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Verbal Behavior
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==Functional analysis== {{Psychology sidebar}} Skinner's ''Verbal Behavior'' also introduced the [[autoclitic]] and six elementary operants: mand, tact, audience relation, echoic, textual, and intraverbal.<ref>{{Cite book |first=Burrhus Frederick |last=Skinner |title=Verbal Behavior |author-link=B.F. Skinner |place=Acton, MA |publisher=Copley Publishing Group |year=1957 |isbn=978-1-58390-021-5}} from the foreword by Jack Michael, p. ix</ref> For Skinner, the proper object of study is ''behavior itself'', analyzed without reference to hypothetical (mental) structures, but rather with reference to the functional relationships of the behavior in the environment in which it occurs. This analysis extends [[Ernst Mach]]'s pragmatic inductive position in physics, and extends even further a disinclination towards hypothesis-making and testing.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Skinner |first=B.F. |year=1950 |title=Are Theories of Learning Necessary? |journal=Psychological Review |volume=57 |issue=4 |pages=193β216 |doi=10.1037/h0054367 |pmid=15440996 |url=http://psychclassics.yorku.ca/Skinner/Theories/|url-access=subscription }}</ref> ''Verbal Behavior'' is divided into 5 parts with 19 chapters.<ref name="Chiesa 2004"/><ref>{{Cite book |first=William |last=Baum |title=Understanding Behaviorism: Behavior, Culture, and Evolution |place=Malden, MA |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-4051-1262-8}}</ref> The first chapter sets the stage for this work, a functional analysis of verbal behavior. Skinner presents verbal behavior as a function of controlling consequences and stimuli, not as the product of a special inherent capacity. Neither does he ask us to be satisfied with simply describing the structure, or patterns, of behavior. Skinner deals with some alternative, traditional formulations, and moves on to his own functional position.
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