A blog about problems in the field of psychology and attempts to fix them.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Notes towards a better Radical Behaviorism

I have some notes, and some small sections in several published papers, about better ways to think about radical behaviorism. This material came together for the first time in the introduction to my 'theory of mind' talk at WCALB. I will probably put together a shortened version of that talk for the International Journal of Comparative Psychology, which often publishes focus sessions from the conference. However, I would like to develop the introduction more elaboratly for one of the general psychology outlets, such as American Psychologist, or Perspectives on Psychological Science. Trying to invoke something like the "hard problem" of consciousness (see here, or here), in comparison to the many "easy problems", I claim there is a virtually unknown "strong challenge" of behaviorism, in contrast to the "weak challenges" with which we are all familiar.

The strong challenge, to be explained below, is what originally made behaviorism interesting as an approach, but the field of psychology has almost completely avoided it for the past 100 years. Further, the strong challenge points directly to the long-missing piece of the puzzle in creating a naturalistic, non-dualistic, scientific, psychology. It is for lack of dealing with the strong challenge of behaviorism that cognitive neuroscience is moving (albeit slowly) towards a state of crisis. Here is the gist:

The Weak Challenges

There are two "versions" of behaviorism with which most professional psychologists are familiar, each based around a particular challenge to traditional dualism. The first is methodological behaviorism. The second is Watson-style eliminative behaviorism. 

Methodological behaviorists claim that we need to study behavior because, well heck, that is all we can study. While this is sometimes played off as an agnostic position with respect to the existence of mind, it is not. When you look at the logic, these researchers are dualists, who believe in a separate world of the mind, and agree with the traditional, Cartesian argument that one person cannot study another person's mind. That is, the methodological behaviorist declares psychology a 'science of behavior' only in the process of surrendering to the cruelty of a world in which it is impossible to truly know another person's mind, and resigns himself to making what little progress he can on other fronts. That this dramatically underestimates the problems that dualism creates is a matter for future discussion. Also, it is unclear why a methodological behaviorist would not be fine with people studying their own minds, working towards a sophisticated introspectionist tradition (which I hear rumor Josh Clegg is trying to reinvigorate). While I know this sounds very negative, it is not all bad. Methodological behaviorism is a perfectly fine position for someone to take, if they are interested being a contributing member to the field of psychological research, and are more interested in doing studies that advancing theory. It is only shoddy when it is viewed as a version of behaviorism. This was a position that helped psychologists get through the day between the advent of the behaviorist challenge and the advent of modern neuroimaging. As a philosophical point, it presents a pretty weak argument.

Eliminative behaviorists represent the position most often presented, in the modern literature, during discussions of behaviorism. The position is most strongly associated with John B. Watson, the first public-face of behaviorism. Though this position is often inappropriately referred to as "radical behaviorism", and Skinner is often lumped into this category, those associations are inaccurate. The eliminative behaviorist denies the existence of the mind, of mental stuff or mental processes, completely. If not for the obvious contradiction, someone supporting this position might be tempted to say that all so-called "mental things" are just figments of your imagination. Watson argued that psychology was 'the science of behavior' as a trumpet call with which to lead the troops into a political battle; the declaration was intended to point out the value of the research he and his friends performed, while simultaneously dismissing the research done by others. For Watson, psychology was about the movement of muscles, because there was nothing else that existed. This is a pretty weak argument though, at least by modern standards. There had been materialist philosophers before, much more sophisticated than Watson; and anyone at the start of the 1900's should have know that you can't get very far after denying the existence of mental stuff.

Neither of these positions pose much of a challenge to the traditional conception of psychology. Methodological behaviorism is a good way of letting people get along as usual, so long as at some point in any longer report they admit that they are only studying behavior and, from that, making educated guesses about the mind. Eliminative behaviorism does not present a strong challenge to traditional psychology for three reasons: First, trite as it sounds, people find it hard to believe that they don't believe. Second, people recognize that psychology cannot really be a science of muscle movements, because that is just not what the term psychology means. It would be like saying that you were going to create a new science of chemistry, but only after denying the existence of chemicals. Third, when you boil things down, the eliminative behaviorists argue that a Science of Psychology can not exist, but even the limited successes of the field in the early 1900's demonstrated that a science was possible. Thus, both of these positions offer little challenge to traditional psychology.

The Strong Challenge

The strong challenge of behaviorism is not a claim about what psychology should be, but about what it always has been. The strong challenge comes in the assertion that: The questions we ask about psychological processes are all, when we examine them closely and phrase them with care, questions about behavior. This is not methodological, nor eliminative, it is the claim that mental things exists within patterns of behavior.

In its modern form this position grows out of pragmatism. It was hinted at in the early work of William James, started to blossom in James's later work,and was picked up by E. B. Holt and his students E. C. Tolman and James J. Gibson. Skinner advocated this position much of the time, though not exclusively. Other advocates (I am lead to believe) include Gilbert Ryle, Wittgenstein, and the Australian Realists, Anderson, O'Neil, and Maze. The connection with William James is perhaps most important, as virtually every American psychologist at the turn of the 20th century had been weaned on James's textbooks. Having those works as foundation readied the field for behaviorism.

When the radical behaviorists claim that psychology is the 'science of behavior', they are making a claim about the original, historic domain of the field. Psychology arose as the experimental study of epistemology and phenomenology, the study of knowledge and experience. While knowledge and experience in the abstract, hypothetical sense can't be studied with the methods of science, individual, concrete, acts of knowing or experiencing can be. How does a person know the capital of North Dakota? When does a person experience lights of different intensities as different? How does a person remember nonsense syllables that were on a list he read earlier? These are all tractable problems, and they are all, when you take it down to a concrete case, questions about behavior. To rephrase: Why does a person correctly answer questions about state capitals? Under what circumstances does a person indicate that one light is brighter than another? How does a person correctly identify which nonsense syllables were on a list he read earlier?

This strong challenge is not limited to psychological science, it works equally for applied cases. Pick any single, concrete example of a person with a psychological problem, watch them and wonder about their problem. Ultimately, isn't your question about why they are doing "those things", whatever those things may be? Note, when we talk about what a person is doing, we are not asking questions about low-level muscle contractions. What you see the person doing might be several types of behavior in several different settings, none of which seem very odd on their own. This might include perfectly reasonable seeming behavior that has no connection to events that occurred in the past. For example, a person who reports others starring at her and following her around, which is only odd because you have observed long enough to know that is not happening. In this example, it is a mismatch in the large-scale behavioral pattern, spread over time and space, that causes concern.

Continuing that example... You might object, "No, no, no, my problem is that she is paranoid. I am interested in why she thinks she is being followed. She doesn't just  say she is being followed, she believes it!" My reply is only to point out that we are still dealing with a question about behavior. That she believes she is being followed is that an even wider pattern of her behavior is directed at her not-visible followers. She regularly checks behind her as she walks, she approaches strangers and accuses them of spying on her, she checks her room for surveillance devices each night, etc. Why, you ask, is that larger pattern of behavior happening? 

So, that's it. That is the strong challenge that behaviorism offers to mainstream psychology. Though it is 100 years old, it is a challenge that has not yet been fully realized, nevertheless answered. There are many virtues that radical behaviorism can offer, when conceived in this way, and I will have to write about them another time. I will also need to experiment with other methods of presentation. For now, though, hopefully this gives a flavor for where all this is going.

4 comments:

  1. Sorry for bringing this article back from the dead, but I thought I should read over it properly after you linked me. I think looking at the issues of behaviorism in a similar way to the easy and hard problems of consciousness is a really clever way of dividing up some of the issues. I'm not entirely sure I agree with your description of the 'hard' problem though, where you write:

    "The strong challenge comes in the assertion that: The questions we ask about psychological processes are all, when we examine them closely and phrase them with care, claims about behavior. This is not methodological, nor eliminative, it is the claim that mental things exists within patterns of behavior."

    The first part is accurate in that questions about mental things are questions about behavior, but I don't agree that it's a claim that mental things exist within patterns of behavior.

    The radical behaviorist claim in this area is not that mental things are emergent properties of external behaviors, but that the mental things ARE behaviors. The cognition is a behavior like any other, with causes and effects, and the only difference between that it occurs 'within the skin'.

    The difference is that if we want to study "paranoia" then we can do so by operationalising it as a set of external behaviors, and use them as measures of "paranoia", but the radical behaviorist would suggest that it is wrong to say that displaying behaviors like looking over your shoulder, walking faster, jumping at the sound of footsteps behind you, etc, are the components of paranoia.

    Finding mental things within patterns of behavior would be, I think, closer to analytical/logical behaviorism which suggests that to say someone is "sad" is to say that they are displaying behaviors of sadness (e.g. crying, no interest in activities, saying "I am sad", etc). The objection to this is the 'perfect actor' - someone who performs all of those behaviors but is not sad.

    Sorry if I've misunderstood what you were saying, but those are my thoughts anyway.

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  2. Hmmmm....
    Perhaps I should have said "as patterns of behavior"? I was thinking of the full arrays of behaviors done and circumstances in which they were done, and trying to point out that some patterns in those arrays (but not necessarily all patterns) are what we are talking about (pointing at?, referring to?) when we use mental terms.

    At any rate, I should try to do a post at some point about "operationalizing". From what I can tell, it got into psychology as a degenerate form of pragmatism. The big difference is: Operationalization is often highly arbitrary (the favorite example being defining stress as the number of "fecal boli" a rat deposited in an open field). In contrast, pragmatism demanded deep thinking to identify the full set of consequences of thing of interest, there was nothing arbitrary or simple about it.

    Ah... what could have happened if James had 10 more years... or if Watson hadn't jumped in the middle of things... or if the waves of continental big wigs hadn't come over due to the wars. Sigh.

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  3. Finding mental things within patterns of behavior would be, I think, closer to analytical/logical behaviorism which suggests that to say someone is "sad" is to say that they are displaying behaviors of sadness (e.g. crying, no interest in activities, saying "I am sad", etc). The objection to this is the 'perfect actor' - someone who performs all of those behaviors but is not sad.

    "The perfect actor" probably won't be able to reproduce hormonal responses and neurochemical responses that also contribute to the "state of sadness". These reactions may also be understood as "behavior".

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    Replies
    1. Carlos,
      Sorry for the delayed response. The possibility of a "perfect actor" is not trivial. There are two issues:

      1) Is it possible for a perfect actor to be perfect all the time (i.e., not just for a short window of time)? If not, than I only need to see a wider swath of their behavior to detect the acting.

      2) Is it really possible for us to imagine a "perfect actor" in the sense implied? It is easy enough for me to stand in front of a room and say "Now students, you can all imagine a Perfect Actor, who appeared sad in every detectable way, but was not in fact sad." The students will hear me say that, nod their heads, and the discussion will continue. However, I don't (personally) think that they can imagine such a thing. I suspect that if we really made them stop and try to imagine the Perfect Actor, we would find a clear suspension of disbelief at some point that would make the students uncomfortable with the initial claim that it was such an easy thing to imagine.

      And yes, I would definitely want to include things like hormonal responses as part of behavior, but I think we can still have the discussion without that.

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