by Joseph Lyons
Duke University Press, 1987
Cloth: 978-0-8223-0710-5
Library of Congress Classification BF698.3.L94 1987
Dewey Decimal Classification 155.264

ABOUT THIS BOOK | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Ecology of the Body presents an argument for describing our behavior in accordance with the ways we experience our bodies. Increasingly, psychologists are recognizing that human beings show great diversity in the ways they perform the vast repertoire of human behaviors—such as perceiving, reasoning, remembering, forgetting—that we may well possess not simply different levels of "intelligence" but also different forms of it in varying combinations, just as we show differing degrees of emotion, goal-directed activity, and creativity. Lyons puts forward a hypothesis in which he argues for the utility of understanding these differences as stylistic variations that are inseparable from our physical experience of ourselves.

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