All Stories

  1. John Bulwer (1606–1656) and Some British and French Contemporaries
  2. John Bulwer and the Quest for a Universal Language, 1641–1644
  3. John Bulwer (1606–1656) and the significance of gesture in the 17th-century theories of language and cognition
  4. The Soviet klezmer orchestra
  5. The Noblest Animate Motion: Speech, physiology and medicine in pre-cartesian linguistic thought. By Jeffrey Wollock
  6. The Noblest Animate Motion
  7. The Historical Meaning of the Crisis in Psychology: A Methodological Investigation
  8. John Bulwer’s (1606–1656) place in the history of the Deaf
  9. Communication disorder in renaissance Italy: An unreported case analysis by Hieronymus Mercurialis (1530–1606)
  10. Eric T. Carlson, Jeffrey L. Wollock, and Patricia S. Noel (editors), Benjamin Rush's Lectures on the mind, Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society, 1981, 4to, pp. xix, 735, $15.00.
  11. VIEWS ON THE DECLINE OF APICAL R IN EUROPE: HISTORICAL STUDY
  12. William Thornton and the Practical Applications of New Writing Systems
  13. An articulation disorder in 17th-century Germany
  14. WILLIAM THORNTON, AN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY AMERICAN PSYCHOLINGUIST: BACKGROUND AND INFLUENCE
  15. Hieronymus Mercurialis
  16. 24. Renaissance philosophy: Gesture as universal language