Morris, E.K. (2009).
Behavior analysis and ecological psychology: Past, present, and future. A review of Harry Hefts Ecological Psychology in Context.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 92, 275-304.
Relations between behavior analysis and ecological psychology have been strained for years, notwithstanding the occasional comment on their affinities.
Harry Hefts (2001) Ecological Psychology in Context provides an occasion for reviewing anew those relations and affinities. It describes the genesis of
ecological psychology in Jamess radical empiricism; addresses Holts neorealism and Gestalt psychology; and synthesizes Gibsons ecological psychology
and Barkers ecobehavioral science as a means for understanding everyday human behavior. Although behavior analysis is excluded from this account,
Hefts book warrants a review nonetheless: It describes ecological psychology in ways that are congruent and complementary with behavior analysis
(e.g., nonmediational theorizing; the provinces of natural history and natural science). After introducing modern ecological psychology, I comment
on (a) Hefts admirable, albeit selective, historiography; (b) his ecological psychology—past and present—as it relates to Skinners science and system
(e.g., affordances, molar behavior); (c) his misunderstandings of Skinner’s behaviorism (e.g., reductionistic, mechanistic, molecular); and
(d) the theoretical status of Hefts cognitive terms and talk (i.e., in ontology, epistemology, syntax). I conclude by considering the alliance and
integration of ecological psychology and behavior analysis, and their implications for unifying and transforming psychology as a life science,
albeit more for the future than at present.
Key words: behavior analysis, ecological psychology, Skinner, B. F., history of psychology, neorealism, Holt, E. B., Gibson, J. J., Barker, R. G.