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History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
Lesson
19
BEHAVIORISM
J.B.
Watson (1878-1958)
J.B.Watson
J.B.
Watson is regarded as the founder of the
school of behaviorism. He was born in
1878 and died
in
1958. He began as a student of
philosophy at the University of Chicago,
but later turned to psychology.
He
taught for a number of years at Johns
Hopkins University at Baltimore USA,
where he set up his
animal
laboratories.
Later he shifted to the corporate world and
offered advice to industry relating to
advertising
and
marketing.
Watson
taught that psychology should ignore
consciousness and concentrate on
concrete facts:
psychology.
This was one of the founding principles
of the behaviorists' approach. He further
said that
psychologists
must discard all reference
to consciousness and must
only look at behavior of
animals and
man.
Because of his stress on
behavior to the neglect of consciousness,
he called himself a behaviorist. He
was
the first one to proclaim himself as a behaviorist.
His methodology revolutionized the
subject of
psychology
giving a new outlook to it.
As consciousness was no more
regarded as the concrete method of
gaining
knowledge, therefore, psychology focused
merely on factual evidences
and observable
phenomena
after
the advent of this school. A measure of
how seriously his appeal
was taken by his
professional
colleagues
is that he was elected as the
President of American Psychological
Association.
In
one of his books, entitled
"Behavior," he enumerated what behaviorism is
all about in
psychology.
As the functionalists and the structuralists
had defined psychology as the
study of
consciousness,
Watson defined, as opposed to them,
psychology as the science of behavior.
Behavior of
animals
and humans was in his
view what needed to be studied
for an understanding of psychology.
Furthermore,
Watson asserted that
psychologists should use only objective,
experimental methods
and
should not use introspection as a method.
He said that the aim of the
study of psychology should be to
provide
prediction and control of
behavior. This is the basic
aim of behaviorism. Behaviorists tend
to
develop
methods and techniques to
control and predict human
behavior in order to get the
most out of
them.
Behaviorism emerged in times when the
industrial revolution took
place. At that moment in the
history
of mankind, the focus was on increasing
the productivity of workforce.
44
History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
According
to Watsonian behaviorism, behavior
can be studied in terms of
stimulus-response
patterns.
This means, that a stimulus
is received by organism and it
responds. For example, when
someone
touches
a hot object, he immediately withdraws his hand
from the object. In other words, the
hotness of
the
object serves as the stimulus while the
withdrawing action of the individual is
his or her response to
the
stimulus.
Watson therefore stated that
there is nothing mysterious in this
action and reaction and all of
it
could
be explained in simple physiological
terms.
Watson
denied the value of introspection as
data for psychology but
said that a "verbal
report,"
may
be obtained from the subject after the
experiment. For example, if an individual
is placed in a series of
experiments,
he may then be asked about
the feelings and the emotions that he
faced during the
experiments.
It is different from introspection in the
sense that here the report
is based on the
circumstances
that have been artificially
created for the experiment. Therefore, verbal
report, in view of
Watson
may be a source of information
for psychologists, but he
clearly denied the introspection as
a
means.
One
of the important contributions of Watson
is that in his opinion,
thinking is nothing
but
"implicit
behavior." For example, when an
individual manipulates images in
his mind, thinking takes
place.
The
individual relates these
images together forming an explanation
for the phenomenon that he is trying
to
study.
Therefore thinking is also a
kind of behavior. Watson
agreed with the viewpoint of
Ivan Pavlov
about
learning and said that we
learn according to the laws of
conditioning as given by Pavlov.
Watson
suggested that memory and
images are nothing but
sensory activities in the brain.
This
again
refers to the study of behaviorism as a physiological
phenomenon rather than a mysterious one.
He
said
that the sensory activities of the brain
can be classified as "molecular
behavior."
Watson
further proclaimed that by controlling
the environment of an organism we could
control
and
predict its behavior. This is
known as environmentalism, that organism
is affected by its
environment.
It
is similar to the idea of Tabula
Rasa given by John Locke. According to Locke, the
mind of a new born
baby
is like a clean slate which
is written upon by the surrounding
environment. Watson's contribution
to
psychology
was one of the major developments in the
study of psychology.
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