Where Can I Read George Herbert Mead On Social Psychology Online?

2025-12-15 20:02:50 261
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3 Answers

Parker
Parker
2025-12-18 23:10:46
Back in my undergrad days, I practically lived in the library chasing Mead's ideas, but online options have gotten way better since then. Open Library (openlibrary.org) lets you borrow digital copies of his key works—just need a free account. For bite-sized bits, search 'George Herbert Mead PDF' on DuckDuckGo; it sometimes digs up syllabi or course packs professors upload.

Pro tip: If you hit a paywall, email the author listed on academia.edu—many scholars will happily share their Mead-related papers for free. And don't sleep on YouTube! Lectures breaking down his 'I vs. Me' concept make great companions to the OG texts. It's wild how much is out there once you start connecting dots between platforms.
Abel
Abel
2025-12-19 05:05:15
Man, I remember hunting down Mead's works online a while back when I was knee-deep in social psych theories for a personal deep dive. His stuff isn't as easy to find as, say, Freud or Jung, but you can snag some gems if you know where to look. Archive.org often has public domain or early editions—try searching for 'Mind, Self, and Society' there. Some university libraries also offer free access to scanned copies if you dig through their open repositories (check places like JSTOR or Project MUSE for excerpts).

For a more modern feel, Google Scholar might surface PDFs of his lectures or essays, though watch out for paywalls. If you're cool with audiobooks, LibriVox has volunteer-read versions of older texts. Honestly, half the fun was stumbling onto obscure forums where academics shared notes—felt like uncovering secret knowledge!
Julian
Julian
2025-12-21 17:12:19
Ugh, the struggle is real—Mead's writing feels like it's everywhere and nowhere online simultaneously. I ended up piecing together his theories through a mix of sources: Scribd occasionally has uploads (though quality varies), and Kindle Unlimited sometimes carries cheap editions of 'The Philosophy of the Present.'

For a quick fix, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy's entry on Mead links to primary texts. And if you're willing to trade ads for access, sites like PDF Drive might surprise you. Honestly? I wound up buying a used paperback after all that—some books just feel better in hand.
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