Friday, March 10, 2017

January 1, 2015



January 1, 2015

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer

By proposing to listen to ourselves while we speak, this writer aims to change the contingency of human interaction. He is not interested in changing the content of our conversation. The content can remain the same, but what he cares about is that the context in which we speak is altered. However, the feedback loop from hearing our own sound will surely change the content of our conversation. It will show that our content cannot stay the same if we pay attention to how we sound. 

We always hear our own sound, but if we listen deliberately, we realize that we can only listen to others to the extent that we are listening to ourselves. In other words, if we ignore self-listening, as we do during Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB), we are only able to pretend that we are listening to others. In Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB), in which we listen to ourselves, we truly listen to others, because we listen to others in the exact same way as we listen to ourselves. Stated differently, in NVB, we listen to others in a different way than we listen to ourselves.  

One way of listening occurs in SVB as a consequence of the verbalizer’s ability to focus on him or herself. Thus, in SVB verbalizer and mediator is one and the same person. However, in SVB verbalizers and mediators are also different people. In SVB mediators understand verbalizers well, because verbalizers do not put pressure on mediators to listen to them. 

Verbalizers who listen to themselves while they speak will change the circumstances in which they speak. Change is brought about by the suggestion of this writer, who, due to his behavioral history knows that this will happen. He has tested this phenomenon over and over. When someone, a verbalizer, switches from not listening to him or herself to listening to him or herself, this verbalizer is going to talk in an entirely different manner. Moreover, both the verbalizer and the mediator(s) will also acknowledge this. In other words, there will be agreement, understanding, validation and reciprocal reinforcement between verbalizer and mediator in SVB about what is said and how it is said. 

The contingency change that occurs in SVB is a result of a behavioral change: listening to ourselves while we speak. Changing our behavior is changing our circumstances.  Yet, behavioral change is not done by some agent, who makes us listen to ourselves. The change that changes the contingency comes about as that part of the environment to which we only individually have access expresses itself. Nobody can express this part for us. The mediator mediates the verbalizer only to the extent that he or she is one with the verbalizer. 

Only to the extent that the mediator is or can be his or her own verbalizer, will the mediator be capable of mediating the verbalizer as another person. This poses two problems: 1) the mediator has never spoken to him or herself as a verbalizer or 2) the verbalizer has never consciously mediated him or herself as a mediator. The first problem is much bigger than the second. There are many more people who have never spoken, who have always just basically only listened, than that there are people who don’t listen, but who speak all the time. Simply stated, most of the talking is supposedly done for us by others. If we take care of the first problem, the second one turns out to be a cover up of the first problem. We have heard so often that listening is the problem, that people just don’t listen, but who is saying this? This is obviously not being said by those who are being listened to, but by those who want to and who demand to be listened to. Those who tell others that they don’t listen seem to have achieved some higher moral ground, but the fact is that they determine the contingency for NVB. 

In SVB we don’t tell each other that we must listen. In SVB listening is not at all the issue. In SVB speaking is the issue or rather, we cannot and do not have SVB because of our lack of speaking. We have for the most part been taught to speak in a NVB manner and to the extent we have been taught to have SVB, we experience constant problems as we find ourselves in environments in which it is impossible to speak the way in which we would like to speak. Consequently, we give up on speaking, we supposedly ‘pick our battles’, but the bottom line is that we stop speaking, as we must protect ourselves from bad consequences.  

Most people speak hesitantly, once they experience the contingency which brings their attention to the distinction between SVB and NVB. It is only after they experience this contingency for half an hour, an hour, two hours or three hours that they begin to lose their hesitation and are sure enough it is okay to speak that way. Repeated trials are necessary before people realize that they actually want SVB and not NVB. Initially, the distinction between SVB and NVB shows in what an upside-down world we actually live: we are conditioned by and familiar with NVB. 

In his book “Running Out of Time” (Ledoux, 2014, p.262) Ledoux states “such bodies are also behaving organisms and, like all organisms, are limited to operantly and respondently conditioned responses that in one way or another change the environmental contingencies on another organism, human or other animal, and these contingency changes bring about change in the other organism’s behavior.”   This author views himself, like Ledoux, not as ”behavior modifier” but as a “contingency engineer.” His challenge in pointing out the SVB/NVB distinction is that he can only point out so much. In order to change the operant and respondent conditioning processes, which maintain NVB, people have to become verbalizers, who recognize and acknowledge themselves as their own mediators. That this is accomplished without any effort demonstrates that it is the absence of some inner agent which makes SVB possible. This absence is experienced as freedom.   

December 31, 2015



December 31, 2015

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer


Dear Students,

Here is my second response to “The Concept of Reinforcement: Explanatory or Descriptive” by Tonneau (2008). The paper doesn’t interest me that much as it is too difficult to understand. If one “phenomenon is properly explained by describing another”, then by describing Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB), the so-called communication in which we dominate, intimidate, manipulate, exploit and alienate each other, we have explained Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB), in which none of these negative things happen.

If Tonneau had understood SVB he would not have written such a tedious paper. This goes for many papers. Most of them were written due to the absence of SVB. Most papers by behaviorists were motivated by an unrecognized longing for SVB, but since they don’t know it is possible, they keep on writing about it. 

Presence of SVB involves absence of Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB) and presence of NVB means absence of SVB. The SVB/NVB distinction can be called circular. Mentalists call behaviorists circular and behaviorists accuse mentalists of being circular. The married couple in the therapy room is constantly arguing; he wants her to listen to him and she wants him to listen to her, but neither one of them is listening to him or herself.   

Most interesting sentence of the paper is “The behaviorist and the mentalist will need to find better indictments against each other than that of circular reasoning.” In NVB we have some kind of “indictments against each other”, but in SVB we simply don’t. I propose for behaviorists and mentalists to have SVB together. 

We are distancing, dissociating from the reality when things are only written and no longer said. Tonneau’s final conclusion just doesn’t cut it. “When encountering a new psychological term, do not ask whether it is descriptive or explanatory. Rather ask, “Descriptive of what?” and “Explanatory with respect to what?” 

SVB and NVB are two easily identifiable and verifiable universal response classes which until now have remained unanalyzed. Why? What SVB describes and explains has remained unknown because our written descriptions and explanations are never the same as our spoken descriptions and explanations. If we would talk with each other, we would find that SVB and NVB really exist. NVB doesn’t prevent SVB, but occurs under entirely different circumstances. Neither the description nor the explanation is important, what matters is whether we are communicating and having SVB or not.

December 30, 2015



December 30, 2015

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer


Dear Students,

Here are some of my comments on “The Concept of Reinforcement: Explanatory or Descriptive” by Tonneau (2008). Philosophical discussions about description versus explanation have been going on since time memorial and will never be resolved by written words. Only spoken communication provides the situation in which we can be attuned to one another. The sound of our voices is a moment-to-moment indication of how our conversation is going. 

During Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB) hair-splitting about whether reinforcement is explanatory or descriptive comes to an end. “Of course, one does not explain a phenomenon (B) by describing it; rather, what one must do in order to explain B is to describe a phenomenon A distinct from B.” The sound produced by the speaker elicits a positive or a negative emotion in the listener. 

The speaker’s voice has an appetitive or an aversive effect on the listener. The speaker produces SVB in the former, but in the latter, he or she produces Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB). Thus, the SVB speaker produces a sound which is different from the NVB speaker. It is by describing the difference between SVB and NVB that these mutually exclusive response classes are explained. 

No matter how well somebody else may be able to describe the SVB/NVB distinction, your own experience explains it best. Only when you listen to yourself while you speak can you sense your experience of both SVB as well as NVB. To get that experience, it doesn’t even matter how well you describe it or explain it, what matters is that you listen to it and hear the sound of it.

You will not have SVB as long as you remain verbally fixated. SVB is not a matter of explaining or describing things exactly, what matters is to hear the sound of your description or your explanations, regardless of how incomplete or inaccurate they may be. It is true that your descriptions and explanations will make more sense to you the more you are able to achieve SVB. 

It will be apparent that none of what you say makes sense to your as long as you keep producing NVB. Whether you produce SVB or NVB is subjectively experienced by you. Your body responds differently to one or the other; it is happy, relaxed, energized and conscious in SVB, but in NVB it feels tense, tired, drained, stressed, agitated and stuck. Moreover, you will find, that is, in retrospect, that during NVB you dissociate from your body. Each time you engage in NVB you disembody your communication, but each time you engage in SVB you really embody what you say.           

Thursday, March 9, 2017

December 29, 2015



December 29, 2015

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer


Dear Students,

This is my final (thirteenth) response to “The Personal Life of the Behavioral Analyst” by D. Bostow (2011). Bostow concludes “My hope is that these words may tip the balance towards behaviors the reader is already inclined to do.” I don’t think that words can or will tip the balance. Besides, I don’t “hope” for anything, I predict and everything I predict comes true. 

My predictions are not grandiose, but scientific. The results have achieved in my classes were as I predicted. So, yes, not words will tip the balance, but the sound our voice will do that. Stated differently, what we say makes more sense because of how we say it. During Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB) there is an alignment between verbal and nonverbal behavior, but in Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB) there is no alignment and we get carried away by what we say, by our verbal fixation

In NVB we disconnect from the nonverbal, from our embodied sound, as we are focused on and obsessed with the content. In academia and in society at large this means that written words have become more important than spoken words. SVB restores the importance of our experience of how we sound while we speak. We already achieve SVB each time we talk with those who love us, care about us, support us, respect us and welcome us. 

SVB isn’t anything new or something we don’t know. However, only a few us are familiar with SVB that goes on for a longer period of time. Not enough is known about the contingency needed to make that possible. We can discover this if we keep on listening to ourselves while we speak. Although contingencies that make this possible come “necessarily from our contact with others”, it is important to recognize that we can have SVB on our own. 

This self-experimentation, talking out loud and listening to our tone of voice while we speak, prepares us for both achieving and maintaining our SVB with others. To the extent that we can have SVB with ourselves we will be able to have it with others. 

“Stimulus control” of our voice is important, but “differential reinforcement gives prior stimuli their power.” We don’t need to wait for others to approve of us and tell us we sound good. Once we hear our own calm voice, we have achieved a behavioral cusp and know this makes social reinforcement possible. SVB develops the “interlocking local contingencies for personal behavior”, which “support our own direct contact with the world.”      

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

December 28, 2015



December 28, 2015

Written by Maximus Peperkamp, M.S. Verbal Engineer


Dear Students,

This is my twelfth response to “The Personal Life of the Behavioral Analyst” by D. Bostow (2011). It doesn’t come out of nowhere that Bostow writes “The task of developing behavioral technologies that reach into the most personal lives of behavior analysts is not an easy one, because scientific rigor requires independent verification of procedures and effects.” 

Anyone who knows the distinction between Sound Verbal Behavior (SVB) and Noxious Verbal Behavior (NVB) immediately realizes that such a remark is the result of being conditioned by NVB. In SVB, the “task of developing behavioral technologies that reach into the most personal lives of behavior analysts” is easy. We are so used to things being difficult, that we distrust anything that is easy. 

Rigorous “Independent verification of procedures and effects” is a matter of verbal behavior. NVB is not up to the task; it is too blunt and too insensitive. Only SVB creates the appropriate scientific conversation. The real issue is NOT “climate change” or “reducing the consumption of nonrenewable resources”, but changing the way in which we talk, because only that can change our other behavior. Our behavior has not changed as we haven’t addressed or explored the NVB which causes and maintains it.

I totally agree with Bostow that we do not “need to wait for a better life to happen; it could be designed using a science of behavior” (Skinner, 1987a, 1987c), but I believe that without the SVB/NVB distinction, Skinner’s science remains incomplete. 

Although many people have tried to refer to SVB and NVB, SVB is NOT about having epiphanies. To the contrary, it is down to earth. Thus, “understanding that behavior does not begin inside of us” didn’t and couldn’t bring us any closer to SVB. It is a matter of whether necessary communication skills are learned.

Many solutions to our problems will come from “contingencies in our personal environment,” but these contingencies will not be accessible to objective scientific scrutiny with NVB. NVB must be controlled before we can have SVB scientific dialogue. With SVB our culture becomes less superstitious and more scientific and will “contrive contingencies” to “support self-management.” I agree with Bostow “It is our personal environment that must be changed”, but I differ with him how to change it. I propose the change from NVB to SVB and have good reason to believe this will generalize to many other behaviors. Bostow may have “given up trying to change a larger world”, but he has NOT discovered SVB.