Behaviorism: W. F. Skiner's Walden Two deliberately closed the book aside aside. In the year after he departed Fraser and his authoritarian utopia, he was unable to get rid of the confusion the community caused, he waited for five years to deliberately finish reading the Walden Two . However, eight years later, he was further frustrated that he was obviously unable to see the situation calmly. In any case, he pulled out an unopened volume from the top shelf, and now he wishes that it is a good idea.
Psychologist B. F. Skinner was born in Pennsylvania in 1904 and has obtained his Ph.D. from Harvard University and began studying human behavior. Skinner's work includes "Biological Behavior" (1938) and a novel "Walden II (1948)" based on his theory. In later books he explored socially relevant behaviorism including transcendental freedom and human dignity (1971). Skinner died in Massachusetts in 1990. Burrhus Frederic Skinner was born on March 20, 1904 in a small town in Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, and grew up there. His father is a lawyer and his mother is at home to take care of Skinner and his brothers. When I was very young, Skinner showed interest in making various gadgets and equipment.
In the 1970s, a popular doctrine in motivational science was B. F. Skinner 's radicalism. Skinner believes that the formation of human behavior is entirely dependent on the influence on behavior, and this doctrine states that scientists and laypeople will be rewarded merely by giving humans motivation for sticks and carrots Let me believe that you will be punished. According to radicalism, people never do things for themselves, and in our programming we only do things to get happiness or to avoid pain. Using this as a doctrine, behavior change designers simply come up with correct remuneration and penalties to motivate their employees, customers and users. Just like adding programming to Roomba