The principles of operant conditioning tell us behavior is exhibited when it gets positively enforced, e.g. Has positive consequences. Nobody ever answers or is friendly to med and blanc, but they still do not leave. I don't know why they keep posting or even stay around 🤔
The principles of operant conditioning tell us behavior is exhibited when it gets positively enforced, e.g. Has positive consequences. Nobody ever answers or is friendly to med and blanc, but they still do not leave. I don't know why they keep posting or even stay around 🤔
Any other forum would ban blanc for spamming lol
And lots of ppl talk to her. You're just not around for it.
Med... lol apparently she gets sex from one of the guys here, and it's good enough for her to spend money on it.
Operant conditioning is an old and flawed system. Human minds are too complex to be controlled by it.
The pleasure principle and the state technology and modern advertising has rendered us towards begs to differ.
The only difference between the rat who presses the button for food and us is the number of steps involved.
Tell me how it is flawed. Also what are the better approaches? There are basically 3 relevant learning theories: classical and operant conditioning and model learning. Whats yours?
There were 5 last time I studied psych, actually.
I prefer the Humanistic school of thought, thx.
I also like Jean Shinodia Bolen/Joseph Campbell's approach to Jungian personality theory and ancestral memory, but I wouldn't recommend it for everybody.
Hint: psych should not be about controlling people, anyway. It's a tool, like a scalpel, that should be used to help paying customers remove an illness that plagues them. Not soak them for their cash.
Hint: psych should not be about controlling people, anyway. It's a tool, like a scalpel, that should be used to help paying customers remove an illness that plagues them. Not soak them for their cash.
Why not use it to control people away from big profit's agenda?