July 21, 2016
Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Behavioral Engineer
Dear Reader,
This is my thirty-sixth response to
“Epistemological Barriers to Radical Behaviorism” by Donohue et al. (1998). I
enjoy quoting Skinner as his words really help me to explain the distinction
between Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB) and Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB) to you.
“The
practical problem in continuing the struggle for freedom and dignity is not to
destroy controlling forces but to change them, to create a
world in which
people will achieve far more than they ever have achieved before in art, music,
literature, science, technology, and above all in the enjoyment of life”
(Skinner, 1975, p. 47).
If Skinner had
known SVB he would, of course, have never said this. SVB is the absence of any
kind of struggle. As long as our conversation is based on struggle, we produce
NVB. It doesn’t really matter what we are struggling for. Although I know what
Skinner is referring to and agree with his insistence on considering the environmental
variables that cause our behavior, I think that “the practical problem” is our way
of talking in which we struggle to get the attention, that is, NVB.
SVB is
possible due to different “controlling forces.” It is the sound of the voice of
the speaker which either sets the stage for SVB or NVB. Unless we pay attention
to how we sound while we speak, we will only be able to hypothesize about creating
“a world in which people will achieve far more than they ever have achieved
before in art, music, literature, science, technology, and above all in the enjoyment
of life.”
Skinner’s way
of talking demonstrates he means what he says as he is having much more SVB
than anybody else. As far as I can tell, he refuses to engage in NVB and
considers it a total waste of his time. Although I am well aware of its
negative consequences, I don’t think that my involvement in NVB has been a
waste of time. To the contrary, it has made me long for another way of
communicating. The problems with my authoritarian father have made me discover the difference between SVB, non-hierarchical speech and NVB, hierarchical
speech.