You are such a great Professor. I go to California State University, Fullerton. Never had a professor explain such complex theories with such simplicity and specificity. Thank you!
Very good lecture! Thank you for posting this publicly. One thing to note though, Pavlov's dog is an example of *Classical conditioning* not operant conditioning as mentioned in your lecture. Please post more content in the future!
Matza's Delinquency and Drift is a hard read first time round, but once someone fully understands his book it's actually quite brilliant. Not only a critique of the positivist view of the delinquent "economic determinism" etc, but he adds that there must be a triggering point for a crime in the immediate circumstances, the "theory of neutralisation"
You are such a great Professor. I go to California State University, Fullerton. Never had a professor explain such complex theories with such simplicity and specificity. Thank you!
Thank you, I am happy the videos are able to help for sure!
This was super helpful and clearly explained! Thank you for clarifying how Bandura and and Akers theories are similar/different 👏🏼
Very good lecture! Thank you for posting this publicly. One thing to note though, Pavlov's dog is an example of *Classical conditioning* not operant conditioning as mentioned in your lecture. Please post more content in the future!
Never wrote a comment before, but honestly a great lecture. I never understood them In deeps before. Thank you
Matza's Delinquency and Drift is a hard read first time round, but once someone fully understands his book it's actually quite brilliant. Not only a critique of the positivist view of the delinquent "economic determinism" etc, but he adds that there must be a triggering point for a crime in the immediate circumstances, the "theory of neutralisation"
Dr.G? More like Top G!