NONFICTION
Released: May 28, 2013
"Scholarly essays packed with closely reasoned arguments from the author and fellow academics, plus extensive historical analyses of thinkers from Aristotle to Spinoza to Malcolm Gladwell. Patient readers with a taste for philosophy will find that reading this book is a stimulating experience."
Why do some people behave honorably and others badly? This has been a core question since the dawn of philosophy, and Ravven (Religious Studies/Hamilton Coll.; co-editor:
Jewish Themes in Spinoza's Philosophy, 2002) discusses the possibilities.
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NONFICTION
Released: June 1, 2013
"Carlson tends to academic dryness and to a fondness for the smallest of details. Though Tesla deserves such serious treatment, his book is likelier to appeal to specialists than general readers."
A scholarly, critical, mostly illuminating study of the life and work of the great Serbian inventor.
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NONFICTION
Released: June 3, 2013
"A witty critique of scientific overreach that celebrates the totality of human achievement."
White (English/Illinois State Univ.;
Barbaric Heart: Faith, Money, and the Crisis of Nature, 2009 etc.) disputes the triumphalism of neuroscientists, evolutionary psychologists and geneticists who proclaim "the victory of science and reason over religion."
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NONFICTION
Released: June 4, 2013
"A novel idea about the origins of the human mind but long-winded and repetitious in its development."
A new answer to the question of why Homo sapiens are the only species to have developed a brain with complex mental abilities.
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NONFICTION
Released: June 4, 2013
"A valuable contribution to the neuroscience bookshelf."
Psychiatrist Satel (Yale Univ. School of Medicine;
When Altruism Isn't Enough: The Case for Compensating Kidney Donors, 2009, etc.) and psychologist Lilienfeld (Psychology/Emory Univ.; co-editor:
Case Studies in Clinical Psychology, 2013, etc.) take up the cudgels against what they call "neurocentrism."
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NONFICTION
Released: June 4, 2013
"An inspiring, informative affirmation of human potential combined with an overview of historical developments in standardized tests, cognitive psychology and current research."
Cognitive psychologist Kaufman (Psychology/New York Univ.; co-author:
Mating Intelligence Unleashed: The Role of Mind in Sex, Dating and Love, 2013, etc.) describes how he overcame a learning disability and defied expectations despite doing poorly on IQ tests.
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NONFICTION
Released: June 4, 2013
"A useful guidebook for those desiring success through shrewd networking."
NONFICTION
Released: June 4, 2013
"A straightforward, relevant discourse on the pernicious nature of online intimidation."
NONFICTION
Released: June 11, 2013
"An eye-opening, absorbing, complex story of scientific achievement in the face of overwhelming odds."
A hard-hitting attack on current drug policy by Hart (Psychology and Psychiatry/Columbia Univ.), a neuroscientist who grew up on the streets of one of Miami's toughest neighborhoods.
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NONFICTION
Released: June 11, 2013
"A fascinating treatment of a complex subject."
Martin, the curator of biological anthropology at the Field Museum in Chicago, examines reproduction from "the basic biology of sperms and eggs up to the complexities of birth control and assisted reproduction."
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NONFICTION
Released: June 17, 2013
"A refreshingly different perspective on forging the future of the Internet."
In his debut, Zuckerman (director of MIT's Center for Civic Media) argues that we must "take control of our technologies and use them to build the world we want rather than the world we fear."
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NONFICTION
Released: June 18, 2013
"A rousing good read, strong on human interest and filled with appalling and amazing data."
A pull-no-punches attack on the hucksterism of alternative medicine and an exposé of the federal government's failure to regulate the vitamin and supplement industry.
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