Can
people freely choose their behavior? Or, are we controlled by environmental
circumstances which can be traced to our so called, evolutionary past? This is
the debate that seems to be dominating society, whether we realize it or not.
God vs. science if you will. Certainly, human behavior can be influenced by
many factors, including the environment around us. When presented with extenuating
circumstances people can be forced to make certain decisions. Some of us will
make more informed choices based on past experiences, while others, will make more
erratic ones. Behaviorist’s attempt to whittle this reality down to an exact
science claiming that our choices are nothing more than ingrained evolutionary
responses to environmental factors, honed by thousands of years of instinct.
The unfortunate reality is that science views man as little more than a
stimulus response mechanism. Animals who have no control over our behavior,
only able to react to whatever stimulus we are receiving.
“The
human brain is not simply a switchboard by means of which one environmental
event is connected to another environmental event.” (William
T. Powers)
Understanding
the concept of stimulus response mechanisms, also known as cause and effect psychology,
is important because it is the lens from which science studies our behavior. It
is in fact, the very basis of behavioral psychology (Powers).
Behaviorists like B.F. Skinner have stated, and this writer has noted this
several times, that any study of our behavior should be done from an
evolutionary perspective. This means that the study of human behavior should
always be done from the perspective that man has no control over his own
choices, and that it is only the environment that motivates our responses.
In
what we may call the pre-scientific view (and the word is not necessarily
pejorative) a person's behavior is at least to some extent his own achievement.
He is free to deliberate, decide, and act, possibly in original ways, and he is
to be given credit for his successes and blamed for his failures. In the
scientific view (and the word is not necessarily honorific) a person’s behavior
is determined by a genetic endowment traceable to the evolutionary history of
the species and by the environmental circumstances to which as an individual he
has been exposed. Neither view can be proved, but it is in the nature of scientific
inquiry that the evidence should shift in favor of the second. (B.F.
Skinner, Beyond Freedom and Dignity)
B.F. Skinner was a behavioral psychologist
known for doing experiments on his own daughter. He took the view that man is
just another animal. He narrowed down the study of behaviorism to either the
scientific or pre-scientific views. Pre-scientific means a time where it was
believed men could freely choose their behavior and were, to some extent, in
control of their decision-making processes. The scientific view takes the
position that our behavior is determined. This is essentially the battle
between free will and evolution. As he stated, “neither can be proven but in the
nature of scientific inquiry, the evidence should shift in favor of the second.”
This means that when your behavior is being studied, it is from the belief that
you are an animal who has no control over your behavior. As Powers
said, it is the basis of behavioral psychology.
Interestingly, Powers
refutes this thesis to
some degree by saying that behavior cannot always be determined simply by the stimulus
response mechanisms being influenced by environmental factors, because the
right models are not always being used. Come again? To be more specific, he
says the models being used are not always appropriate to behavior. Furthermore,
he states that a controlled environment that determines what parameters the
study will be conducted from will largely determine the results.
The apparent usefulness
of variations of behavioral acts can be accepted as fact in the framework of a
control system model of behavior. A control system, properly organized for its
environment will produce whatever output is required in order to achieve a
constant sensed result, even in the presence of unpredictable disturbances. (Powers)
Why does any of this
matter? What difference does it make? As this writer noted in his article Operant
conditioning and the face mask pandemic, there was a study conducted in
2014 that was done to determine the public’s susceptibility to being forced
to wear facemasks. The study concluded that people could essentially be
motivated to cover their face based on the perceived vulnerability
of being afflicted with life threatening diseases and, the perceived benefits
of wearing a mask. The study also noted that perceived perceptions
of embarrassment could inhibit the desire to wear a mask. Finally, the study
found that a blitz in media efforts, supported by government, to promote public
health was a huge factor in encouraging people to wear masks. This study, as
noted above, was done in 2014.
As all studies are,
this one was conducted based on a particular model of behavior called the Health
Belief Model. What is the Health Belief Model? Interesting you should ask. It
is a behavioral change model developed to predict or explain behaviors related
to health and health related services. It is also one of the most common models
of behavior used to conduct health related studies today. All studies have
independent and dependent variables, factors for which they establish controls.
The Health Belief Model did not account for the following ̶ ̶
- It
does not account for a person's attitudes, beliefs, or other individual
determinants that dictate a person's acceptance of a health behavior.
- It
does not take into account behaviors that are habitual and thus may inform
the decision-making process to accept a recommended action (e.g.,
smoking).
- It
does not take into account behaviors that are performed for non-health
related reasons such as social acceptability.
- It does not account for
environmental or economic factors that may prohibit or promote the
recommended action.
Interesting, it does not account for persons
attitudes, beliefs, or other determinants that dictate a person’s acceptance of
a health behavior. Like the ability to
freely choose on their own which behavior they will engage in? This is a
perfect example of B.F. Skinners assertion that all studies be done from a
scientific opposed to pre-scientific viewpoint. In other words, the propaganda
you are being fed about wearing masks is based on a behavioral study where an individual’s
ability to freely engage, in or disregard the behavior, is completely left out.
Furthermore, The Health Belief Model makes a few preconceived assumptions as
well, that the facemask study surely considered. It
assumes that cues to action are widely prevalent in encouraging people to act
and that "health" actions are the main goal in the decision-making
process. What is a cue to action? As described in the model itself, a cue
to action is the stimulus needed to trigger an individual into engaging in the
desired behavior. According to The Health Belief Model a cue to action can be
perceived susceptibility to illness, or a news paper article.
There is an ongoing
debate between those that believe humans have free will and those that believe
in, for a lack of a better term, evolutionary science. B.F. Skinner said that
scientific inquiry into human behavior should be conducted from the latter
viewpoint even though neither can be proven. Is that the way we really want to
go? As demonstrated above, the study revolving around a major issue we are
facing today, the forced wearing of masks, was conducted without accounting for
individual differences in the way we all perceive what is going on. The study
denied us our individuality. Furthermore, the study also assumed, based on
Skinners theories no less, that most of us would just accept what we are being
told because of the perceived authority of media and government. This is
something that the American people need to understand if they are going to live
in a free country. We are governed by those who view us as nothing more than
stimulus response animals. When we respond to a given stimulus, they study that
response and learn from it. Over the past five months they have come to believe
that we are a very compliant population. In many ways, we have been. They will
continue to push until we assert ourselves in the name of our free will to
choose our own lives. To do that however, we must first understand the lens
from which we are viewed. This writer believes the facemask study and the
Health Belief Model provided a good base from which to show an example we can
all relate to.
No comments:
Post a Comment