<P> 2 . Psychology cannot be reduced to physiology . The tools of physiology remain fundamentally insufficient for the task of psychology . Such a project is meaningless "because the interrelations between mental processes would be incomprehensible even if the interrelations between brain processes were as clearly understood as the mechanism of a pocket watch ." </P> <P> 3 . Psychology is concerned with conscious processes . Wundt rejected making subconscious mental processes a topic of scientific psychology for epistemological and methodological reasons . In his day there were, before Sigmund Freud, influential authors such as the philosopher Eduard von Hartmann (1901), who postulated a metaphysics of the unconscious . Wundt had two fundamental objections . He rejected all primarily metaphysically founded psychology and he saw no reliable methodological approach . He also soon revised his initial assumptions about unconscious judgements When Wundt rejects the assumption of "the unconscious" he is also showing his scepticism regarding Fechner's theory of the unconscious and Wundt is perhaps even more greatly influenced by the flood of writing at the time on hypnotism and spiritualism (Wundt, 1879, 1892). While Freud frequently quoted from Wundt's work, Wundt remained sceptical about all hypotheses that operated with the concept of "the unconscious". </P> <P> For Wundt it would be just as much a misunderstanding to define psychology as a behavioural science in the sense of the later concept of strict behaviourism . Numerous behavioural and psychological variables had already been observed or measured at the Leipzig laboratory . Wundt stressed that physiological effects, for example the physiological changes accompanying feelings, were only tools of psychology, as were the physical measurements of stimulus intensity in psychophysics . Further developing these methodological approaches one - sidedly would ultimately, however, lead to a behavioural physiology, i.e. a scientific reductionism, and not to a general psychology and cultural psychology . </P> <P> 4 . Psychology is an empirical humanities science . Wundt was convinced of the triple status of psychology: </P>

The first psychology lab in the u.s. (according to the textbook) was developed by __