
Blueprint
How DNA Makes Us Who We Are
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Narrado por:
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Robert Plomin
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De:
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Robert Plomin
Acerca de esta escucha
A top behavioral geneticist makes the case that DNA inherited from our parents at the moment of conception can predict our psychological strengths and weaknesses.
In Blueprint, behavioral geneticist Robert Plomin describes how the DNA revolution has made DNA personal by giving us the power to predict our psychological strengths and weaknesses from birth. A century of genetic research shows that DNA differences inherited from our parents are the consistent life-long sources of our psychological individuality - the blueprint that makes us who we are. This, says Plomin, is a game-changer. It calls for a radical rethinking of what makes us who were are.
Plomin has been working on these issues for almost fifty years, conducting longitudinal studies of twins and adoptees. He reports that genetics explains more of the psychological differences among people than all other factors combined. Genetics accounts for fifty percent of psychological differences - not just mental health and school achievement, but all psychological traits, from personality to intellectual abilities. Nature defeats nurture by a landslide.
Plomin explores the implications of this, drawing some provocative conclusions - among them that parenting styles don't really affect children's outcomes once genetics is taken into effect. Neither tiger mothers nor attachment parenting affects children's ability to get into Harvard. After describing why DNA matters, Plomin explains what DNA does, offering listeners a unique insider's view of the exciting synergies that came from combining genetics and psychology.
©2018 Robert Plomin (P)2018 Penguin Books Limited and used by arrangement.Los oyentes también disfrutaron...
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For years we have been told to make lists and obsessively monitor when we’re angry, what we eat, how much we worry, and how often we go to the gym. So why isn’t everyone healthy? Now based on the most extensive study of long life ever conducted The Longevity Project reveals what really matters across the long run—the personality traits, relationships, experiences, and career paths that naturally keep you vital.
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Good info to know about
- De Thomas en 11-10-11
De: Howard S. Friedman, y otros
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The Language of Life
- DNA and the Revolution in Personalized Medicine
- De: Francis S. Collins
- Narrado por: Greg Itzin
- Duración: 10 h y 45 m
- Versión completa
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A scientific and medical revolution has crept up on us, based on study after study, from hundreds of laboratories around the world. It is no longer just a theoretical shift: every one of us will be touched by it, and many of us already have been. The meaning of disease, our understanding of the human body, and crucial decisions about what we all need to know and what choices we make about our health are at stake. Welcome to the new world of personalized medicine.
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The future of medicine
- De Ronald E en 04-12-10
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The Intelligence Paradox: Why the Intelligent Choice Isn't Always the Smart One
- De: Satoshi Kanazawa
- Narrado por: Paul Neal Rohrer
- Duración: 5 h y 49 m
- Versión completa
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Satoshi Kanazawa's Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters (written with Alan S. Miller) was hailed by the Los Angeles Times as "a rollicking bit of pop Science & Technology that turns the lens of evolutionary psychology on issues of the day." That book answered such burning questions as why women tend to lust after males who already have mates and why newborns look more like Dad than Mom. Now Kanazawa tackles the nature of intelligence: what it is, what it does, what it is good for.
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Very entertaining
- De Liz W. en 03-01-20
De: Satoshi Kanazawa
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Sicker, Fatter, Poorer
- The Urgent Threat of Hormone-Disrupting Chemicals on Our Health and Future . . . and What We Can Do About It
- De: Leonardo Trasande MD MPP
- Narrado por: Leonardo Trasande MD MPP
- Duración: 6 h y 44 m
- Versión completa
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Lurking in our homes, hiding in our offices, and polluting the air we breathe is something sinister. Something we’ve turned a blind eye to for far too long. Dr. Leonardo Trasande, a pediatrician, professor, and world-renowned researcher, tells the story of how our everyday surroundings are making us sicker, fatter, and poorer. Through a blend of narrative, scientific detective work, and concrete information about the connections between chemicals and disease, he reveals what we can do to protect ourselves and our families in the short-term, and how we can help bring the change we deserve.
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The Must Read Book of 2019 is here early on Audio!
- De Ryan S en 12-21-18
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Gay, Straight, and the Reason Why
- The Science of Sexual Orientation
- De: Simon LeVay
- Narrado por: Topher Payne
- Duración: 8 h y 1 m
- Versión completa
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What causes a child to grow up gay or straight? In this book, neuroscientist Simon LeVay summarizes a wealth of scientific evidence that points to one inescapable conclusion: Sexual orientation results primarily from an interaction between genes, sex hormones, and the cells of the developing body and brain. LeVay helped create this field in 1991 with a much-publicized study in Science, where he reported on a difference in the brain structure between gay and straight men. Since then, an entire scientific discipline has sprung up around the quest for a biological explanation of sexual orientation. In this book, LeVay provides a clear explanation of where the science stands today, taking the reader on a whirlwind tour of laboratories that specialize in genetics, endocrinology, neuroscience, cognitive psychology, evolutionary psychology, and family demographics. He describes, for instance, how researchers have manipulated the sex hormone levels of animals during development, causing them to mate preferentially with animals of their own gender. LeVay also reports on the prevalence of homosexual behavior among wild animals, ranging from Graylag geese to the Bonobo chimpanzee.
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Excellent litterature review on the topic
- De Matt H. en 06-28-17
De: Simon LeVay
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Attack of the Teenage Brain
- Understanding and Supporting the Weird and Wonderful Adolescent Learner
- De: John Medina
- Narrado por: John Medina
- Duración: 6 h y 16 m
- Versión completa
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In accessible language and with periodic references to Star Trek, motorcycle daredevils, and near-classic movies of the '80s, developmental molecular biologist John Medina explores the neurological and evolutionary factors that drive teenage behavior and can affect both achievement and engagement. Then he proposes a research-supported counterattack: a bold redesign of educational practices and learning environments to deliberately develop teens' cognitive capacity to manage their emotions, plan, prioritize, and focus.
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Wish I knew years ago
- De John Wernecke en 05-30-18
De: John Medina
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The Book of Why
- The New Science of Cause and Effect
- De: Judea Pearl, Dana Mackenzie
- Narrado por: Mel Foster
- Duración: 15 h y 14 m
- Versión completa
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"Correlation does not imply causation". This mantra has been invoked by scientists for decades and has led to a virtual prohibition on causal talk. But today, that taboo is dead. The causal revolution, sparked by Judea Pearl and his colleagues, has cut through a century of confusion and placed causality - the study of cause and effect - on a firm scientific basis.
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Great book! Not a great audiobook.
- De rrwright en 05-30-18
De: Judea Pearl, y otros
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Mating Intelligence Unleashed
- The Role of the Mind in Sex, Dating, and Love
- De: Scott Barry Kaufman PhD., Glenn Geher PhD., Helen Fisher PhD. - foreword
- Narrado por: Bernard Setaro Clark
- Duración: 11 h y 17 m
- Versión completa
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Psychologists often paint a picture of human mating as visceral, instinctual. But that's not the whole story. In courtship and display, sexual competition and rivalry, we are also guided by what Glenn Geher and Scott Barry Kaufman call Mating Intelligence - a range of mental abilities that have evolved to help us find the right partner. Mating Intelligence is at work in our efforts to form, maintain, and end relationships. It guides us in flirtation, foreplay, copulation, finding and choosing a mate, and many other behaviors.
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Tedious with the gems buried deep within
- De Matt J en 09-26-15
De: Scott Barry Kaufman PhD., y otros
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The Depths
- The Evolutionary Origins of the Depression Epidemic
- De: Jonathan Rottenberg
- Narrado por: Walter Dixon
- Duración: 4 h y 27 m
- Versión completa
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Nearly every depressed person is assured by doctors, well-meaning friends and family, the media, and ubiquitous advertisements that the underlying problem is a chemical imbalance. Such a simple defect should be fixable, yet despite all of the resources that have been devoted to finding a pharmacological solution, depression remains stubbornly widespread. Why are we losing this fight?
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Great read for understanding
- De Adam en 02-04-15
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Born for Love
- Why Empathy Is Essential - and Endangered
- De: Bruce D. Perry, Maia Szalavitz
- Narrado por: Corey M. Snow
- Duración: 11 h
- Versión completa
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From birth, when babies' fingers instinctively cling to those of adults, their bodies and brains seek an intimate connection - a bond made possible by empathy, the remarkable ability to love and to share the feelings of others. In this unforgettable book, award-winning science journalist Maia Szalavitz and renowned child psychiatrist Bruce D. Perry explain how empathy develops, why it is essential both to human happiness and for a functional society, and how it is threatened in a modern world.
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Born for Love is a Rallying Call for Caring and Cry for Help
- De Jeffrey Olsen en 09-24-18
De: Bruce D. Perry, y otros
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Our Political Nature
- The Evolutionary Origins of What Divides Us
- De: Avi Tuschman
- Narrado por: Jay Snyder
- Duración: 17 h y 42 m
- Versión completa
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Our Political Nature is the first book to reveal the hidden roots of our most deeply held moral values. It shows how political orientations across space and time arise from three clusters of measurable personality traits. These clusters entail opposing attitudes toward tribalism, inequality, and differing perceptions of human nature. Together, these traits are by far the most powerful cause of left-right voting, even leading people to regularly vote against their economic interests.
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A Trivial Version of Haidt's "The Righteous Mind"
- De Curt Doolittle en 10-29-13
De: Avi Tuschman
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The Elephant in the Brain
- Hidden Motives in Everyday Life
- De: Kevin Simler, Robin Hanson
- Narrado por: Jeffrey Kafer
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Human beings are primates, and primates are political animals. Our brains, therefore, are designed not just to hunt and gather but also to help us get ahead socially, often via deception and self-deception. But while we may be self-interested schemers, we benefit by pretending otherwise. The less we know about our own ugly motives, the better - and thus, we don't like to talk, or even think, about the extent of our selfishness. This is "the elephant in the brain".
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Let Me Save You the Credit
- De Evert en 03-16-19
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When Men Behave Badly
- The Hidden Roots of Sexual Deception, Harassment, and Assault
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“An exceptional book” (Helen Fisher) by a leading evolutionary psychologist and sex researcher that lays out a new theory of sexual conflict, exposing the roots of the dangerous dynamics that underpin men’s predatory behavior - and what can be done to address it.
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Interesting ideas, but argumentation incomplete
- De Kindle Customer en 07-03-21
De: David M. Buss
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Blueprint
- The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society
- De: Nicholas A. Christakis
- Narrado por: Nicholas A. Christakis
- Duración: 14 h y 55 m
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For too long, scientists have focused on the dark side of our biological heritage: our capacity for aggression, cruelty, prejudice, and self-interest. But natural selection has given us a suite of beneficial social features, including our capacity for love, friendship, cooperation, and learning. Beneath all our inventions - our tools, farms, machines, cities, nations - we carry with us innate proclivities to make a good society.
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Many interesting thoughts
- De Jonas Blomberg Ghini en 06-01-19
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Innate
- How the Wiring of Our Brains Shapes Who We Are
- De: Kevin J. Mitchell
- Narrado por: Michael Page
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What makes you the way you are - and what makes each of us different from everyone else? In Innate, leading neuroscientist and popular science blogger Kevin Mitchell traces human diversity and individual differences to their deepest level: in the wiring of our brains.
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Excellent overview.
- De John M. Hilliard en 01-25-19
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Who We Are and How We Got Here
- De: David Reich
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- Duración: 10 h y 50 m
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Geneticists like David Reich have made astounding advances in the field of genomics, which is proving to be as important as archaeology, linguistics, and written records as a means to understand our ancestry. In Who We Are and How We Got Here, Reich allows listeners to discover how the human genome provides not only all the information a human embryo needs to develop but also the hidden story of our species.
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Great Book, No Maps Available thru Audible
- De Jane W. en 07-15-18
De: David Reich
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The Social Leap
- The New Evolutionary Science of Who We Are, Where We Come from, and What Makes Us Happy
- De: William von Hippel
- Narrado por: Michael David Axtell
- Duración: 8 h y 36 m
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Historia
In The Social Leap, William von Hippel lays out a revolutionary hypothesis, tracing human development through three critical evolutionary inflection points to explain how events in our distant past shape our lives today. From the mundane, such as why we exaggerate, to the surprising, such as why we believe our own lies and why fame and fortune are as likely to bring misery as happiness, the implications are far-reaching and extraordinary.
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Amazing
- De tiffani en 11-15-18
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The Elephant in the Brain
- Hidden Motives in Everyday Life
- De: Kevin Simler, Robin Hanson
- Narrado por: Jeffrey Kafer
- Duración: 10 h y 26 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Historia
Human beings are primates, and primates are political animals. Our brains, therefore, are designed not just to hunt and gather but also to help us get ahead socially, often via deception and self-deception. But while we may be self-interested schemers, we benefit by pretending otherwise. The less we know about our own ugly motives, the better - and thus, we don't like to talk, or even think, about the extent of our selfishness. This is "the elephant in the brain".
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Let Me Save You the Credit
- De Evert en 03-16-19
De: Kevin Simler, y otros
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When Men Behave Badly
- The Hidden Roots of Sexual Deception, Harassment, and Assault
- De: David M. Buss
- Narrado por: Tom Parks
- Duración: 10 h y 47 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Historia
“An exceptional book” (Helen Fisher) by a leading evolutionary psychologist and sex researcher that lays out a new theory of sexual conflict, exposing the roots of the dangerous dynamics that underpin men’s predatory behavior - and what can be done to address it.
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-
Interesting ideas, but argumentation incomplete
- De Kindle Customer en 07-03-21
De: David M. Buss
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Blueprint
- The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society
- De: Nicholas A. Christakis
- Narrado por: Nicholas A. Christakis
- Duración: 14 h y 55 m
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General
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Historia
For too long, scientists have focused on the dark side of our biological heritage: our capacity for aggression, cruelty, prejudice, and self-interest. But natural selection has given us a suite of beneficial social features, including our capacity for love, friendship, cooperation, and learning. Beneath all our inventions - our tools, farms, machines, cities, nations - we carry with us innate proclivities to make a good society.
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Many interesting thoughts
- De Jonas Blomberg Ghini en 06-01-19
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Innate
- How the Wiring of Our Brains Shapes Who We Are
- De: Kevin J. Mitchell
- Narrado por: Michael Page
- Duración: 10 h y 7 m
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What makes you the way you are - and what makes each of us different from everyone else? In Innate, leading neuroscientist and popular science blogger Kevin Mitchell traces human diversity and individual differences to their deepest level: in the wiring of our brains.
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Excellent overview.
- De John M. Hilliard en 01-25-19
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Who We Are and How We Got Here
- De: David Reich
- Narrado por: John Lescault
- Duración: 10 h y 50 m
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General
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Historia
Geneticists like David Reich have made astounding advances in the field of genomics, which is proving to be as important as archaeology, linguistics, and written records as a means to understand our ancestry. In Who We Are and How We Got Here, Reich allows listeners to discover how the human genome provides not only all the information a human embryo needs to develop but also the hidden story of our species.
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Great Book, No Maps Available thru Audible
- De Jane W. en 07-15-18
De: David Reich
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The Social Leap
- The New Evolutionary Science of Who We Are, Where We Come from, and What Makes Us Happy
- De: William von Hippel
- Narrado por: Michael David Axtell
- Duración: 8 h y 36 m
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In The Social Leap, William von Hippel lays out a revolutionary hypothesis, tracing human development through three critical evolutionary inflection points to explain how events in our distant past shape our lives today. From the mundane, such as why we exaggerate, to the surprising, such as why we believe our own lies and why fame and fortune are as likely to bring misery as happiness, the implications are far-reaching and extraordinary.
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Amazing
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The Gene
- An Intimate History
- De: Siddhartha Mukherjee
- Narrado por: Dennis Boutsikaris
- Duración: 19 h y 22 m
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The extraordinary Siddhartha Mukherjee has written a biography of the gene as deft, brilliant, and illuminating as his extraordinarily successful biography of cancer. Weaving science, social history, and personal narrative to tell us the story of one of the most important conceptual breakthroughs of modern times, Mukherjee animates the quest to understand human heredity and its surprising influence on our lives, personalities, identities, fates, and choices.
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It's a Wonderful Book
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The Evolution of Desire
- De: David M. Buss
- Narrado por: Greg Tremblay
- Duración: 12 h y 20 m
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If we all want love, why is there so much conflict in our most cherished relationships? To answer this question we must look into our evolutionary past, argues prominent psychologist David M. Buss. Based one of the largest studies of human mating ever undertaken, encompassing more than 10,000 people of all ages from 37 cultures worldwide, The Evolution of Desire is the first work to present a unified theory of human mating behavior.
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Highly naive look on the nature of women
- De Xavier en 12-10-18
De: David M. Buss
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Mind Fixers
- Psychiatry's Troubled Search for the Biology of Mental Illness
- De: Anne Harrington
- Narrado por: Joyce Bean
- Duración: 11 h y 50 m
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In the 1980s, American psychiatry announced that it was time to toss aside Freudian ideas of mental disorder because the true path to understanding and treating mental illness lay in brain science, biochemistry, and drugs. This sudden call to revolution, however, was not driven by any scientific breakthroughs. Nor was it as unprecedented as it seemed. Why had previous efforts stalled? Was this latest call really any different? In Mind Fixers, Anne Harrington offers the first comprehensive history of the troubled search for the biological basis of mental illness.
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A summary relevant to each of us
- De R3 en 04-28-19
De: Anne Harrington
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The Ape That Understood the Universe
- How the Mind and Culture Evolve
- De: Steve Stewart-Williams
- Narrado por: Tom Lawrence
- Duración: 15 h y 53 m
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The Ape That Understood the Universe is the story of the strangest animal in the world: the human animal. It opens with a question: How would an alien scientist view our species? What would it make of our sex differences, our sexual behavior, our child-rearing patterns, our moral codes, our religions, our languages, and science? The book tackles these issues by drawing on ideas from two major schools of thought: evolutionary psychology and cultural evolutionary theory.
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I Am a Strange Loop
- De: Douglas R. Hofstadter
- Narrado por: Greg Baglia
- Duración: 16 h y 47 m
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Historia
One of our greatest philosophers and scientists of the mind asks where the self comes from - and how our selves can exist in the minds of others. I Am a Strange Loop argues that the key to understanding selves and consciousness is the "strange loop" - a special kind of abstract feedback loop inhabiting our brains. The most central and complex symbol in your brain is the one called "I". The "I" is the nexus in our brain, one of many symbols seeming to have free will and to have gained the paradoxical ability to push particles around, rather than the reverse.
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The Self That Wasn't There
- De SelfishWizard en 01-09-19
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The Case Against Reality
- Why Evolution Hid the Truth from Our Eyes
- De: Donald Hoffman
- Narrado por: Timothy Andrés Pabon
- Duración: 8 h y 43 m
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Historia
Challenging leading scientific theories that claim that our senses report back objective reality, cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman argues that while we should take our perceptions seriously, we should not take them literally. How can it be possible that the world we see is not objective reality? And how can our senses be useful if they are not communicating the truth? Hoffman grapples with these questions and more over the course of this eye-opening work.
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Don't buy - visual examples missing, no pdf
- De Richard Pickett en 08-26-19
De: Donald Hoffman
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Range
- Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World
- De: David Epstein
- Narrado por: Will Damron
- Duración: 10 h y 46 m
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Historia
Plenty of experts argue that anyone who wants to develop a skill, play an instrument, or lead their field should start early, focus intensely, and rack up as many hours of deliberate practice as possible. But a closer look at research on the world’s top performers shows that early specialization is the exception, not the rule. David Epstein examined the world’s most successful athletes, artists, musicians, inventors, forecasters and scientists. He discovered that in most fields—especially those that are complex and unpredictable—generalists, not specialists, are primed to excel.
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If you're highly curious, read this
- De anon. en 06-07-19
De: David Epstein
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All That Remains
- A Renowned Forensic Scientist on Death, Mortality, and Solving Crimes
- De: Sue Black
- Narrado por: Angela Dawe
- Duración: 10 h y 22 m
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Dame Sue Black is an internationally renowned forensic anthropologist and human anatomist. She has lived her life eye to eye with the Grim Reaper, and she writes vividly about it in this book, which is part primer on the basics of identifying human remains, part frank memoir of a woman whose first paying job as a schoolgirl was to apprentice in a butcher shop, and part no-nonsense but deeply humane introduction to the reality of death in our lives. It is a treat for CSI junkies, murder mystery and thriller fans, and anyone seeking a clear-eyed guide to a subject that touches us all.
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I wanted a science book about forensics. I got a mostly-memoir instead.
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Black Rednecks and White Liberals
- De: Thomas Sowell
- Narrado por: Hugh Mann
- Duración: 11 h y 9 m
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This explosive new audiobook challenges many of the long-held assumptions about blacks, about Jews, about Germans and Nazis, about slavery, and about education. Plainly written, powerfully reasoned, and backed with a startling array of documented facts, Black Rednecks and White Liberals takes on the trendy intellectuals of our times as well as historic interpreters of American life.
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Great Book, Somewhat Misleading Title
- De ComputerBastard en 05-15-09
De: Thomas Sowell
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How Emotions Are Made
- The Secret Life of the Brain
- De: Lisa Feldman Barrett
- Narrado por: Cassandra Campbell
- Duración: 14 h y 32 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
The science of emotion is in the midst of a revolution on par with the discovery of relativity in physics and natural selection in biology. Leading the charge is psychologist and neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett, whose research overturns the long-standing belief that emotions are automatic, universal, and hardwired in different brain regions. Instead, Barrett shows, we construct each instance of emotion through a unique interplay of brain, body, and culture.
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Emotions are not things!!!!!!
- De Gary en 03-14-17
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The Selfish Gene
- De: Richard Dawkins
- Narrado por: Richard Dawkins, Lalla Ward
- Duración: 16 h y 12 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Historia
Richard Dawkins' brilliant reformulation of the theory of natural selection has the rare distinction of having provoked as much excitement and interest outside the scientific community as within it. His theories have helped change the whole nature of the study of social biology, and have forced thousands to rethink their beliefs about life.
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Better than print!
- De J. D. May en 07-31-12
De: Richard Dawkins
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The Alignment Problem
- Machine Learning and Human Values
- De: Brian Christian
- Narrado por: Brian Christian
- Duración: 13 h y 33 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
Today's "machine-learning" systems, trained by data, are so effective that we've invited them to see and hear for us - and to make decisions on our behalf. But alarm bells are ringing. Systems cull résumés until, years later, we discover that they have inherent gender biases. Algorithms decide bail and parole - and appear to assess black and white defendants differently. We can no longer assume that our mortgage application, or even our medical tests, will be seen by human eyes. And autonomous vehicles on our streets can injure or kill.
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Required reading for any AI course
- De ehan ferguson en 11-16-20
De: Brian Christian
Lo que los oyentes dicen sobre Blueprint
Con calificación alta para:
Reseñas - Selecciona las pestañas a continuación para cambiar el origen de las reseñas.
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- Jasmine Mauldin
- 08-30-24
Fascinating truth about our personality
Thank you for doing this work and helping us see the facts of our selves and not a misunderstood fallacy. Referred by Dr. Doug Lisle.
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- Sam Gilley
- 08-06-20
Great story
But the narration will put you to sleep. I appreciate hearing the author narrate their own material, but Mr. Plomin sounds like he's reading a bedtime story to a toddler.
other than that, if you're interested in the future of genomics, this is the book for you.
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- Graeme Newell
- 01-24-19
Some Genuine New Thinking
The mapping of the human genome has created amazing breakthroughs in medicine but what a lot of people don’t realize is that it is also revolutionizing the field of psychology. Using a variety of methods, researchers have made amazing progress in deciphering the “nature vs nurture” quandary that has plagued the field since its founding days.
The past 30 years have been heavily influenced by the believers in “nurture.” An avalanche of self-help and parenting books have set the trajectory. The message is that if you toughen up, buckle down and condition the correct behavior, anything is possible. Human beings are lumps of clay and those who fail to overcome their shortcomings simply lack discipline.
Robert Plomin is a psychology researcher who specializes in studies on twins. Plomin and an army of other researchers have conducted thousands of causality studies for everything from personality traits to major psychological maladies like depression and schizophrenia.
The result is that the answer to the “nature vs nurture” question is becoming clearer. The pendulum is swinging back to the “nature” camp. Solid science shows that our personalities are far more genetically driven than we ever realized. While outside forces such as parenting, peers and self-discipline can bring about real change, it’s becoming increasingly clear that genetic predisposition is the most powerful driver of our feelings and behavior.
Some people are just happy by nature. Others have a more grumpy disposition. Some are achievers, couch potatoes, worriers or happy-go-lucky. For good or for bad, the research is now showing that your ability to pick yourself up by your bootstraps has daunting limitations.
This has profound implications for the field of psychology, education and most importantly, parenting. Today’s helicopter parents will not be nearly as successful as they think. The good news is that kids tend to be a lot like their parents, but this is primarily driven by parents passing down their DNA, not by child-rearing prowess. Good or bad parenting can have a powerful impact, but we are learning that all of us have a mighty inclination to ascend or regress to the behavior that is genetically programmed in our DNA.
The research reveals that genetic predisposition is the dominant determining factor in education success. It’s more of an influence than where a child goes to school, the skill of teachers, or involvement of parents. Don’t get me wrong, all these latter components can make a difference, but they appear to have less impact than was previously thought.
The research is revealing that a systematic change is required in the way we look at the field of psychology. The field still follows a medical model. People in the mental health system are classified as “sick” and in need of a “cure.” They are “healthy” or “normal.” Plomin argues this black and white thinking is the wrong approach.
There is no single gene for depression. This feeling is endemic to human existence. The research is showing that ALL OF US suffer from depression. Some of us have very little, and some of us have a lot. The level of severity can be predictably graphed on a standard bell curve. The daunting conclusion this book reveals is that all of us will still be powerfully compelled to return to a set point coded in our chromosomes.
We will not be able to “cure” something that is hard coded throughout the human genome. This would be like curing someone of the malady of having brown eyes or being tall. What we want to do is to help those in the most distress move up the bell curve to a place where their suffering is lessened.
I also appreciated Plomin’s explanation of how cells divide and pass along their DNA coding. He took a very complicated topic and made it understandable.
I really enjoyed this book. The writing is a bit cumbersome but it has some genuine new insights. A warning - the first chapters are abysmal, filled with methodology and biography. Stick with it and muscle through. It gets better.
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- Ralf Weber
- 06-06-21
Great and accessible journey into genetics
A valuable read for anybody who wants to get a better understanding on the importance of genetics on many aspects of life.
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- Amazon Customer
- 12-20-18
A milestone book
I began learning about DNA nearly 40 years ago. Since that time the advances made in our ability to understand the implications of DNA, and how to modify it, have been incredible. This book does an excellent job of reviewing the advances and discussing the implications of this research.
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- mcnoodles
- 08-11-20
Important reading.
For me. This is up there with Sapolsky's 'Behave' (reminding us we are just shaved monkeys), Pinker's 'Enlightenment now' (reminding us things have never been better) and Harris's 'Free Will' (reminding us not to be so pleased/displeased with our choices in life).
Plomin is careful to consistently remind us that he is not a genetic reductionist, that genes tell us more about what 'could be'. Most importantly he reminds us that loving your children for who they are might be a better long term strategy than trying to shape and mold them. He suggests that going against the genetic grain will lead to the inevitable disappointment, angst and feelings of failure that many well meaning parents suffer.
I very much enjoyed the audio version. Narrated by Plomin himself who has a very calming and pleasant tone.
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- Steven Roller
- 01-31-23
Informative and provocative towards more questions
Much of the content is counter intuitive to those steeped in environmental psychology….this is interesting in conjunction with E O Wilson’s Sociobiology
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- Amazon Customer
- 08-23-20
Augmenting patient classification
Very interesting new science, clearly explained with potentials and limitations, with certain phrases repeated ad nauseum in case you didn't get it the first time.
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- Waqar Mahmud Hasan
- 01-24-19
Cultural Enlightenment via an Academic Angle
Wonderful academic research and superb book & the topic for the public domain. This book will at some point in future will achieve a cultural reference point in a positive way, InshallAllah.
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- PsyMBA
- 04-26-19
A compelling summary of the work of a key behavioral geneticist
Plomin is convincing that the preponderance of psychological traits are heritable. Unfortunately, he may a bit naive in his predictions of how polygenic information will be utilized when trait variance can be directly linked to specific genes. Nevertheless, this a worthy book, especially for those who seek environmental explanations for human behavior.
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