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McDowell, J. J. – Behavior Analyst, 2012
Rachlin's teleological behaviorism eliminates the first-person ontology of conscious experience by identifying mental states with extended patterns of behavior, and thereby maintains the materialist ontology of science. An alternate view, informed by brain-based and externalist philosophies of mind, is shown also to maintain the materialist…
Descriptors: Organizational Communication, Phenomenology, Brain, Behaviorism
Rachlin, Howard – Behavior Analyst, 2012
The four commentaries all make excellent points; they are all fair and serve to complement the target article. Because they are also quite diverse, it makes more sense to respond to them individually rather than topically. This article presents the author's response to the comments by McDowell (2012), Schlinger (2012), Hutchison (2012), and Wojcik…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Behaviorism, Stimuli, Computers
Lowe, R. Sandlin, III – Exceptional Parent, 2008
In this article, the author shares his journey with autism which began when his son, David Braxton Hughes Lowe, was diagnosed in September of 2005. It was the confirmation of suspicions that he had had since he was about a year old. As a father and a physician, this was a particularly disheartening sequence of events. Over the next few months, he…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Behavioral Science Research, Autism, Etiology
Mobbs, Dean; Hall, Scott – Behavior Analyst, 2005
This article presents the argument by the authors regarding the article of Uttal (2004), which lays forth several, rightly justified, caveats in the pursuit of elucidating the neural basis of higher cognitive functions using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Adding to the onslaught of criticism from cellular physiologists, Uttal's…
Descriptors: Behavioral Sciences, Brain, Neurology, Cognitive Processes