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  • - I Thought It Was Over
    af Ken Richardson
    153,95 kr.

    Tabitha Dillard is like most people seeking that rewarding career, beautiful home, wonderful husband and children. She has that rewarding career and beautiful home. But when it comes to relationships that's another story. Broken from a previous relationship she finds it hard to trust men. Thus, giving up hope of finding a good man. Her friend Destiny Wallace refuses to allow her friend to become an old maid. She has the perfect gentleman for Tabitha. The kind of man you take home to your parents. Richard Barnes, an outstanding DC attorney, and Destiny's partner at the firm. Will Tabitha allow her friend to play match maker? Or will the successful surgeon and ex-fiancé of Richard Barnes allow it? Or will Tabitha have her happily ever after?

  • af Ken Richardson
    384,95 - 1.189,95 kr.

    What do we mean when we describe a person as intelligent? The concept of intelligence wields a powerful influence on research dealing with the brain and on how individuals progress in society. Yet, remarkably, there is no scientific consensus about the meaning of intelligence. In The Making of Intelligence Ken Richardson looks at how intelligence has been characterized and measured in the past, explores current trends in our understanding and uses of the concept, and predicts what form these trends will take in the future. He argues that intelligence is not solely predetermined by such factors as genes and environment; it is also created by self-organizing interactions within evolved developmental systems. Considering the implications for society of this dynamic-systems approach, Richardson predicts that as our understanding of the relationship between the mind and the brain improves, the notion of intelligence as a single concept may disappear altogether. Richardson takes particularly sharp aim at IQ tests, exposing the reductionist, oversimplified, and contradictory notions of intelligence that they presuppose as well as the social repercussions of the widespread, unreflecting acceptance of the IQ model in public consciousness. From the writings of Charles Darwin and Herbert Spencer on evolution and adaptation to the reflections of Jean Piaget and Lev Vygotsky on logical reasoning; from the formulation of early IQ tests by Francis Binet and Henri Simon to their recent, provocative rebirth in the assertions of The Bell Curve by Charles Murray and Richard Herrnstein, The Making of Intelligence is a lucid, judicious, critical analysis of this controversial and important subject.

  • af Ken Richardson
    143,95 - 557,95 kr.

    Life sciences, Neuroscience, Cognition

  • af Ken Richardson
    582,95 - 1.816,95 kr.

    Beginning with the premise that there remains a diversity of models of what knowledge and reasoning are and how they develop, this text aims to provide theoretical convergence towards a generally accepted set of principles.

  • - The Science and Ideology of Intelligence
    af Ken Richardson
    343,95 kr.

    For countless generations people have been told that their potential as humans is limited and fundamentally unequal. The social order, they have been assured, is arranged by powers beyond their control. More recently the appeal has been to biology, specifically the genes, brain sciences, the concept of intelligence, and powerful new technologies. Reinforced through the authority of science and a growing belief in bio-determinism, the ordering of the many for the benefit of a few has become more entrenched. Yet scientists are now waking up to the influence of ideology on research and its interpretation. In Genes, Brains, and Human Potential, Ken Richardson illustrates how the ideology of human intelligence has infiltrated genetics, brain sciences, and psychology, flourishing in the vagueness of basic concepts, a shallow nature-versus-nurture debate, and the overhyped claims of reductionists. He shows how ideology, more than pure science, has come to dominate our institutions, especially education, encouraging fatalism about the development of human intelligence among individuals and societies. Genes, Brains, and Human Potential goes much further: building on work being done in molecular biology, epigenetics, dynamical systems, evolution theory, and complexity theory, it maps a fresh understanding of intelligence and the development of human potential. Concluding with an upbeat message for human possibilities, this synthesis of diverse perspectives will engender new conversations among students, researchers, and other interested readers.