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Journal ArticleDOI

On a distinction between hypothetical constructs and intervening variables.

Kenneth MacCorquodale, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1948 - 
- Vol. 55, Iss: 2, pp 95-107
TLDR
A distinction is made between two subclasses of intervening variables, or the authors prefer to say, between ‘intervening variables’ and ‘hypothetical constructs’ which they feel is fundamental but is currently being neglected.
Abstract
As the thinking of behavior theorists has become more sophisticated and selfconscious, there has been considerable discussion of the value and logical status of so-called ‘intervening variables.’ Hull speaks of “symbolic constructs, intervening variables, or hypothetical entities” (5, p. 22) and deals with them in his theoretical discussion as being roughly equivalent notions. At least, his exposition does not distinguish among them explicitly. In his presidential address on behavior at a choice point, Tolman inserts one of Hull’s serial conditioning diagrams (11, p. 13) between the independent variables (maintenance schedule, goal object, etc.) and the dependent variable (‘behavior ratio’) to illustrate his concept of the intervening variable. This would seem to imply that Tolman views his ‘intervening variables’ as of the same character as Hull’s. In view of this, it is somewhat surprising to discover that Skinner apparently feels that his formulations have a close affinity to those of Tolman, but are basically dissimilar to those of Hull (10, p. 436, 437). In advocating a theoretical structure which is ‘descriptive’ and ‘positivistic,’ he suggests that the model chosen by Hull (Newtonian mechanics) is not the most suitable model for purposes of behavior theory; and in general is critical of the whole postulate-deductive approach. Simultaneously with these trends, one can still observe among ‘tough-minded’ psychologists the use of words such as ‘unobservable’ and ‘hypothetical’ in an essentially derogatory manner, and an almost compulsive fear of passing beyond the direct colligation of observable data. ‘Fictions’ and ‘hypothetical entities’ are sometimes introduced into a discussion of theory with a degree of trepidation and apology quite unlike the freedom with which physicists talk about atoms, mesons, fields, and the like. There also seems to be a tendency to treat all hypothetical constructs as on the same footing merely because they are hypothetical; so that we find people arguing that if neutrons are admissible in physics, it must be admissible for us to talk about, e.g., the damming up of libido and its reversion to earlier channels. The view which theoretical psychologists take toward intervening variables and hypothetical constructs will of course profoundly influence the direction of theoretical thought. Furthermore, what kinds of hypothetical constructs we become accustomed to thinking about will have a considerable impact upon theory creation. The present paper aims to present what seems to us a major problem in the conceptualization of intervening variables, without claiming to offer a wholly satisfactory solution. Chiefly, it is our aim here to make a distinction between two subclasses of intervening variables, or we prefer to say, between ‘intervening variables’ and ‘hypothetical constructs’ which we feel is fundamental but is currently being neglected. We shall begin with a common-sense distinction, and proceed later to formulations of this distinction which we hope will be more rigorous. Naively, it would seem that there is a difference in logical status between constructs which involve the hypothesization of an entity, proc-

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Citations
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a cRiTical aPPRaisal o F coNTeMPoRaRy aPPR oaches iN The Qua NTiTaTiVe aNalysis o F BehaVioR

J. Moore
TL;DR: For over 40 years, much research has sought to mathematically describe the relation between operant choice responding and reinforcement as mentioned in this paper, which can at times be regrettably mentalistic. But it is important to be sensitive to mentalistic influences arising from outside the experimental analysis of behavior, such as the psychophysics of S. S. Stevens.
Book ChapterDOI

Hermeneutics of explanation: or, if science is theoretical why isn't psychology?

TL;DR: This paper argued that explanations, whether of singular events or empirical regularities, are fundamentally theoretical in nature and that psychology, in its search for theoretical explanations, is inescapably a hermeneutic endeavor, and that the value-ladeness of our theoretical explanations in psychology and hence our rationality is only bounded by the historical, social-cultural, life forms which characterize our linguistic and communal practices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mind‐body: What is the question?

Abstract: (1976) Mind‐body: What is the question? The Philosophy Forum: Vol 14, No 4, pp 325-350
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Principles of Behavior

Book

Testability and meaning

Rudolf Carnap
Book

An Inquiry into Meaning and Truth

TL;DR: Bertrand Russell is concerned in this book with the foundations of knowledge as mentioned in this paper, and he approaches his subject through a discussion of language, the relationships of truth to experience and an investigation into how knowledge of the structure of language helps our understanding of the world.