K
KESSEN, WILLIAM (1925–1999)
William Kessen was born in Key West, Florida, in
- Kessen’s many honors included memberships
in the Society of Experimental Psychologists and the
American Academy of Arts of Sciences. The only child
of a ship’s engineer and a homemaker, his journey to-
ward Yale began as a bespectacled youth who de-
clared himself a Roosevelt liberal. The first in his
family to attend college, Kessen entered the Universi-
ty of Florida in 1941 to study history and acting.
Drafted into the war when he was eighteen, Kessen
served as a clerk-typist and read voraciously during
his thirty-four months of service. After the war, and
supported by the GI Bill, Kessen completed his un-
dergraduate degree in psychology at the University of
Florida. On his shifting interests toward psychology,
Kessen wrote that he ‘‘became convinced that the ills
of the world were not to be tackled by legal or histori-
cal strategies, but by empirical and psychological
ones’’ (1991, p. 287). Kessen went on to Brown Uni-
versity to pursue masters and doctoral degrees with
Gregory Kimble, who remains a leading expert on
classical conditioning. At Brown, Kessen met his ‘‘best
and truest friend,’’ Marion Lord. They fell in love and
married in 1950. Following Kimble to Yale, Kessen’s
1952 fifteen-page dissertation entitled ‘‘Response
Strength and Conditioned Stimulus Intensity’’ was
carried out in the tradition of the eminent behavioral
psychologist Clark Hull.
During his graduate tenure at Yale, many promi-
nent social scientists, including Neal Miller, John
Dollard, and Robert Sears, joined in an effort to inte-
grate Ivan Pavlov and Sigmund Freud by transform-
ing Freudian concepts into a behaviorist framework.
At the same time, psychoanalyst Kaethe Maria Wolf
came to the Yale Child Study Center after having
worked with developmental psychologists Charlotte
Buehler and Jean Piaget. Large and powerful ideas
surrounded Kessen when he chose to do postdoctoral
work with Wolf. She introduced Kessen to the com-
plexities of Freud and Piaget during the heyday of be-
haviorism before her untimely death in 1957. In the
years to come, Kessen would pursue at least three dis-
tinct paths in psychology—all broke new ground and
generated young colleagues. Immediately after his
doctorate and with the first stirrings from the cogni-
tive revolution, Kessen turned from rats to babies,
first probing their earliest sensory and perceptual de-
velopment, and later their changing place in culture
and history. Kessen created and maintained a presti-
gious infant laboratory from the 1950s through the
1970s. He and many widely recognized students did
pioneering studies of the visual development of
human babies, focusing much on infant eye move-
ments in response to different shapes, colors, and
sizes. Studies of olfactory and taste preferences of
young babies also left their marks in the literature. As
time passed, questions of structure and context of
child development grew more pressing. His ‘‘histori-
co-conceptual’’ line was never far from sight.
In 1959 Kessen, together with his other lifelong
friend, George Mandler, published a philosophical
treatise The Language of Psychology. It was a deep and
223