Zick Rubin Explained

Isaac Michael "Zick" Rubin (born 1944) is an American social psychologist, lawyer, and author.[1] He is "widely credited as the author of the first empirical measurement of love,"[2] for his work distinguishing feelings of like from feelings of love via Rubin's Scales of Liking and Loving.[3] [4] [5] Science Progress stated, "The major breakthrough in research on love came from the pioneer psychometric work of Zick Rubin."[6]

He has also published on disclosing to consequential strangers. According to The Cambridge Handbook of Personal Relationships, Rubin "conducted influential early studies on disclosure reciprocity in naturalistic settings, such as in airport departure lounges and at bus stops."[7] His work also examined the development of friendship among toddlers.[8]

Life and education

Rubin earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Yale University in 1965 and a Ph.D. from University of Michigan in 1969.

In the 1980s, Rubin entered Harvard Law School, earning his J.D. degree and being admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1988.

In the 2001 edition of The Penguin Dictionary of Psychology, Rubin was listed as having died in 1997.[9] In 2011 he wrote a New York Times op-ed about his attempts to correct the error after it had been repeated in a Wikia profile about him.[10]

Career

Social psychology

Rubin won the Socio-psychological Prize from the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1969.[11] He was director of the Boston Couples Study, described by the Encyclopedia of Human Relationships as "a pioneering longitudinal study" that integrated multiple research methods as it followed the development of relationships over time.[12] Rubin taught at Harvard University from 1967 to 1976 and was the Louis and Frances Salvage Professor of Social Psychology at Brandeis University from 1977 to 1985 before entering law school.

Rubin defended tax-funded work on love after Senator William Proxmire criticized the use of National Science Foundation funding on studies of love at Harvard, the University of Minnesota, and University of Wisconsin.[13] [14] In 1975, Proxmire had named psychologist Ellen Berscheid of University of Minnesota as recipient of his first Golden Fleece Award for her work on love.[15] Proxmire called it "a futile and wasteful attempt to explain the impossible."[16] Rubin defended his colleagues, saying Proxmire was "taking advantage of the fact that it is easy to trivialize and sensationalize such matters as these."[16]

Rubin sued Boston Magazine for copyright infringement after they copied the questions from his liking and loving scales without permission in a 1977 article.[17] He won the case in 1981 and prevailed on appeal.[18]

Law

Rubin was a lawyer at Palmer & Dodge LLP and then at Hill & Barlow before opening The Law Office of Zick Rubin in 2003. He specializes in legal issues related to copyright, trademark, media, and higher education. In 2020 Rubin joined Archstone Law Group as Of Counsel. On behalf of the daughters of the poet who wrote the lyrics of the nursery school song “Soft Kitty,” he brought a copyright infringement lawsuit against the producers of the popular weather sitcom “The Big Bang Theory,” alleging that they used the song without permission. The case was settled on undisclosed terms.

Rubin had been a member of the Copyright Society of the United States, the Authors Guild, the Text and Academic Authors Association, and the National Association of College and University Attorneys.

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Sheehy, Noel; Conroy, Wendy A. (1997). Biographical dictionary of psychology, p. 493. Taylor & Francis,
  2. Baxter LA; Akkoor C (2008). Aesthetic love and romantic love in close relationships. In Roberts, Kathleen Glenister; Arnett Ronald C., eds. Communication ethics: between cosmopolitanism and provinciality, p. 29. Peter Lang,
  3. Associated Press (May 5, 1970). Harvard Sociologist Finds Male Love Exceeds Liking. New York Times
  4. Feshbach, Seymour; Weiner, Bernard; Bohart, Arthur C. eds. (1996). Personality. D.C. Heath,
  5. Myers, David G. (1999). Social Psychology. McGraw-Hill College,
  6. Kanekar . Suresh . Toward a scientific understanding of romantic love . Science Progress (1933–2017) . 1989 . 73 . 4 (292) . 501–519 . Science Reviews Ltd. . London . 43421050 . 0036-8504.
  7. Vangelisti, Anita L.; Perlman, Daniel (2006). The Cambridge handbook of personal relationships, p. 410. Cambridge University Press,
  8. Collins, Gail (December 15, 1980). Friendship: A Fact of Life for Toddlers, Too; Challenging Assumptions Theoretical Model 60 Families Observed. New York Times
  9. Reber AS, Reber E (2001). The Dictionary of Psychology, 3rd edition. See Appendix B: Authorities cited p 828.
  10. Rubin, Zick (March 12, 2011). How the Internet Tried to Kill Me. New York Times
  11. http://archives.aaas.org/awards.php?a_id=24 History & Archives: AAAS Prize for Behavioral Science Research
  12. Reis, Harry T.; Sprecher, Susan K. (2009). Encyclopedia of Human Relationships, p. 188. SAGE,
  13. Haney, Daniel Q. (March 19, 1975). "Love" researcher defends his work. Associated Press
  14. Proxmire, William (1980). The fleecing of America. Houghton Mifflin,
  15. Oord, Thomas Jay (2010). Defining Love: A Philosophical, Scientific, and Theological Engagement. Brazos Press,
  16. Associated Press (Mar 19, 1975). Researchers Defend Their Studies Of Love. The Telegraph-Herald
  17. Isaac Michael Rubin v. Boston Magazine Company and D. Herbert Lipson (see appeal at 645 F.2d 80 (1981).
  18. Doherty, William F. (March 28, 1981). Question of Love, Matter of Money. Boston Globe