If one knows enough about the world, one should know that an oar partly submerged in water (seen from a particular viewing angle) should look bent just like that. (The Splintered Mind)
In a Helpless Baby, the Roots of Our Social Glue
As Dr. Hrdy argues in her latest book, “Mothers and Others: The Evolutionary Origins of Mutual Understanding,” which will be published by Harvard University Press in April, human babies are so outrageously dependent on their elders for such a long time that humanity would never have made it without a break from the great ape model of child-rearing. Chimpanzee and gorilla mothers are capable of rearing their offspring pretty much through their own powers, but human mothers are not.
humans evolved a powerful set of moral instincts - a set of instincts that far exceed those of our primate relatives - because we depend on others to help us rear our helpless infants (The Frontal Cortex)
State of the Art Research into Cognitive Load Theory
Computers in Human Behavior,
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 253-596 (March 2009)
Including the Special Issue: State of the Art Research into Cognitive Load Theory
Edited by Paul Ayres and Tamara van GogInternational Journal of Law and Psychiatry, Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages 1-64 (January-February 2009)
Women and Criminality
Edited by Hanna Putkonen and Ghitta Weizmann-Henelius"Folk Psychology and Phenomenal Consciousness" by Justin Sytsma
Powerpoint with audio lecture
Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.
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