GESTALT
Gestalt, from the German gestalt meaning "shape" or "form," is a foundational concept in psychology that emphasizes organized wholes over the mere sum of parts. Emergent in the early 20th century, it developed through the work of Max Wertheimer, Wolfgang Köhler, and Kurt Koffka, who studied how people perceive patterns, motion, and structure. The movement arose in opposition to elementist approaches that analyzed sensory experience by breaking it into discrete components. Its early experiments on apparent motion (the phi phenomenon) helped establish the idea that perception is inherently organized by the mind.
Core ideas of gestalt theory include the laws of perceptual organization: proximity, similarity, continuation, closure, figure-ground
Influence and legacy: The approach shaped research in perception, problem solving, and cognitive psychology, and has