SHAPING OF A BEHAVIORIST (Particulars of My Life, Part 2)

by B. F. Skinner

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Continues Skinner's life story through the crucial years that saw the development of his controversial behaviorist philosophy, his famous experiments with rats and pigeons, the invention of the Skinner Box, and the writing of Walden Two.

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55+ Works 4,939 Members
B. F. Skinner, an American behavioral psychologist, is known for his many contributions to learning theory. His Behavior of Organisms (1938) reports his experiments with the study of reflexes. Walden Two (1949), a utopian novel, describes a planned community in which positive rather than negative reinforcers serve to maintain appropriate behavior; show more the novel stimulated the founding of some experimental communities. In Beyond Freedom and Dignity (1971), Skinner attempted to show that only what he called a technology of behavior could save democracy from the many individual and social problems that plague it. (An early example of this technology is the so-called Skinner box for conditioning a human child.) A teacher at Harvard University from 1948 until his retirement, Skinner was for some the model of the objective scientist, for others the epitome of the heartless behaviorist who would turn people into automatons. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2001

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Biography & Memoir, General Nonfiction, History, Science & Nature, Philosophy
DDC/MDS
150.19Philosophy & psychologyPsychologyEmotions, Relationships, & FamilyTheory And InstructionSystems, schools, viewpoints
LCC
BF109 .S55 .A332Philosophy, Psychology and ReligionPsychologyPsychology

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Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2
ASINs
2