment thinkers. Born in Königsberg, Kant's comprehensive and systematic works ...
had long stated that this was impossible, and that therefore, a science of psychology was also impossible.
Though he had a vast influence on
psychophysics, the actual disciples of his general philosophy were few.
Ernst Mach was inspired by his work on psychophysics.
William James also admired his work: in 1904, he wrote an admiring introduction to the English translation of Fechner's ''Büchlein vom Leben nach dem Tode'' (''Little Book of Life After Death'').
The composer
Gustav Mahler read Fechner as a student, and he identified with Fechner when writing his
Second Symphony, his
Third, and
Das Lied von der Erde.
Furthermore, he influenced
Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud ( ; ; born Sigismund Schlomo Freud; 6 May 1856 – 23 September 1939) was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, a clinical method for evaluating and treating psychopathology, pathologies seen as originating fro ...
, who refers to Fechner when introducing the concept of psychic locality in his ''The Interpretation of Dreams'' that he illustrates with the microscope-metaphor.
Fechner's world concept was highly
animistic. He felt the thrill of life everywhere, in plants, earth, stars, the total universe. Fechner was a panpsychist; he viewed the entire universe as being inwardly alive and consciously animated, instead of being dead “stuff” as accepted by most of his contemporary colleagues, who had become devotees to what was becoming known as material science. Yet he based his panpsychism on a well thought out description of consciousness as waves. He believed that human beings stand midway between the souls of plants and the souls of stars, who are angels. God, the soul of the universe, must be conceived as having an existence analogous to human beings. Natural laws are just the modes of the unfolding of God's perfection. In his last work Fechner, aged but full of hope, contrasts this joyous "daylight view" of the world with the dead, dreary "night view" of
materialism
Materialism is a form of monism, philosophical monism according to which matter is the fundamental Substance theory, substance in nature, and all things, including mind, mental states and consciousness, are results of material interactions. Acco ...
. Fechner's work in
aesthetics is also important. He conducted experiments to show that certain abstract forms and proportions are naturally pleasing to our senses, and gave some new illustrations of the working of aesthetic association.
Charles Hartshorne saw him as a predecessor on his and
Alfred North Whitehead's philosophy and regretted that Fechner's philosophical work had been neglected for so long.
Fechner's position in reference to predecessors and contemporaries is not very sharply defined. He was remotely a disciple of
Schelling,
learned much from
Baruch Spinoza,
G. W. Leibniz,
Johann Friedrich Herbart,
Arthur Schopenhauer, and
Christian Hermann Weisse, and decidedly rejected
G. W. F. Hegel
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (27 August 1770 – 14 November 1831) was a 19th-century German idealism, German idealist. His influence extends across a wide range of topics from metaphysical issues in epistemology and ontology, to political phi ...
and the
monadism of
Rudolf Hermann Lotze.
Fechner's work continues to have an influence on modern science, inspiring continued exploration of human perceptual abilities by researchers such as
Jan Koenderink,
Farley Norman,
David Heeger, and others.
Honours
Fechner Crater
In 1970, the
International Astronomical Union named the
Fechner crater on the far side of the Moon after Fechner.
Fechner Day
In 1985 the International Society for Psychophysics called its annual conference ''Fechner Day''. The conference is now scheduled to include 22 October to allow psychophysicists to celebrate the anniversary of Fechner's waking up on that day in 1850 with a new approach into how to study the mind. Fechner Day runs annually with the 2021 Fechner Day being the 37th. It is organized annually, by a different academic host each year.
During the pandemic resulting from COVID-19, Fechner Day was held online in 2020 and 2021.
Family and later life
Little is known of Fechner's later years, nor of the circumstances, cause, and manner of his death.
Fechner was the brother of painter
Eduard Clemens Fechner and of Clementine Wieck Fechner, who was the stepmother of
Clara Wieck when Clementine became her father
Friedrich Wieck's second wife.
Works
* ''Praemissae ad theoriam organismi generalem'' ("Advances in the general theory of organisms") (1823).
* (Dr. Mises) ''Stapelia mixta'' (1824)
Internet Archive (Harvard)* ''Resultate der bis jetzt unternommenen Pflanzenanalysen'' ("Results of plant analyses undertaken to date") (1829)
Internet Archive (Stanford)* ''Maassbestimmungen über die galvanische Kette'' (1831).
* (Dr. Mises) ''Schutzmittel für die Cholera'' ("Protective equipment for cholera") (1832)
Google (Harvard)�
Google (UWisc)* ''Repertorium der Experimentalphysik'' (1832). 3 volumes.
**
Volume 1Internet Archive (NYPL)�
Internet Archive (Oxford)**
Volume 2Internet Archive (NYPL)�
Internet Archive (Oxford)**
Volume 3Internet Archive (NYPL)�
Internet Archive (Oxford)* (ed.) ''Das Hauslexicon. Vollständiges Handbuch praktischer Lebenskenntnisse für alle Stände'' (1834–38). 8 volumes.
* ''Das Büchlein vom Leben nach dem Tode'' (1836).
6th ed., 1906
Internet Archive (Harvard)�
Internet Archive (NYPL)** ''On Life After Death'' (1882)
Google (Oxford)�
IA (UToronto)2nd ed., 1906
Internet Archive (UMich)3rd ed., 1914
IA (UIllinois)** ''The Little Book of Life After Death'' (1904)
IA (UToronto)1905
Internet Archive (UCal)�
IA (Ucal)�
IA (UToronto)* (Dr. Mises) ''Gedichte'' (1841)
Internet Archive (Oxford)* ''Ueber das höchste Gut'' ("Concerning the Highest Good") (1846)
Internet Archive (Stanford)* (Dr. Mises) ''Nanna oder über das Seelenleben der Pflanzen'' (1848).
2nd ed., 1899.
3rd ed., 1903
Internet Archive (UMich)4th ed., 1908
Internet Archive (Harvard)* ''Zend-Avesta oder über die Dinge des Himmels und des Jenseits'' (1851). 3 volumes.
3rd ed., 1906
Google (Harvard)* ''Ueber die physikalische und philosophische Atomenlehre'' (1855).
2nd ed., 1864
Internet Archive (Stanford)* ''Professor Schleiden und der Mond'' (1856)
Google (UMich)* ''Elemente der Psychophysik'' (1860). 2 volumes.
Volume 1Google (ULausanne)Volume 2Internet Archive (NYPL)* ''Ueber die Seelenfrage'' ("Concerning the Soul") (1861)
Internet Archive (NYPL)�
Internet Archive (UCal)�
Internet Archive (UMich)2nd ed., 1907
Google (Harvard)* ''Die drei Motive und Gründe des Glaubens'' ("The three motives and reasons of faith") (1863)
Google (Harvard)�
Internet Archive (NYPL)* ''Einige Ideen zur Schöpfungs- und Entwickelungsgeschichte der Organismen'' (1873)
Internet Archive (UMich)* (Dr. Mises) ''
Kleine Schriften'' (1875)
Internet Archive (UMich)* ''Erinnerungen an die letzen Tage der Odlehre und ihres Urhebers'' (1876)
Google (Harvard)* ''Vorschule der Aesthetik'' (1876). 2 Volumes
Internet Archive (Harvard)* ''In Sachen der Psychophysik'' (1877)
Internet Archive (Stanford)* ''Die Tagesansicht gegenüber der Nachtansicht'' (1879)
Google (Oxford)2nd ed., 1904
Internet Archive (Stanford)* ''Revision der Hauptpuncte der Psychophysik'' (1882)
Internet Archive (Harvard)*''Kollektivmasslehre'' (1897)
Internet Archive (NYPL)
References
Further reading
* Heidelberger, M. (2001), "Gustav Theodor Fechner" in ''Statisticians of the Centuries'' (ed.
C. C. Heyde E. Seneta) pp. 142–147. New York:
Springer Verlag, 2001.
* Heidelberger, M. (2004), ''Nature From Within: Gustav Theodor Fechner and his Psychophysical Worldview'' (trans. Cynthia Klohr), Pittsburgh, PA:
University of Pittsburgh Press, 2004.
* Robinson, David K. (2010), "Gustav Fechner: 150 years of Elemente der Psychophysik", in ''History of Psychology'', Vol 13(4), Nov 2010, pp. 409–410
APA PsycNet* Stigler, Stephen M. (1986), ''The History of Statistics: The Measurement of Uncertainty before 1900'', Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, pp. 242–254.
External links
*
*
*
William James on Fechner* Works o
Gustav Theodor Fechnerat Projekt Gutenberg-DE. (German)
* Excerpt fro
''Elements of Psychophysics''from the Classics in the History of Psychology website.
* Robert H. Wozniak'
Biography, bibliography and digitized sourcesin the
Virtual Laboratory of the
Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
* Granville Stanley 191
''Founders of modern psychology''p. 125ff archive.org
* Gustav Theodor Fechner 190
''The Little Book of Life after Death''Foreword by William James
* Gustav Theodor Fechner 190
''The Living Word''at statprob.com
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fechner, Gustav
1801 births
1887 deaths
People from Żary County
German atheists
German Christians
German statisticians
German psychologists
Experimental psychologists
People from the Province of Silesia
Leipzig University alumni
Academic staff of Leipzig University
People educated at the Kreuzschule
19th-century German mathematicians
Panpsychism
Plant intelligence writers
Quantitative psychologists