William Robert BousfieldFRSKC (12 January 1854 – 16 July 1943) was a British lawyer, Conservative politician and scientist.[1][2]
Biography
Bousfield was the son of Edward Tenney Bousfield, an engineer, and his wife Charlotte Eliza Collins, who was a noted diarist. He was born at Newark-on-Trent, from which his family moved to Sticklepath in 1856 and then to Bedford, where they arrived in September 1858.[3]
He attended Bedford Modern School before serving an apprenticeship as an engineer. In 1872 he was admitted to Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, winning a scholarship there in 1873.[4] Following graduation as 16th Wrangler in 1876 and a brief period as a lecturer at the University of Bristol, where he delivered the new institution's first ever lecture (on Mathematics at 9a.m. 10 October 1876), he decided to study law.[5][6] In 1880 he was called to the bar at the Inner Temple. His knowledge of engineering led to him becoming a renowned expert on patent law.[7] He became a Queen's Counsel in 1891 (which office became King's Counsel on the accession of a King in 1901).[7] He was elected a bencher of the Inner Temple in 1897, and treasurer in 1920.[7]
When his health began to fail in the 1920s, he was no longer able to carry out laboratory experiments, and turned his attention to psychology. He wrote three books on the subject: A Neglected Complex (1924), The Mind and its Mechanism (1927) and The Basis of Memory (1928).[1][7] His book The Mind and its Mechanism co-authored with his son Paul Bousfield postulated the existence of a "psychoplasm" which like protoplasm is an essential part of each cell. The psychoplasm is composed of immaterial "psychons" which interact with the physical brain.[16][17] Psychons are described as immeasurably smaller than electrons or protons. The book argued for a psycho-physical interaction. The "psychonic substance" is utilized to explain consciousness, ideas, memory, the unconscious mind and evolution. Bousfield favoured Lamarckian evolution, taking the view that habits become ingrained in the "mental structure" of the organism which influence the psychic structure of the germ plasm.[16]
^Bousfield, Charlotte Eliza (2007). Smart, Richard (ed.). The Bousfield Diaries: A Middle-Class Family in Late Victorian Bedford. Bedfordshire Historical Record Society. pp. xiii–xiv. ISBN978-0-85155-075-6.
^ ab"Reviewed Work: The Mind And Its Mechanism by Paul Bousfield, W. R. Bousfield". The British Medical Journal. 1 (3501): 224–225. 1928. JSTOR25327855.