944 resultados para Evans, Richard J.: Telling lies about Hitler
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Leaf A₂ mis-signed as A₁.
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Binder's title.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"All the sketches contained in this volume are reprinted from the Tatler."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vols. 5, 18, 30 are 1st ed.; vols. 3, 8, 9, 21, 27, 29, 39 are 2d ed.; v. 17 is 3d ed.; v. 7 is 5th ed.
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Pictorial t.p. in black and red.
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"Forewords" to pt. II contain extracts from the sources of the play(Hall's and Holinshed's chronicles) : p. iii-xxxviii.
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Includes letters by John James, Jr., and Jonathan Boucher.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Humans are primates. We have evolved from common ancestors and the evolution of the human body is becoming increasingly clear as the archeological record expands. But for most people the gap between humans and animals lies in the mind, not in the body. And minds do not fossilise. To reconstruct the evolution of mind, scholars have thus increasingly looked to our closest relatives for clues. Here I discuss four ways in which the study of primates may inform such reconstruction: fact-finding, phylogenetic reconstruction, analogy, and regression models. Knowledge about primates can help us bridge the gap. Extinction of our closest relatives, on the other hand, would not only deplete that source of information but also increase the apparent differences between animal and human minds. It is likely that we have a long history of displacing closely related species, including the other hominids, leading us to appear ever more unique.
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This article presents three studies conducted in Canada and Australia that relate theory of mind (ToM) development to mental state discourse. In Study 1, mental state discourse was examined while parents and their 5-7-year-old children jointly read a storybook which had a surprise ending about the identity of the main character. Comments specific to the mental states of the story characters and discourse after the book had ended were positively related to children's ToM, and this was due to parent elaborations. Studies 2 and 3 examined children's mental state discourse during storytelling tasks, and in both, mental state discourse of children during narrative was concurrently related to ToM performance. While research has shown that mental state discourse of parents is related to children's ToM acquisition, the current research indicates that children's spontaneous use of mental state language examined outside of the interactional context is also a strong correlate.