The motivation for this volume is simple. For a variety of reasons,
clinical psychologists have long shown considerable interest in the
philosophy of science. When logical positivism gained currency in
the 1930s, psychologists were among the most avid readers of what
these philosophers had to say about science. Part of the critique
of Skinner s radical behaviorism and thus behavior therapy was that
it relied on, and thus was logically dependent on, the truth of
logical positivism a claim decisively refuted both historically and
logically by L.D. Smith (1986) in his important Behaviorism and
Logical Positivism: A Reassessment of the Alliance. "
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