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About The Book
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<p>Neal E. Miller's pioneering work in experimental psychology has earned him worldwide respect. This first of a two-volume collection of his work brings together twenty-one of Miller's most important and representative essays on conflict displacement learned drives and theory. They were selected for both their current relevance and their historical significance.</p><p>The theoretical and experimental analysis of conflict behavior in Part I grew out of an interest in applying the laws of learning that Pavlov discovered in the laboratory to certain phenomena that Freud discovered in the clinic. This led naturally to a similar analysis of displacement in Part II and also to the studies of fear as a learnable drives in Part III.</p><p>In contrast with the ease of establishing learned fear on the basis of pain the studies in Part IV show that it is much more difficult and perhaps impossible to establish learned appetitive drives on the basis of hunger or thirst. In the first experiments on drugs Part V attempted to test the applicability of some of the principles discovered by Pavlov in experiments on classical conditioning to the trial-and-error learning situation studied by Thorndike and now frequently called operant conditioning. Later studies of drugs are closely related to the work on fear and conflict and hence are grouped nearby.</p><p>The first of the theoretical chapters in Part VI summarizes the work on conflict behavior as well as many of my other theoretical ideas including a cybernetic analysis of behavior. Another chapter is the result of an assignment to represent behavioral sciences from physiology through anthropology.</p>