Friday, June 30, 2017

November 6, 2016



November 6, 2016 

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer

Dear Reader,

Here is my analysis of the results of the American presidential election. Now that Donald Trump is done campaigning with his Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB), he is toning it down in his graceful acceptance speech as the real work must begin. The real work is Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB). Difficult as this may be to accept, the outcome of this election is a victory for SVB. Regardless of what one may feel about his demeanor, he won as he was more authentic than Hillary Clinton.

The majority of Americans is sick and tired of scripted, predetermined and mechanical speech, which is NVB. Trump’s outsider’s, non-political, entertainer’s, unconventional approach won him the election as he was powerful enough to be blatantly himself. In effect, he expresses more SVB than Clinton, who can only pretend to express SVB. Our conflicted and polarized country now demands that we take a closer and more realistic look at how we are actually communicating with each other.

Our technology forces us to look at ourselves and to become aware of ourselves. Although Trump doesn’t know the difference between SVB and NVB, he has the behavioral history that allows him to recognize the difference between authenticity and phoniness. His speech is different from anybody else. He has ‘authentic’ NVB and was chosen for expressing the widespread dissatisfaction with the status quo.

Whether we know it or not, we are in the process of coming to terms with NVB, which has been around since the dawn of men. We cannot engage in ongoing SVB as long as we haven’t explored and understood NVB. This election was NOT about what was said, but about how it was said. How we say things is much more essential to how the speaker is perceived by the listener than we have previously believed. Mankind’s history has definitely been with NVB, but mankind’s future is with SVB.

Thursday, June 29, 2017

November 5, 2016



November 5, 2016 

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer

Dear Reader,

This is my final response to “The Power of the Word May Reside in the Power of Affect” (2007) by Jaak Panksepp. As you can read, my dear reader, this is another paper which I have read which brings a ton of evidence for the distinction between Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB) and Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB). Many, many academics are trying to point out the same thing, but are coming at it from a different angle.

As a behaviorist, I don’t think that additional empirical exploration of the primary processes, which were already carefully investigated by Jaak Panksepp, will be able to dispel the “non-affective cognitivistic thought.” What urgently needs to be identified and stopped is what maintains this thought: our malicious Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB).

It was of course never “our cognitive preconceptions” which “have historically confused and shielded the way toward an evolutionary understanding of language and the associated heights of the human mind,” but it was our way of talking, which was considered to be of a lesser importance than our writings that made us verbally fixated.

Rather than academically arguing about “evolutionary understanding of language” or “the heights of the human mind”, we need Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB) to have healthy harmonious relationships. High rates of NVB signify the breakdown of relationship. “It will be most interesting to see how the epigenetic emergence of language cortex is programmed by our social-emotional encounters, especially those playful secure bases within which mothers coax their children to become affective resonant creatures of culture.” Panksepp indicates safe environments.

Panksepp describes SVB: “to do that well, it was essential for recent brain developments to have retained an implicit understanding, that it is important to speak about the emotional complexities of our lives – the more poetically and musically, the better.”  Our “musical-emotional nature” stimulates SVB, but what loud-mouth morons like Steven Pinker have dismissively described as “cultural cheesecake” only perpetuates NVB.

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

November 4, 2016



November 4, 2016 

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer

Dear Reader,

This is my tenth response to “The Power of the Word May Reside in the Power of Affect” (2007) by Jaak Panksepp. The power of affect can only be revealed as long as there is no aversive stimulation during our interaction. Only during Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB) are we “wise” enough “to recognize that the neocortex, that obligatory processor of linguistic abilities, has no intrinsic power to be conscious on its own.”

In Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB), we falsely assume it is all about what we say and therefore we speak in a disembodied, unconscious, mechanical manner, like talking heads. Indeed, “without the basic attentional, emotional and motivational powers of the non-linguistic subcortical regions, it [the neocortex] would be perpetually asleep.”  

When people are for the first time introduced to the SVB/NVB distinction, they are totally shocked to learn they were unconscious due to their own way of talking; only SVB makes us conscious. NVB “reflects an impoverished understanding of language.” And, NVB makes people “cling to the evolutionary-psychology “dream” (or “nightmare”) that the human cortex contains abundant evolutionarily-honed functional “modules” as opposed to enormous epigenetic potentials.”

I fully agree with Panksepp, who is unknowingly, but correctly, calling the NVB “dream” a “nightmare.” However, it is not only “unlikely”, it is absolutely impossible “that basic learning and conditioning could proceed without affective rewards.” Learning always requires SVB as NVB can’t and doesn’t produce “affective rewards.” Panksepp praises Shanahan for “swimming against the tide of non-affective cognitivistic thought” as he doesn’t yet know how to flow with the SVB stream.

November 3, 2016



November 3, 2016

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer

Dear Reader,

This is my ninth response to “The Power of the Word May Reside in the Power of Affect” (2007) by Jaak Panksepp. This great neuroscientist is unknowingly promoting Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB). “Our urge to speak may be more profoundly linked to social-emotional motivation than our need to promote logical ideas.” Right on! You go Panksepp! And, he states “for most people, speaking remains more of a social emotional act than a propositional-logical one.” A neuroscientist said that!

Although we are not very skilled in arranging environments in which we can engage in ongoing SVB, our brains still want it. Only in safe circumstances do we seem to be functioning properly. Our neurobiology craves SVB, but our environments are so demanding that we can’t help engaging again and again in Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB).

The conundrum of not being able to create a safe environment and again and again engaging in NVB can only be solved if we pay attention to what happens within our own skin. Only when we listen to ourselves while we speak, the speaker will be perceived as his or her own listener.

By synchronizing our own speaking and listening behavior we are no longer dependent on others to produce SVB. In an ideal situation SVB would be supported by our environment, that is, by other speakers who also listen to themselves while they speak, but, as this can only be achieved after we have been introduced to the SVB/NVB distinction while we are speaking, we only have these written words to help us listen to ourselves while we speak. Writings can only help us so much….

Panksepp states “Cognition will never be free from affect; raw emotional feelings arising from ancient neural substrates that are essentially pre-propositional – cognitively objectless. These emotional substrates promote cognitive object-relations optimally through rich emotional experiences.” I think he is referring to SVB and not to NVB. NVB doesn’t promote “cognitive object-relations optimally through rich emotional experiences.” NVB impoverishes our emotional experiences.  

November 2, 2016



November 2, 2016 

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer

Dear Reader,

This is my eight response to “The Power of the Word May Reside in the Power of Affect” (2007) by Jaak Panksepp. “With cortico-cognitive maturation, the diverse emotional-musical communication of infants begin to bifurcate into two seemingly distinct streams” of speech. This demonstrates that “the left hemisphere participates more in defense mechanisms than the right.” Also, this is why “patients with right hemispheric damage, following paralysis of the left side of the body” readily “deny their self-evident paralysis, a clear logical absurdity.”

To deny the existence of one’s own body is a main characteristic of Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB). In NVB communicators see themselves as talking heads. It is hard to put our finger on our body as embodied sound is so easily distracted from that by what we say. As we engage in NVB, we are like those patients with brain damage, who “prefer to confabulate about their lives in” what only seems to be “affectively positive, self-protective ways.” NVB is basically dissociative in nature.

Apparently, our brains work in such a way that “when the left-hemisphere is less grounded in subcortical/right hemispheric emotional “soil”, it becomes more adept at self-serving rationalizations.” Panksepp is getting really very poetic here. In NVB, we talk at each other, but only in Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB) do we talk with each other. The difference between SVB and NVB is in the ‘motivation’ of the speaker.

In SVB, we are always socially-motivated to speak, as the sound of the speaker’s voice has an approach-inducing and connecting quality, but in NVB, our social urges are reflexively inhibited as the voice of the speaker has an aversive, avoidance and escape-eliciting quality. We achieve “social attachment” in SVB and “separation-distress” in NVB.