Design for a Life: How Biology and Psychology Shape Human BehaviorWritten in clear and simple language, 'Design for a Life' offers an understanding of the science that lies behind many current controversies in parenting, education, social policy and medicine. |
From inside the book
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Contents
From Egg to Adult Nature and Nurture Design | 15 |
6 | 31 |
3 | 42 |
COOKING BEHAVIOR | 62 |
PROTEAN INSTINCTS | 78 |
7 | 117 |
8 | 133 |
MORNING Shows the | 154 |
10 | 167 |
11 | 182 |
12 | 198 |
Its Just It Extravagant Ornaments Some Strangeness | 207 |
Serious Commitment From Inbreeding Avoidance | 215 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | 233 |
FURTHER READING | 243 |
Other editions - View all
Design for a Life: How Behaviour Develops Patrick Bateson,Paul Martin,Paul R. Martin No preview available - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
ability activities adapted adult adulthood aspects babies Bateson become behave behavior patterns behavioral development behavioral imprinting biological birds birth body born brain Cambridge cells Charles Darwin chicks child childhood consequences corticosteroid crucial Darwin devel developmental processes disease early experience early handling effects emotional environment evolution evolutionary example face female function genes genetic grow growth havior heritability homosexual hormone identical twins important imprinting individual individual's inherited instinct Journal Kallmann syndrome language later learning lives long-term Lorenz male mammals mate maternal menopause ment mother musical natural neurons nonidentical twins normal offspring opposite sex organism oxytocin particular Patrick Bateson personality physical placenta play preferences produce proteins psychological pups rats reared recessive gene role senescence sensitive period sexual siblings Simone de Beauvoir social species stress syndrome thrifty phenotype tion University Press velopment visual visual cortex Werner's syndrome women young animals