Modern Perspectives on J.R. Kantor and InterbehaviorismModern Perspectives on J.R. Kantor and Interbehaviorism
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eBook, 2006
Current format, eBook, 2006, , See item page for details.eBook, 2006
Current format, eBook, 2006, , See item page for details. Offered in 0 more formats"J. R. Kantor did not achieve the prominence of his contemporaries, however, he established the most naturalistic and conceptually systematic psychology since Aristotle. Today, his interbehavioral psychology is consistent with converging movements in the naturalization of the behavioral, developmental, social, and cognitive sciences. Kantor, his interbehavioral psychology, and these movements are the focus of this text"--Provided by publisher.
"J. R. Kantor did not achieve the prominence of his contemporaries, however, he established the most naturalistic and conceptually systematic psychology since Aristotle. Today, his interbehavioral psychology is consistent with converging movements in thenaturalization of the behavioral, developmental, social, and cognitive sciences. Kantor, his interbehavioral psychology, and these movements are the focus of this text"--Provided by publisher.
Although not as well known as John B. Watson and B.F. Skinner Kantor established a highly naturalistic and conceptually systematic psychology which is highly consistent with today's convergence in the naturalization of behavioral, developmental, social and cognitive sciences. This collection of 12 articles and commentary upon them describe both the foundations of Kantor's concepts of interbehavioralism but also the converging movements. The former include a biographical sketch and work on the evolution of scientific psychology, the interbehavioral field and research. The latter include a survey of the converging movements and studies of developmental systems and psychological science, cognitivism and the schema of "perception-and-cognition," the narrative turn in social psychology, "Q" methodology and naturalistic subjectivity and behavioral analysis. The collection closes with a bibliography of Kantor's published work. Annotation ©2006 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
J. R. Kantor (1888-1984) did not achieve the prominence of his contemporaries, such as John B. Watson and B. F. Skinner. However, he established the most naturalistic and conceptually systematic psychology since Aristotle. Today, his interbehavioral psychology is consistent with converging movements in the naturalization of the behavioral, developmental, social, and cognitive sciences. Kantor, his interbehavioral psychology, and these movements are the focus of this text.
This volume examines the contributions of J.R. Kantor to the field of behavioral science.
"J. R. Kantor did not achieve the prominence of his contemporaries, however, he established the most naturalistic and conceptually systematic psychology since Aristotle. Today, his interbehavioral psychology is consistent with converging movements in thenaturalization of the behavioral, developmental, social, and cognitive sciences. Kantor, his interbehavioral psychology, and these movements are the focus of this text"--Provided by publisher.
Although not as well known as John B. Watson and B.F. Skinner Kantor established a highly naturalistic and conceptually systematic psychology which is highly consistent with today's convergence in the naturalization of behavioral, developmental, social and cognitive sciences. This collection of 12 articles and commentary upon them describe both the foundations of Kantor's concepts of interbehavioralism but also the converging movements. The former include a biographical sketch and work on the evolution of scientific psychology, the interbehavioral field and research. The latter include a survey of the converging movements and studies of developmental systems and psychological science, cognitivism and the schema of "perception-and-cognition," the narrative turn in social psychology, "Q" methodology and naturalistic subjectivity and behavioral analysis. The collection closes with a bibliography of Kantor's published work. Annotation ©2006 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
J. R. Kantor (1888-1984) did not achieve the prominence of his contemporaries, such as John B. Watson and B. F. Skinner. However, he established the most naturalistic and conceptually systematic psychology since Aristotle. Today, his interbehavioral psychology is consistent with converging movements in the naturalization of the behavioral, developmental, social, and cognitive sciences. Kantor, his interbehavioral psychology, and these movements are the focus of this text.
This volume examines the contributions of J.R. Kantor to the field of behavioral science.
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- Reno, NV : Context Press, ©2006.
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