Why it is crucial to understand thinking and feeling: An analysis and application to drug abuse
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Authors
Wilson, KG
Hayes, Steven C.
Issue Date
2000
Type
Citation
Language
Keywords
alcoholism , bidirectionality , cognition , derived stimulus relations , emotion , private events , relational frame theory , self-awareness , substance abuse , verbal behavior
Alternative Title
Abstract
Behavior analysis has long accepted the legitimacy of the analysis of private events in a natural science of behavior. However the topic has languished as a focus of empirical research in either applied or basic arenas. We argue that recent empirical work examining the bidirectional nature of verbal relations may shed light on the role of private events in complex human behavior. Skinner argued that although it would be possible to analyze private events, we need nor, because thoughts and feelings were viewed as co-occuring products of the same contingencies that are responsible for changes in overt responses. However, the bidirectional transformation of stimulus function inherent in verbal behavior changes the way that private events participate in complex behavioral episodes for verbal organisms. We examine why we have reached such a conclusion, with special emphasis on the role of self-awareness. Finally, we conclude with an application of our analysis to the problem of substance abuse.
Description
Citation
Publisher
License
In Copyright
Journal
Volume
Issue
PubMed ID
DOI
ISSN
0738-6729
