B.F. Skinner
American psychologist Burrhus Frederic Skinner, or B.F. Skinner, was a strong critic of Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytical approach to psychology. Skinner believed that studying the unconscious mind was a waste of time to finding out why a person acted a certain way and that only what a person actually did mattered. Greatly influenced by behaviorists John B. Watson and Ivan Pavlov, Skinner also concentrated on observable behaviors that could be explained scientifically.
B.F. Skinner developed radical behavioralism, a subcategory of behavioralism. Radical behaviorism is the belief that everything that a person does is a behavior, including their thoughts and feelings. He also established operant conditioning to contrast classical conditioning. Operant conditioning was based on the idea that a person will behave a certain way according to the consequences associated with that behavior, such as reinforcements or punishments. The consequence will determine whether or not......
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