“IT IS NOT ELEMENTARY, MY DEAR WATSON”: THE STRANGE LEGACY OF THE BEHAVIORIST MANIFESTO

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M. JACKSON MARR

Abstract

J. B. Watson’s “Psychology as a Behaviorist Views It” marks its centennial in 2013. It is commonly recognized as the birth of behaviorism, a perspective in various forms to dominate theory and experiment in American psychology for the subsequent 50 years or so and still very much alive. What is not so clear in the light of both history and the substance of Watson’s behaviorism is why he is considered the founder of this movement. While a current assessment of Watson’s manifesto might be subject to a charge of whiggishness, in fact, well before and certainly during Watson’s career as a spokesman for behaviorism others had much more sophisticated behaviorist views, some of which are reflected in modern formulations. Watson’s naïve behaviorism however, was to be considered by many, especially those outside the experimental psychologist community, as the behaviorism, with decidedly negative impact that continues to the present day.

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How to Cite
MARR, M. J. (2013). “IT IS NOT ELEMENTARY, MY DEAR WATSON”: THE STRANGE LEGACY OF THE BEHAVIORIST MANIFESTO. Mexican Journal of Behavior Analysis, 39(2). https://doi.org/10.5514/rmac.v39.i2.63917