Hume, Mach e Skinner: a explicação do comportamento
Resumo
Radical behaviorism was presented as the philosophy of science of human behavior. This has
important consequences. One of them has to do with questions regarding scientific
explanation. The present essay essentially deals with the following question: what is the
model of explanation of radical behaviorism? Some characteristics of the explanation model
of behavior are examined, based on a discussion of the ideas of Skinner and two others
philosophers of science, to wit, David Hume and Ernst Mach. Hume offers a logical-empirical
critique of the concept of causality as necessary connection, by arguing that causal relations
can not be demonstrated on the basis of statements of fact. Moreover, experience does not
furnish the necessary causal link between cause and effect. He concludes the human
knowledge deals solely with constant relations. This critique was taken over by Skinner by
way of Mach s functional descriptivism . Mach s substitution of the concept of cause by that
of functional relations, and its consequent distinction between scientific explanation and
causal explanation is based on Hume s critique. One might also argue that Mach advances on
Hume s critique by asserting that the world is, in principle, probabilistic. Skinner, from the
beginning, offered an interpretation of behavioral theory as description in accordance with
Mach s philosophy of science. Accordingly, he limited himself to explaining behavior in
terms of functional relationships. However, it is argued that the explanation of behavior is not
only the discovery of functional relations. Skinner does not comply with the restrictions of
descriptivism when he offers an interpretation, beyond the bounds of mere functional
relations, of the origin of behavior, as is the case with philogenetic behavior and with cultural
practices. Accordingly, interpretation is included in radical behaviorism s explanatory system.
In this way, the theory of behavior, without rejecting descriptivism, may be associated with a
version of scientific instrumentalism. This is done via Mach in a somewhat surprising way.
Mach s emphasis on the notions of scientific concept and hypothesis leads us to a kind of
reticent instrumentalism which emerges as a reaction to the realist view of theories. As a
version of scientific instrumentalism, the theory of behaviorism can be seen as pragmatic, and
so radical behaviorism enters the field of ethics. The alliance of descriptivism and
instrumentalism rule out realist interpretations of the theory of behavior. A reading of
Skinner s theory from the perspective of the philosophical works of Hume and Mach also
weaken the association of radical behaviorism with the metaphysical determinism. It is
concluded that the model of selection by consequences is a functional, instrumental and
probabilistic, rather than causal, way of explaining behavior.