
How to Explain Behavior
A Critical Review and New Approach
Sam S. Rakover(Author)
Lexington Books (Publisher)
Published on 20. December 2017
Book
Hardback
282 pages
978-1-4985-3668-4 (ISBN)
Description
In How to Explain Behavior: A Critical Review and New Approach, Sam S. Rakover proposes a critical review of explanation models (procedures); presents explanation as an essential part of research methodology; depicts understanding as based on explanation models and other procedures; provides a list of basic ideas common to most explanation models; supplies an approach that unifies mechanistic explanations as used by the sciences with mentalistic explanations that are based on one's inner world; and provides a general procedure for explaining individual behavior.
Reviews / Votes
Scientific domains are sometimes categorized as hard and soft, with psychology falling in the latter grouping. Another characterization could be the hard sciences and the difficult sciences. As Rakover (Univ. of Haifa, Israel) has compellingly illustrated in How to Explain Behavior, psychology clearly falls in the difficult category. This book deals with the philosophy of science as it relates to psychological explanation. As such, a solid background in philosophy and the philosophy of science will enable readers to evaluate Rakover's complex arguments. That the issues of causal explanation remain unresolved indicates the complexity of the endeavor. He lays out the varied philosophical approaches to understanding phenomena as they unfold in the natural and in the social/behavioral sciences, showing that scientists are still far from coming up with explanatory models of behavior. He makes it clear that explanations and understanding are intimately tied to measurement, which constitutes a problem with respect to modeling experiential, mental states. He develops his model, called the "general explanation procedure," to account for psychological constructs, suggesting that psychologists can use it to carve a methodological path leading in the direction of the truth. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students and researchers. * Choice Reviews * [This] excellent book. . . . offers several profound insights into psychology's existential problems. It contains a wealth of material that should be studied and be of interest to a large audience, including psychologists, philosophers, and members of the educated public at large. A valuable feature of the book is that the author is not satisfied with mere discussion of the seemingly insurmountable problems, but volunteers also to offer solutions. This scholarly book should hold a respected place on the shelves of novice and seasoned psychologists alike. * Iyyn: The Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly * Rakover makes a remarkable, detailed exposition of the problem involved in accounting for the innermost mentalistic processes that are not amenable to scientific inquiry. . . . The arguments are eloquently presented and richly accompanied by supporting data and by thought experiments. * American Journal of Psychology * How to Explain Behavior:A Critical Review and New Approach is at once a general introduction to psychological explanation and an original mature theory on the nature of such explanation. It is to be hoped that this work will be widely read not only by psychologists, philosophers, and historians of science, but by all those motivated by the struggles of a gifted thinker who is forging his way toward a foundation for his discipline. -- Daniel Algom, Tel-Aviv University Sam S. Rakover's provocative book consists of a comprehensive, in-depth analysis of the conceptual problems involved in the explanation of organismic behavior which concludes with a bold, creative suggestion of an original model that skillfully combines complementary mechanistic (causal) and mentalistic (teleological) explanations which together may account for both the external (explicit responses) and internal (implicit will and belief) behavioral processes. -- Israel Nachson, Bar Ilan University, professor emeritus Knowing that Sam S. Rakover is a psychologist, his 'dual methodology' and 'multi-explanation framework' that appear in this book can be considered as an essential epistemological step toward an overall explanation of the realities ('epistemological ontologies') of the mind and brain (i.e., my 'epistemologically different worlds' perspective). -- Gabriel Vacariu, Bucharest University, author of Illusions of Human ThinkingMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
7 BW Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
566 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4985-3668-4 (9781498536684)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
12/2017
1st Edition
Lexington Books
€42.49
Available for download
Person
Sam S. Rakover is professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Haifa.
Content
Chapter 1: Understanding and Explanation
Chapter 2: Models of Explanation (I): Natural Sciences
Chapter 3: Models of Explanation (II): Natural and Social Sciences
Chapter 4: Reflections on Models of Explanation
Chapter 5: Methodological Dualism (MD) and the Multi-Explanation Framework (MEF) (I) Theoretical and Empirical Basis
Chapter 6: Methodological Dualism (MD) and the Multi-Explanation Framework (MEF) (II): Setting Up
Chapter 7: A Proposed General Explanation Procedure (GEP) for Understanding an Individual's Behavior
Chapter 2: Models of Explanation (I): Natural Sciences
Chapter 3: Models of Explanation (II): Natural and Social Sciences
Chapter 4: Reflections on Models of Explanation
Chapter 5: Methodological Dualism (MD) and the Multi-Explanation Framework (MEF) (I) Theoretical and Empirical Basis
Chapter 6: Methodological Dualism (MD) and the Multi-Explanation Framework (MEF) (II): Setting Up
Chapter 7: A Proposed General Explanation Procedure (GEP) for Understanding an Individual's Behavior