[Granville Stanley].  American philosopher and educator, born at Ashfield, MA; graduated from Williams College (1867); studied at Berlin, Bonn, Heidelberg and Leipsic; lecturer in Harvard and Williams (1876, 1881, 1882), after having spent four years as professor at Antioch College, OH (1872–76); professor of psychology at Johns Hopkins University (1882); president of the (new) Clark University, Worcester, MA (1888); wrote Aspects of German Culture (1881); How to Teach Reading and What to Read in Schools (1887); and numerous sketches in magazines devoted to psychology and pedagogy.