Wundt was born at Neckarau, Baden on 16 August 1832 He studied from 1851 to 1856 at the University of Tübingen, University of Heidelberg, and the University of Berlin. After graduating in medicine from Heidelberg. In 1858 he University's staff, becoming an assistant to the physicist and physiologist Hermann von Helmholtz. In 1867 he became a professor in acquainting medical students with the exact physical needs for medical investigation and In 1874, he became a professor of "Inductive Philosophy" in Zurich. Later he written pertaining to the field of psychology. Wundt claimed that the book was "an attempt to mark out [psychology]as a new domain of science" The Principles utilized a system of psychology that sought to investigate the immediate experiences of consciousness, including feelings, emotions, volitions and ideas, mainly explored through Wundt's system of "internal perception", or the self-examination of conscious experience by objective observation of one's consciousness. In 1879, at the University of Leipzig,