Géza Révész (psychologist)

Hungarian psychologist and musicologist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroHungarian psychologist and musicologist
PlacesHungary
wasPsychologist Musicologist Psychiatrist Educator
Work fieldAcademia Healthcare Music
Gender
Male
Birth9 December 1878, Siófok
Death19 August 1955Amsterdam (aged 76 years)
Family
Children:Judith Révész
The details

Biography

Géza Révész (Siófok, Hungary, 9 December 1878-Amsterdam, Netherlands, 19 August 1955) was a Hungarian-Dutch psychologist, and is regarded as one of the pioneers of European psychology.

Life

Revesz was born in the Siofok, Hungary, a village located on Lake Balaton, where his father owned a famous vineyard. He studied law in Budapest and received his doctorate in 1902, when he finished his dissertation entitled Das Trauerjahr der Witwe.

Revesz continued his studies at various German universities, including in Göttingen. While in Göttingen, he studied psychology with Georg Elias Müller, with whom he completed his doctorate and his thesis Über die vom weiss ausgehende Schwägung of Wirksamkeit farbiger Lichtreize in 1905. During this time, Revesz also became friends with phenomenological psychologists David Katz, Gustav Kafka and Edgar Rubin, who all played a role in the emergence of Gestalt psychology.

In 1906, Revesz returned to Budapest, and went to work at the University of Budapest. He was assistant to the Austrian physiologist Franz Tangl. The late psychologist Imre Hermann was his assistant there. Revesz worked at the university as an experimental psychologist. Initially, he was involved in the hearing. In 1913, he proposed observing pitches for a tweekomponentenmodel. From 1909 to 1915, he studied musical prodigy Ervin Nyiregyházi. Revesz was also a professor of psychology during his time at the University of Budapest.

In 1920, at the invitation of Gerard Heymans, Revesz left Hungary for the Netherlands. At the University of Amsterdam, he was appointed as private teacher and began his research into the sense of touch. Along with Philip Kohnstamm, Revesz ran the psychological-pedagogical laboratory, but this did not last long due to lack of funds.

In 1932, Revesz was awarded a full professorship in the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics at the University of Amsterdam. In that capacity, he was a promoter of Adriaan de Groot. With David Katz, Revesz founded in 1935 the journal Acta Psychologica on. In 1933, he opened his own psychological laboratory, with 40 rooms and an auditorium, which was unprecedented at that time in Europe. He worked there with Philip Kohnstamm, with whom he fled the Netherlands in 1938 because the growing situation in Germany.

Revesz died at the age of 76 in Amsterdam. His work on the psychology of music is still relevant today. The filmmaker/photographer Emile Moerkerken was a staunch supporter of Révész.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.