Thorndike, born in
Williamsburg, Massachusetts was the son of Edward R and Abbie B Thorndike, a Methodist minister in
Lowell, Massachusetts. Thorndike graduated from
The Roxbury Latin School (1891), in West Roxbury, Massachusetts and from
Wesleyan University (B.S. 1895). He earned an M.A. at
Harvard University in 1897. His two brothers (Lynn and Ashley) also became important scholars. The younger,
Lynn, was a
medievalist specializing in the history of science and magic, while the older,
Ashley, was an English professor and noted authority on
Shakespeare. While at Harvard, he was interested in how animals learn (
ethology), and worked with
William James. Afterwards, he became interested in the animal 'man', to the study of which he then devoted his life. Edward's thesis is sometimes thought of as the essential document of modern comparative psychology. Upon graduation, Thorndike returned to his initial interest, educational psychology. In 1898 he completed his PhD at Columbia University under the supervision of
James McKeen Cattell, one of the founding fathers of
psychometrics. In 1899, after a year of unhappy initial employment at the College for Women of Case Western Reserve in
Cleveland, Ohio, he became an instructor in psychology at Teachers College at Columbia University, where he remained for the rest of his career, studying human learning, education, and mental testing. In 1937 Thorndike became the second President of the
Psychometric Society, following in the footsteps of
Louis Leon Thurstone who had established the society and its journal
Psychometrika the previous year. On August 29, 1900, he wed Elizabeth Moulton. They had five children, among them
Frances, who became a mathematician. During the early stages of his career, he purchased a wide tract of land on the Hudson and encouraged other researchers to settle around him. Soon a colony had formed there with him as its 'tribal' chief. ==Connectionism==