Growing YoungBloomsbury Academic, 1989 - 292 páginas In this new, revised edition of his landmark book, Montagu compels us to reevaluate the way we think about growth and development, in all its phases, throughout life. Humans are designed to grow and develop their childlike qualities, and not to become the ossified adults prescribed by society. Montagu demonstrates how our culture, schools, and families are in conspiracy against such childlike traits as the need to love, to learn, to wonder, to know, to explore, to think, to experiment, to be imaginative, creative and curious, to sing, dance, or play. He also reveals the many links between physical and mental aging and tells how to prevent psychosclerosis, the hardening of the mind, so that we can die young--as late as possible. The best statement ever written on the most important, neglected theme of human life and evolution. Stephen Jay Gould, Harvard University |
Dentro del libro
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... changes in arterial blood pressure , central nervous system changes , and changes in metabolism and the loss of heat . Babies cry with their eyelids firmly closed . The harder they cry the firmer the closure of the eyelids . The ...
... changes occurred in our precursors leading to the appearance of the first hominids . While these somatic and functional changes appear to have gone on simultaneously , the genes involved have remained quite independent of one another ...
... changes would have been necessary to produce those qualitative changes serving to differentiate the human from the ape mind . It would appear that the principal developments associated with such changes have been those facilitating ...
Contenido
Neoteny and Human Biological Evolution | 12 |
The Evolution of Human Behavior | 46 |
Chapter 4 | 62 |
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Referencias a este libro
Continuity of Neural Functions from Prenatal to Postnatal Life Heinz F. Prechtl Vista previa limitada - 1984 |
Continuity of Neural Functions from Prenatal to Postnatal Life Heinz F. Prechtl Vista previa limitada - 1984 |