2 publications that cite Place (1985d). Three senses of the word "tact".
Matos, M. A, & Passos, M. L. R. F. (2006). Linguistic Sources of Skinner's Verbal Behavior. The Behavioral Analyst, 29(1), 89–107. doi:10.1007/BF03392119
[Abstract]Formal and functional analyses of verbal behavior have been often considered to be divergent
and incompatible. Yet, an examination of the history of part of the analytical approach used in
Verbal Behavior (Skinner, 1957/1992) for the identification and conceptualization of verbal
operant units discloses that it corresponds well with formal analyses of languages. Formal
analyses have been carried out since the invention of writing and fall within the scope of
traditional grammar and structural linguistics, particularly in analyses made by the linguist
Leonard Bloomfield. The relevance of analytical instruments originated from linguistic studies
(which examine and describe the practices of verbal communities) to the analysis of verbal
behavior, as proposed by Skinner, relates to the conception of a verbal community as
a prerequisite for the acquisition of verbal behavior. A deliberately interdisciplinary approach is
advocated in this paper, with the systematic adoption of linguistic analyses and descriptions
adding relevant knowledge to the design of experimental research in verbal behavior.
[Citing Place (1985d)]
Skinner, B. F. (1985). Reply to Place: "Three senses of the word 'tact'" Behaviorism, 13(2), 75-76.
[Citing Place (1985d)] [Is reply to] [1 referring publications by Place] [Is replied by]
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