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Contents
Von Osten's Horse, Hamlet's Question, and the Mechanistic View of Causality: Implications for a Post-Crisis Social Psychology
Ralph L. Rosnow, Temple University
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, Number 3, Pages 319–337, ISSN 0271–0137
Every science subsumes within it
hidden assumptions that, while not empirical in nature, give meaning
to empirical relations. Social psychology has borne the brunt
of attacks regarding previously hidden assumptions about the mechanistic
paradigm of empirical science. It appears that the field is undergoing
a gradual shift in orientation , in part as a result of an erosion
of confidence in the old paradigm. This paper attempts to review
aspects of the attacks in order to show how they provoked a reappraisal,
still under way, of the nature of empirical social psychology
and the limits of sociopsychological knowledge. The question is
raised as to whether such a reappraisal might lead to a profoundly
pluralistic social psychology consistent with a more liberalized
definition of empirical science.
Requests for reprints should be sent to R.L. Rosnow,
Department of Psychology,
Temple University,
517 Weiss Hall,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122.
Functionalism and the Definition of Theoretical Terms
Austen Clark, University of Tulsa
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, Number 3, Pages 339–351, ISSN 0271–0137
Advocates of the philosophical thesis known as "functionalism" have recently
proposed a solution to the problem of defining theoretical terms in behavioral science. They claim that such terms are
functionally defined, or defined in terms of the functional role that the term specifies within the theory.
This paper examines two versions of functional definition for theoretical terms. One version is sown to imply that some of
the propositions in a theory are true a priori, solely in virtue of the meaning of the terms within them. Since no part of
a theory can claim such independence from empirical test, that implication is shown to be unacceptable. An alternative
account of functional definition is proposed. It allows one to define theoretical terms without stipulating that any of the
propositions within the theory are true independently of evidence, or true in virtue of the meanings of their terms. This
second account is shown to accord better with features of scientific practice.
Requests for reprints should be sent to Austen Clark, Ph.D.,
Department of Philosophy,
University of Tulsa,
600 South College Avenue,
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74104.
The Theory of "Formative
Causation" and its Implications for Archetypes, Parallel Inventions,
and the "Hundredth Monkey Phenomenon"
Caroline S. Keutzer, University of Oregon
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, Number 3, Pages 353–367, ISSN 0271–0137
The theory of "formative causation,"
proposed by plant physiologist Rupert Sheldrake (1981b) has implications
and explanatory power for a number of hitherto unexplained phenomena:
Jung's concepts of archetypes, synchronicity and the collective
unconscious; the phenomenon of parallel inventions; the resonant
effect of group meditations; Watson's (1979) "Hundredth Monkey
Phenomenon"; the learning of new behavior in untrained animals;
and a host of other physical and biological anomalies. The "formative
causation" hypothesis proposes that all systems are regulated
not only by known energy and material factors but also by invisible
organizing matrices (termed "morphogenetic fields"). The structures
of these fields are derived from the morphogenetic fields associated
with previous similar systems; that is, the morphogenetic fields
of past systems influence subsequent similar systems by a process
called "morphic resonance." Thus this hypothesis proposes that
the characteristic organization of systems depends on influences
that lead to a repetition of the form and patterns of previous
systems. It enables some regularities of nature to be regarded
more as habits than as products of chance, neo-Darwinian evolution,
or Lamarckism. An exposition of the theory is herein presented
and the author attempts to demonstrate the intrinsic compatibility
of the hypothesis with three important, comprehensive, and ascendent
models of reality.
Requests for reprints should be
sent to Carolin S. Keutzer, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, College
of Arts and Sciences, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1227.
Synthesizing the Everyday World
Andrew R. Fuller, The College of Staten Island, C.U.N.Y.
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, Number 3, Pages 369–387, ISSN 0271–0137
James, Heidegger, and Merleau-Ponty
have pointed out the derivative character of the categories of
subject and object into which Western thought has split the primordial
singleness of experience. Taking its lead from these thinkers,
but also from Husserl and Kohler, and proceeding by example-based
description, this investigation explores the place of experience
in the forming of the everyday world. Insight into this world
- a complex, autonomous, and organized world - is a behavior of
discriminating in which parts are brought to organization as worldly
wholes. Such insightful synthesizing occurs on experience's own
level. The world is not outside experience - formed objects do
no exist of and by themselves; and experience is not inside a
subject - the organism is beyond itself in contact with the world
itself. Insight, while a present self-accomplishing, is historically
conditioned both by n ongoing temporal context, and by former
experiences of world-synthesizing: insight is interpreting. In
brief, the everyday world comes to organization in its autonomy
and its complexity in a historically shaped, organizing vision
that of necessity occurs on the level of experience.
Requests for reprints should be sent to Andrew
R. Fuller, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, Sociology, and Anthropology,
College of Staten Island, City University of New York, 715 Ocean
Terrace, Staten Island, New York 10301.
On the Nature of Relationships Involving the Observer and the Observed Phenomenon in Psychology and Physics
Douglas M. Snyder, The Professional School
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, Number 3, Pages 389–400, ISSN 0271–0137
A framework for psychology and
physics is developed with the construct of situation -
based on the indivisible and immediate relationship between an
observed phenomenon and the observer of this phenomenon - as its
foundation. Particular expressions of the objective view, the
strength of which is reflected in the traditional assumption of
a fundamental isolation between psychology and physics, are discussed.
Contemporary dilemmas arising from the maintenance of this view
are presented. These dilemmas are resolved by a thoroughly related
structure in which situations are themselves related to one another,
most importantly, in a simultaneous manner. It is proposed that
empirical study in physics and psychology inherently involves
theoretical circumstances that must be explicitly understood.
Requests for reprints should be sent to Douglas M. Snyder, Ph.D.,
P.O. Box 228,
Berkeley, California 94701.
Homeopathy and Psychiatry
Daphna Slonim, UCLA - Sepulveda V.A.
Medical Center and Kerrin White, McLean Hospital
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, Number 3, Pages 401–410, ISSN 0271–0137
Homeopathy, though unfamiliar
to most mainstream psychiatrists, has relevance to conventional
medicine. It is widely practiced, has a long tradition of research,
and offers one alternative to conventional medicine for disaffected
patients. There are points of potential congruence between homeopathy
and allopathy. Although data supporting efficacy of homeopathic
treatments for mental disorders are limited to clinical reports
and series, this situation obtains for many interventions used
routinely in conventional practice as well. The allopath may do
well to become familiar with such an alternative modality, and
to apply scientific principles in assessing claims for its efficacy.
Requests for reprints should be sent to Daphna
Slonim, M.D., Ward 52A, Psychiatry Department, UCLA-Sepulveda,
VA Medical Center, 16111 Plummer Street, Sepulveda, California
91343.
Book Review >
Names For Things: A Study of Human Learning.
John Macnamara. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 1982.
Reviewed by Michal R. Hughes, The Institute of Mind and Behavior
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, Number 3, Pages 411–418, ISSN 0271–0137
[Note: Early paragraph, no abstract
available.] So far psychologists have failed to deal with what
strikes me as the very real complexities of name learning. "The
aspects that seem most neglected may be surprising when just listed:
reference, meaning hierarchical relations among meanings, the
grammatical category to which names belong (noun) and its subdivision,
proper and common names." (p. vii) To address these issues Macnamara
approaches name learning by synthesizing ideas from philosophy,
linguistics, and psychology with the records of Kieran Macnamara's
language development and with his (and others') empirical testing
of children's language development. His use of this data helps
give some unity to a work which, by its very nature, is broad
in scope and unrefined in its theory. This is not, however, a
fault; rather it is an asset. For while often too much material
and too many ideas are being thrown at the reader, and while these
ideas are frequently not tied one to another, they do present
the reader with a rich vein of information from which to speculate.
And it is from speculation that all great theories derive.
Requests for reprints should be
sent to Michal R. Hughes, The Institute of Mind and Behavior,
PO Box 522, Village Station, New York City, New York 10014.
Book Review >
Journey Through the Dark Woods.
Wayne Burns. Foreward by Alex Comfort. Seattle: The Howe Street Press, 1982.
Reviewed by Steven E. Connelly, Indiana State University.
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, number 3, Pages 413–418 ISSN 0271–0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract available.]
Good teachers of constant threats: to peace of mind, innocence, morality, good taste,
proper behavior, religion, democracy, war efforts, "our way of life," university budgets, administrators,
bad teachers, authority. Especially authority. Good teachers are generally ignored, usually underpaid,
often denied tenure, frequently denied promotion, occasionally vilified, now and then attacked outright, and
too often driven out of education. To the discredit of American education, a number of great and original
thinkers have been ousted from teaching posts - or denied appointments - because they were intellectual
boat-rockers: Albert Einstein, Thorstein Veblen, Bertrand Russell, Ezra Pound, and Theodore Roethke, to
name but a handful. Little wonder "the crisis in American education" is a prase always with us; no wonder
so much big money is spent on paper: constant reports from perpetual commissions, studies upon studies.
American education is in continual crisis. Administrators multiply; mediocrity is rewarded and
encouraged; good teachers dwindle. Idiotic solutions to miseducation are not only taken seriously but
applauded - Indiana's governor recently proposed lengthening the school year for high school students, as if
by extending the inmates' sentences, as if by increasing the number of days of bored incarceration and angry
rebellion, the inmates could be magically transformed into scholars; perhaps kisses will turn them into
royalty. No, the crisis in American education won't be solved quickly, because few politicians and few
administrators (to say nothing of parents) care for a solution that threatens their equilibrium: simply
tolerating good teachers, intellectual boat-rockers, and perhaps eventually rewarding them.
Requests for reprints should be sent to Steven E. Connelly, Ph.D.,
Department of English,
Indiana State University,
Terre Haute, Indiana 47809.
Book Review >
Literacy and Social Development in the West: A Reader.
Harvey J. Graff (Ed.). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981.
Reviewed by Tom Morris, Trent University.
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, number 3, Pages 419–427 ISSN 0271–0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract available.]
People nowadays seem irritated when the word "literacy" enters conversation. It feels as if you've stumbled
over one of those unwieldy words, like sex or culture or power, that barely contain the incomplete historical conflicts
they have been made to carry.
Requests for reprints should be sent to Tom Morris, Ph.D.,
Department of English,
Trent University,
Peterborough, Ontario, Canada.
Book Review >
Mental Images and Their Transformations.
R.N. Shepard and L.A. Cooper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 1982.
Reviewed by Terence Hines, Pace University.
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, number 3, Pages 429–430 ISSN 0271–0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract
available.] Starting in the late 1960's, studies of mental imagery
and mental rotation of those images carried out by Roger Shepard
and his colleagues have probably done more than anything else
to make the study of such internal mental phenomena, once again,
a respectable pursuit for psychologists One example of an elegant
study conducted in this area comes from Cooper and Shepard (1973).
Subjects were shown a single capital letter in block print. They
had to decide whether the letter was in the normal orientation
or reversed in mirror-image fashion. In addition to being normal
or reversed, the stimulus could be presented tilted at various
angles off the vertical. Reaction time for the normal vs. reversed
decision was the dependent measure. The basic finding, since verified
in other studies, was that as the stimulus was tilted more from
the vertical, reaction time increased. Thus, for example, it took
longer to respond to an "R" tilted 120 degrees from the vertical
than to make the identical response to one tilted only 60 degrees
from the vertical. In addition, when the tilt was greater than
180 degrees, reaction time decrease as the tilt approached 360
degrees. That is, reaction time was faster for an "R" tilted 300
degrees than one tilted 240 degrees.
Requests for reprints should be sent to Terence Hines, Ph.D.,
Psychology Department,
Pace University,
Pleasantville, New York 10570.
Book Review >
Dichotomies of Mind.
W. Lowen with Lawrence Miike. New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1982.
Reviewed by Terence Hines, Pace University.
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 1983, Volume 4, number 3, Pages 431–432 ISSN 0271–0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract
available.]The basic thesis of this book is that there are "at
least 16 types of people. Each type of personality has definite
preferences for processing information: (p. 4). The model presented
consists of 1 "capacities," or basic building blocks, each of
which "represents a larger cluster of cooperating brain cells
that, when working together, carry out information-processing
functions." Examples of some "capacities" are "signal," "sign,"
"harmony," and "logic." As might be expected, with 16 "capacities"
and the opportunity for various groupings of these capacities
and interactions between capacities and groups thereof, the model
quickly becomes quite complex. However, the complexity does little
to hide one fundamental point: the model is an absurdity. The
16 capacities have apparently been made up almost totally out
of whole cloth by the author, based on nothing other than subjective
experience. No empirical evidence whatsoever is presented to argue
for the reality of the individual capacities or, in fact, for
any aspect of the model. Astonishingly, the author explicitly
belittles the use of evidence to support his model: "I offer no
validation of the correctness of the model. Correlation studies
bore me and I leave those to others" (p.4).
Requests for reprints should be sent to Terence
Hines, Ph.D., Psychology Department, Pace University, Pleasantville,
New York 10570.
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