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The Psychology of B F Skinner
- William O'Donohue - University of Nevada, Reno, USA
- Kyle E. Ferguson - Scottish Centre for Social Research, Edinburgh
Other Titles in:
Behavioral
Behavioral
April 2001 | 296 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Behaviourists, or more precisely Skinnerians, commonly consider Skinner's work to have been misrepresented, misunderstood, and to some extent defamed. In this book, the author clarifies the work of B F Skinner, and puts it into historical and philosophical context. Though not a biography, the book discusses Skinner himself, in brief. But the bulk of the book illuminates Skinner's contributions to psychology, his philosophy of science, his experimental research programme (logical positivism) and the behavioural principles that emerged from it, and applied aspects of his work. It also rebuts criticism of Skinner's work, including radical behaviourism, and discusses key developments by others that have derived from it.
As such, the book is a text on behaviourism, rather than on Skinner.
Introduction
B F Skinner
Skinner's Intellectual Influences
Skinner's Philosophy of a Science of Human Behaviour
Operant Conditioning and the Experimental Analysis of Behaviour
Skinner on Cognition
Skinner on Language
Applied Behavior Analysis
B F Skinner
Skinner's Views on Bettering Society
Criticisms of Skinner
Skinner's Legacy
B F Skinner's Published Works
This text has been adopted by Capella University
Harold Abel School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Capella University
July 2, 2014