Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | GN 504 .P75 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5182740 |
No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||||
GN 502 .H36 1980 v.1 Handbook of cross-cultural psychology / | GN 502 .H36 1980 v.1 Handbook of cross-cultural psychology / | GN 502 .H63 1982 Culture's consequences : international differences in work-related values / | GN 504 .P75 2012 Beyond human nature : how culture and experience shape our lives / | GN 506 .B46 1961 Patterns of culture / | GN 517 .S76 1990 The art of crossing cultures / | GN 625 .M37 2012 Markets and Indigenous Peoples in Asia Lessons from Development Projects. |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
In this provocative, revelatory tour de force, Jesse Prinz reveals how the cultures we live in - not biology - determine how we think and feel. He examines all aspects of our behaviour, looking at everything from our intellects and emotions, to love and sex, morality and even madness. This book seeks to go beyond traditional debates of nature and nurture. He is not interested in finding universal laws but, rather, in understanding, explaining and celebrating our differences. Why do people raised in Western countries tend to see the trees before the forest, while people from East Asia see the forest before the trees? Why, in South East Asia, is there a common form of mental illness, unheard of in the West, in which people go into a trancelike state after being startled? Compared to Northerners, why are people in the American South more than twice as likely to kill someone over an argument? And, above all, just how malleable are we? Prinz shows that the vast diversity of our behaviour is not engrained. He picks up where biological explanations leave off. He tells us the human story.
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