Nature's Thumbprint: The New Genetics of PersonalityColumbia University Press, 1996 - 223 pages In Nature's Thumbprint, one of the country's foremost psychiatrists and his son, a writer, explore the impact of today's new genetic research on our understanding of human development and personality. Using original case studies of identical twins adopted in infancy and reared apart, this extraordinary book untangles the complex interaction between genetics and experience. |
Table des matières
PART I | 10 |
CHAPTER | 25 |
CHAPTER THREE | 37 |
CHAPTER FOUR | 55 |
CHAPTER FIVE | 75 |
CHAPTER | 93 |
CHAPTER SEVEN | 113 |
CHAPTER EIGHT | 129 |
CHAPTER | 153 |
CHAPTER ELEVEN | 167 |
PART IV | 181 |
CHAPTER THIRTEEN | 195 |
Epilogue | 201 |
Selected Bibliography | 211 |
217 | |
A Long History Briefly Told | 141 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Nature's Thumbprint: The New Genetics of Personality Peter B. Neubauer,Alexander Neubauer Affichage d'extraits - 1990 |
Nature's Thumbprint: The New Genetics of Personality Peter B. Neubauer,Alexander Neubauer Affichage d'extraits - 1990 |
Nature's Thumbprint: The New Genetics of Personality Peter B. Neubauer,Alexander Neubauer Affichage d'extraits - 1990 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
ability adaptation adult Alzheimer's disease Anna Freud appear baby become behavior Berry Brazelton biological birth brain CARVING NATURE cells characteristics child childhood chromosomes cognitive conflicts consider culture demands devel developmental disease disorders disposition early emotional environment environmental Erik Erikson experience expression father fears feel function genes genetic matrix girl ground plan growth healthy Heinz Hartmann heredity human identical twins reared individual infant inherited inner interaction INVULNERABLE learning linked lives makeup Margaret Mahler maturation and development menarche mother nature and nurture needs never parents patterns personality phases physical predisposed problems psychic psychoanalysis psychological psychosexual stages psychotherapy ranges of flexibility recognize relationship response revealed role sense sensitive shape shared shyness siblings Sigmund Freud social specific stage Stephen Jay Gould stimulation survive Theodosius Dobzhansky timetables tion traits twin studies understanding unfolding vulnerable Walter Mischel York