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 The kind of pro-Pavlov line in the CPUSA by Harry K. Wells in the 1950's and 
1960's by Wells was continued in later decades by writers like  Joseph Nahem, 
who was a longtime activist in the CPUSA, who endured harassment and 
persecution in the McCarthy period. He would eventually acquire a PhD when he 
was over sixty years old. A few years after, in 1981, he put out a book, 
through International Publishers, titled, Psychology and Psychiatry Today: A 
Marxist View.  Like Wells, he was very pro-Pavlov. He condemned just about 
every other school in psychology and psychotherapy as being unscientific and 
reactionary. Thus, he condemned psychoanalysis and humanistic psychology. He 
even condemned B. F. Skinner's radical behaviorism too, despite its avowed 
roots in Pavlov's work. He was also very dismissive of many of the 
psychotherapies that were popular back in the 1970's and 1980's, viewing many 
of them as just being passing fads (which of course they were). He also had a 
solid discussion o
 f such issues as the IQ and race controversy that were receiving lots of 
attention back then, Not surprisingly, he was not very impressed by the 
arguments of people like Arthur Jensen and Hans Eysenck.  Given the 
anti-Freudian stances of both Wells and Nahem, it is curious that neither 
author seems to have ever mentioned the work of Andrew Salter. As far as I 
know, Salter was not a Marxist but back in the 1950's, he wrote a book, The 
Case Against Psychoanalysis, which attacked psychoanalysis as lacking in 
scientific grounding, and he was also one of the very first behavior 
therapists, who created a variety of behavior therapy, which he called 
conditioned reflex therapy, that was based directly on Pavlov's research.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Salter  
Jim 
Farmelanthttp://independent.academia.edu/JimFarmelanthttp://www.foxymath.com 
Learn or Review Basic Math

---------- Original Message ----------
From: "Jim Farmelant" <farmela...@juno.com>
To: marxism-tha...@lists.riseup.net,  marxism@lists.csbs.utah.edu
Subject: [marxism-thaxis] Pavlov, Soviet psychology, and Harry K. Wells
Date: Tue, 6 Sep 2016 16:25:04 GMT



This came up as part of a thread in an FB group, in which I turned out to be a 
member. The discussion turned to the role of the great Russian physiologist, 
Ivan Pavlov, in the Soviet Union. As I pointed out: Pavlov attacked the 
Bolsheviks. He intended to leave Russia after the October Revolution but Lenin 
convinced him to stay by giving him his own research institute with virtually 
unlimited resources. The Soviet regime showered all kinds of honors on him but 
he remained outspokenly critical of it. In his final years, concerned over the 
rise of fascism, he softened his opposition towards the Soviet regime.

 Pavlov was the son of a Russian Orthodox priest. He originally intended to 
follow in his father's footsteps, and so, attended an Orthodox seminary to 
prepare for the priesthood. However, while there, he read the writings of 
progressive Russian thinkers like Dmitry Pisarev, who was one of the so-called 
Nihilists. As a consequence, Pavlov lost his religious faith, and so decided 
against entering the priesthood. Eventually, he decided to pursue a scientific 
career, and so went to medical school instead of the seminary.

 It should be noted that years later, when the Bolsheviks decided to crack down 
on priests and banished the children of priests from attending academic 
institutions, Pavlov issued a public protest denouncing this move and resigning 
from his own position. He even took, for a while, to wearing religious medals, 
even though he was not a religious believer, but wanted to piss off the 
Bolsheviks.

Throughout Soviet history, Pavlov was always upheld as the model researcher in 
physiology, and often, psychology. He did not regard himself to be a 
psychologist. He saw his own work on conditioned reflexes as a part of his 
physiology research. On occasion, he was openly contemptuous of psychology, 
although at other times, he did speak respectfully of the work of 
psychologists. His own standing within Soviet psychology fluctuated over time. 
In Lenin's day, his status within Soviet psychology was very high, enjoying the 
backing of Lenin, Trotsky, Bukharin, etc. During the 1930's and 1940's, his 
standing declined a bit. Then around 1950, there was a very strong pro-Pavlov 
campaign in both physiology and psychology.

In discussing the fluctuating fortunes of Pavlovian reflexology under the 
Stalin regime it is interesting to note B.F. Skinner's comments on this 
(Skinner having been a great admirer of Pavlov). Thus, in *Beyond Freedom & 
Dignity*, Skinner wrote:

"Communist Russia provided and interesting case history in the relation between 
environmentalism and personal responsibility, as Raymond Bauer has pointed out. 
Immediately after the revolution the government could argue that if many 
Russians were uneducated, unproductive, badly behaved, and unhappy, it was 
because their environment had made them so. The new government would change the 
environment, making use of Pavlov's work on conditioned reflexes, and all would 
be well. But by the early thirties the government had its chance, and many 
Russians were still not conspicuously better informed, more productive, better 
behaved, or happier. The official line was then changed, and Pavlov went out of 
favor. A strongly purposive psychology was substituted: it was up to the 
Russian citizen to get an education, work productively, behave well, and be 
happy. The Russian educator was to make sure that he would accept this 
responsibility, but not by conditioning him. The successes of the Second Wor
 ld War restored confidence in the earlier principle, however; the government 
had been successful after all. It might not yet be completely effective,but it 
was moving in the right direction.Pavlov came back into favor."

n the US, the CPUSA has always had a strong pro-Pavlov orientation. Their 
publishing arm, International Publishers, has, for decades, been the publisher 
of some of the main English translations of his writings. Back in the 1950's 
and 1960's, the CP philosopher/psychologist, Harry K. Wells, wrote a couple of 
books, comparing and contrasting Pavlov's work with Freud's. Pavlov was held up 
as the exemplary of scientific psychology, whereas, Freud was denounced as 
being unscientific. Pavlov was progressive, Freud was reactionary. Wells also 
wrote a book denouncing the neo-Freudianism of people like Erich Fromm,  I have 
some other, later books, by people connected with the CPUSA, which took much 
the same view too. Pavlov was upheld, and almost everybody else in psychology, 
including even B.F. Skinner, was denounced as being unscientific.

As I said, Wells was very pro-Pavlov. At the time that he started to write 
about Pavlov, the Soviet Union was officially pro-Pavlov. Wells didn't seem to 
grasp that the Soviet psychological scene was already starting to channge as he 
wrote. Following the Khrushchev thaw, the work of people like Lev Vygotsky and 
his friend, Alexander Luria, was revived in the Soviet Union, so that by the 
mid-1960's, Vygotskyian psychology had become the dominant school there. Wells 
said very little about Vygotsky in his books.

BTW here is the NY Time obit for Wells.
http://www.nytimes.com/1976/02/09/archives/harry-k-wells-64-psychologist-dies.html

 Also, it is interesting to note that in Argentina, apparently, Harry K. 
Wells's books on Pavlov and Freud appealed to psychology students there who 
were also radical leftists,  andwho rejected psychoanalysis as 
idealist.According to the article, linked below, some of these students would 
eventually become radical behaviorists in the mode of B. F. Skinner.
http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1657-92672014000500030

And in the issue of Vol. 12, No. 1 1999 Nature, Society, and Thought, there can 
be found an article, "Public Marxist Intellectuals: Barrows
 Dunham, Howard Selsam, and Harry K. Wells," by Edwin A. Roberts.
http://conservancy.umn.edu/bitstream/handle/11299/151743/nst121.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y


Jim Farmelant
http://independent.academia.edu/JimFarmelant
http://www.foxymath.com 
Learn or Review Basic Math


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