Logical BehaviorismSandra LaFave Behaviorism held sway in psychology until the 1960s. The more extreme forms of behaviorism were philosophically on shaky ground from the start. For example, some behaviorists denied the existence of mental events altogether. Philosophers generally found that position a little extreme: it seems obvious that even if I cant be sure anybody else has mental events, I do, and so I cant deny that mental events exist. (Maybe Im the only one who has them, but thats a different problem. Maybe theres no continuous me to have them, but thats yet another problem.) Besides, the behaviorists often didnt really eliminate intentional language at all; they simply substituted less intentional sounding words, e.g., "drive" for "instinct," "food-seeking behavior" for "hunger," "flight behavior" for "fear," etc. Gilbert Ryle (1900-1976), a British philosopher of the "ordinary language" school, tried to remedy these problems. Like the behaviorists, Ryle opposed the Cartesian view. But Ryle, like Aristotle, opted for metaphysical pluralism. Ryle thought there were many ways to be, and that it was silly to claim that something had simply to be either "mental" on the one hand or "physical" on the other with no merging and no in-between. Ryle saw that if you limited yourself to the Cartesian categories, you ended up making category mistakes (like saying, if youre a materialist, that intentions cant exist because theyre "mental"; or if you’re a dualist, that intentional behavior can’t be observed because the intention is "mental"). The root problem is the Cartesian notion of the "mental" as opposed to the "physical." Ryle came up with a new form of behaviorism, which he called logical or philosophical behaviorism. Logical behaviorism was opposed to methodological behaviorism, which was behaviorist psychology’s policy never to use mental events in its "scientific" explanations of behavior. So Ryle did not try to deny the existence of mental events or intentionality; on the contrary, Ryle (following Brentano) said you must use intentional language to understand the behavior of people and higher animals. But according to Ryle, you can take any claim about "the mental" and systematically reformulate it as a set of "if … then" statements (conditionals), where all components (the antecedents and consequents) are observable behaviors. This way you can accept and use mentalistic and intentional language without committing yourself to all the Cartesian spook baggage. Everything that is is publicly; there is one world, for epistemological purposes. But there are many ways to be in that world (metaphysical pluralism). Logical behaviorism and non-intentional states (e.g., sensation) Lets look at how Ryles logical behaviorism would reformulate a statement about a non-intentional "mental" state such as sensation. Lets consider the sensation of pain. According to logical behaviorism, the statement "John is in pain" MEANS the entire set of true conditional statements such as the following: IF THEN The clever idea here is that if our list of conditionals is exhaustive enough, well know exactly what it MEANS to say "John is in pain" without having to acknowledge any spooky invisible feelings, since in all these restatements, the referents of both the "if" clause (the antecedent) and the "then" clause (the consequent) are public and observable. Logical behaviorism and intentional states (e.g., belief) Next lets consider how Ryle would reformulate intentional statements such as "Jill believes it is going to rain". For Ryle statements about belief are statements about dispositions to behave. Those dispositions to behave are just the true conditional statements such as the following: IF THEN Again, the clever idea here is that in all these restatements, the referents of both the "if" clause (the antecedent) and the "then" clause (the consequent) are public and observable, so we know what it MEANS for Jill to believe its going to rain without ever bringing in mysterious subjective private mental events called beliefs. PROBLEMS: Sandy's X10 Host Home Page | Sandy's Google Sites Home Page Questions or comments? sandy_lafave@yahoo.com |