May 22, 2015
Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer
Dear Reader,
Today’s writing is my fifth response to “Behaviorism and the Stages of Scientific
Activity” by J. Moore (2010). Although I tried to contact him, Moore has never even responded to me. Yet, he is the one who wrote “Radical behaviorism is concerned about talk
of mental causes and dimensions because such talk is a product of
nonscientific influences (underlining added).”
May be it was because I was
explaining myself in terms of having ‘meditative interaction’ in my previous
writings? However, Moore’s written concern “about talk” is not the same as my involvement with real talk.
This reminds me of the colloquial distinction between SVB and NVB. In the
former people talk with each other,
but in the latter, people talk at each
other. Stated differently, SVB is bi-directional and NVB is uni-directional. It amazes me how
often behaviorist writing, supposedly in an attempt to prevent “reification”,
contain references to things said without giving consideration for the fact that these
written “words can neither literally
create nor change the nature of the things talked about.”
Scholarly emphasis on writing rather than on talking is
based on the false assumption that studying what is written will change
the way in which we talk. Sadly, Skinner’s project of “redefining psychology” was
mainly about writing. He lamented the fact that the science of behavior “inherited a language so infused with
metaphor and implication that it was frequently impossible merely to talk about
behavior without raising the ghosts of dead systems. Worst of all, it carried
on the practice of seeking solution for the problems of behavior elsewhere that
in the behavior itself.” Although he
argued in favor of a science “in which
behavior was taken as a subject matter in its own right, as Watson (1878/1958)
had earlier envisioned it”, he didn’t seek, like I do, solutions for how we
talk “in the behavior
itself.” To the contrary, Skinner himself urged the behaviorist to
seek the “solution for the problems
elsewhere”, that is, in their writings. Later in his career, Skinner stated
“As a philosophy of a science of
behavior, behaviorism calls for probably the most drastic change ever in our
way of thinking about man (underlining added).” He didn’t say‘talking'!
What are the “methods
and instruments needed in the study of behavior?” Are we prevented from advancing more
rapidly toward them, as Skinner believed, because of “the diverting preoccupation with a supposed or real inner life?”
Is mentalism, as Moore believes, a half-baked “third-stage verbal product”, which hasn’t “gone through developmental
verbal processes associated with the first two stages?” We can use our vocal verbal behavior
as our method and we must use our eyes and ears as instruments. Our “diverting preoccupation with an inner life”
is not kept alive by cognitive science, but by our overemphasis on writing and
reading. If we would decide to investigate talking while we talk,
there would be no room for an imaginary inner agent. It is because we
haven’t talked that this inner agent is still there. Really talking means: being
without an inner agent. This is not esoteric, but scientific. Certainly “cognitive psychology is a great hoax and a
fraud”, but regardless of that, most interaction is based on belief in the
inner causation of behavior, that is, most talking is NVB.
As a teacher, but also as a facilitator of hundreds of
seminars, that is, as an experimenter, I have found that “the validation of the experiment is the change in the behavior of the
individual subject, guided by principle or instruction.” My focus has
been and continues to be “manipulations
necessary to confirm the law.” Although SVB has been confirmed over and
over again, I never get tired of it. I am aligned with Bacon, who stated “to know a cause is have the ability to
produce an effect.” I happily consider
myself “homo faber”, a “making human” rather than “homo sapiens”, a “thinking human.” As evidenced by my students, the SVB/NVB
distinction is “practical, productive
knowledge – how to control, make and remake the world.” Moreover, I feel at home in
the USA because my technological theory is aligned with American culture. I
continue a lineage of passionate behavioral engineers, who are into scientifically
doing something to change the world into a better place.
By instructing people to listen to themselves while they
speak, I bring them “under control of
variables and relations that participate in an event.” By doing so, “participants may better formulate and
refine principles that inform the prediction and control of behavioral events.”
The event I am talking about here is talking. People learn to
discriminate the two subsets of vocal verbal behavior and the conditions in which
these behaviors occur.
As with all behaviorisms, SVB is an inductive practice. “The inductive leap from particulars to
universals” begins with the speaker’s verbal behavior and then it generalizes
to the listener’s response. When it is pointed out to a speaker that he or she
sounds a certain way, that is, when the listener becomes the speaker and then tells
the other speaker how he or she is experiencing this speaker and how he or she is
feeling about him or her, this is often, quite conveniently, pushed
aside as “irrelevant or ad hominem.”
The difference between SVB and NVB is mostly avoided in actual conversation, because,
as Schoenfeld (1969) correctly described
“what is not often pointed out
[in deductively arrived postulates] is to
say where the axioms or postulates come from in the first place.” Moreover, “to
argue that only the ultimate correctness of the postulates is of interest, is
to deny that human behavior is involved.” The difference between SVB and
NVB is not theoretical, as it is about a functional relationship that
involves the speaker and the listener. Once we explore SVB and NVB, we can no
longer hide behind our unscientific, favorite, mentalistic postulates.
SVB and NVB are “behavioral
processes” which “are uniform across
time and place.” These subsets of vocal verbal behavior are on the
continuum of behavior with other species; there is a nonverbal version of SVB
and NVB in nonhumans. Since our phylogenetic development makes our ontogenetic
development (SVB and NVB), possible, it is important to recognize the
environmental variables which effect how we talk. Development of scientific
theory is essentially not very different from our everyday pragmatic efforts to
make sense of our world. Our theory of reality is only as good as the extent to
which we accurately measure the results of our actions. As we research SVB, it will become apparent that “better
outcomes of events”, better results in our conversation, depends not on specific third-stage statements, but on whether SVB was able to
continue. The verbal instructions given by the speaker involve appetitive
stimulation of the listener, who as a speaker maintains SVB, by reinforcing the
other speaker. In conclusion, NVB is my way or the highway, but in SVB
everyone can be a speaker, who is reinforced by the fact that he or she is
listening to him or herself, but who is also being listened to by others. It is
reciprocal reinforcement that makes SVB possible and keeps it going.