Episode 1152
Most people associate Ivan Pavlov with a ringing bell, but the truth is much more complex. In this episode, we debunk the popular image of the "Pavlovian bell"—a device some scholars doubt he ever used—and explore the wide variety of stimuli he actually employed, from metronomes to electric shocks. Join us as we trace the journey of this Russian physiologist, who abandoned a religious career as a seminary student to pursue the natural sciences.
We discuss the work that earned Pavlov the 1904 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine: not psychology, but his groundbreaking research on the digestive system. You will learn about his innovative "chronic experiments," where he used surgical fistulas to study the long-term functions of living dogs without killing them. We also breakdown how his famous discovery of "classical conditioning" happened almost by accident when he noticed dogs salivating at the mere presence of lab technicians.
Finally, we examine Pavlov’s complex political life. Despite receiving significant funding and praise from the Soviet government, he was a vocal critic of the communist regime, once writing to Stalin that he was "ashamed to be a Russian". Tune in to understand the legacy of the man whose work on conditioned reflexes laid the foundation for modern behavior therapy and transformed our understanding of learning.
Published on 3 days ago
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