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Aping Newtonian physics but ignoring brute facts will not transform Skinnerian psychology into genuine science or useful technology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2005
Abstract:
The proposal to add the behavioral momentum metaphor to Skinnerian psychology and the use of other borrowed physical explanatory concepts such as velocity and inertial mass has only superficial value. The basic problem is that, in contrast to Newtonian physics, the “laws” do not apply to a significant proportion of the phenomena to be explained, and these evidential discrepancies are ignored, rather than being used to modify the scientific explanations and improve technological applications that are based on those explanations.
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- Continuing Commentary
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2004
Footnotes
Commentary onJohn A. Nevin & Randolph C. Grace (2000). Behavioral momentum and the Law of Effect. BBS 23(1):73–130.