Publication | Closed Access
Programs in the Explanation of Behavior
129
Citations
6
References
1977
Year
Behavioural PsychologyBehaviorismEducationCognitionBehavior MonitoringExplanatory StrategyPerceptionBehavior AnalysisSocial SciencesPsychologyCognitive ConstructionPsychophysiologyExplanatory InterestBehavioral PrincipleBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceInformation Processing (Psychology)Physiological ExplanationsCognitive DynamicsSocial BehaviorHuman-computer InteractionBehavioral Experiments
The purpose of this paper is to set forth a sense in which programs can and do explain behavior, and to distinguish from this a number of senses in which they do not. Once we are tolerably clear concerning the sort of explanatory strategy being employed, two rather interesting facts emerge; (1) though it is true that programs are “internally represented,” this fact has no explanatory interest beyond the mere fact that the program is executed; (2) programs which are couched in information processing terms may have an explanatory interest for a given range of behavior which is independent of physiological explanations of the same range of behavior.
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