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Primatology, Ethics and Trauma offers a critical re-examination of the research conducted into the linguistic capabilities of the Oklahoma chimps and uncovers the historical reality of this research project without fabrication.
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Primatology, Ethics and Trauma offers a critical re-examination of the research conducted into the linguistic capabilities of the Oklahoma chimps and uncovers the historical reality of this research project without fabrication.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 192
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Februar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 11mm
- Gewicht: 304g
- ISBN-13: 9781032413488
- ISBN-10: 1032413484
- Artikelnr.: 66697986
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 192
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Februar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 11mm
- Gewicht: 304g
- ISBN-13: 9781032413488
- ISBN-10: 1032413484
- Artikelnr.: 66697986
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Robert Ingersoll (BSc, MS) has been a tireless champion of captive chimpanzees since the 1970s. He entered the world of primates as an undergraduate student at the University of Oklahoma's Institute for Primate Studies, where the research focus was on cognition, language, and interspecies communication between chimpanzees and humans, using American Sign Language. He quickly came to see the chimpanzees as friends rather than as research subjects. After several productive years, funding for the program was cut by the university, and the chimpanzee colony was sold to a medical research laboratory for invasive research. This led Robert to a crusade to free his chimpanzee friends that has lasted decades. Anna Scarnà (BSc Hons, DPhil, PGCTHE, PGCert, CPsychol) is a psychologist and neuroscientist with expertise in language, personality and psychological disorders. Her Doctor of Philosophy was on the composition of the monolingual and bilingual lexicon, and she explored the factors that affect object naming and reading. She has conducted award-winning research into non-drug treatments for dopamine in bipolar disorder and schizophrenia at Oxford University, United Kingdom, where she runs courses in brain and behaviour/neuroscience, personality, and psychological disorders covering topics including personality traits, addiction, and social behaviours. She teaches various international tutorial courses, and has been running the popular Oxford University online Introduction to Psychology course.
1. Acknowledgment 2. Chimpanzee Family Trees 3. Introduction 4. Chapter 1:
50 Years Later 1.1 Fifty years since language experiments on chimpanzees
1.2 When we swap chimpanzee for child 1.3 A biography of Washoe 5. Chapter
2: Narratives for Flourishing 2.1 Why language and Noam Chomsky for Nim
Chimpsky? 2.2 The introduction of language to a chimpanzee, order of the
signs, and human parallels 2.3 Age of acquisition, order of acquisition 2.4
Trauma and language 6. Chapter 3: One of Us 3.1 Humans' need for a healthy
upbringing and the needs of a chimpanzee 3.2 Washoe in her enclosure,
existing not living, and self efficacy in humans 3.3 Survivors: The effects
of trauma on the brain in humans: the Romanian orphanages and the Holocaust
3.4 "Man is the master of animals": the morality behind the authoritarian
model over chimpanzees 7. Chapter 4: The Truth About Washoe 4.1 Washoe's
preparation for mothering. What do good mothers do? 4.2 The true story of
the death of Sequoyah 4.3 Was Washoe abnormal? Definition of abnormality in
humans and in chimpanzees, with use of the DSM-5 4.4 Parental narcissism in
humans and in chimpanzees: a sense of self worth, parental neglect, and
chimpanzee trust 8. Chapter 5: Post Traumatic Chimpanzees 5.1 Did Washoe
have complex PTSD? Living conditions and the turning of James Mahoney 5.2
Finding and building sanctuary 9. Chapter 6: When All The Chimps Have Gone
6.1 How do we look to the future? 6.2 How not to repeat history. Existing
models of good practice 6.3 How to honour the memory of Washoe and the
other Oklahoma chimpanzees 6.4 The last word
50 Years Later 1.1 Fifty years since language experiments on chimpanzees
1.2 When we swap chimpanzee for child 1.3 A biography of Washoe 5. Chapter
2: Narratives for Flourishing 2.1 Why language and Noam Chomsky for Nim
Chimpsky? 2.2 The introduction of language to a chimpanzee, order of the
signs, and human parallels 2.3 Age of acquisition, order of acquisition 2.4
Trauma and language 6. Chapter 3: One of Us 3.1 Humans' need for a healthy
upbringing and the needs of a chimpanzee 3.2 Washoe in her enclosure,
existing not living, and self efficacy in humans 3.3 Survivors: The effects
of trauma on the brain in humans: the Romanian orphanages and the Holocaust
3.4 "Man is the master of animals": the morality behind the authoritarian
model over chimpanzees 7. Chapter 4: The Truth About Washoe 4.1 Washoe's
preparation for mothering. What do good mothers do? 4.2 The true story of
the death of Sequoyah 4.3 Was Washoe abnormal? Definition of abnormality in
humans and in chimpanzees, with use of the DSM-5 4.4 Parental narcissism in
humans and in chimpanzees: a sense of self worth, parental neglect, and
chimpanzee trust 8. Chapter 5: Post Traumatic Chimpanzees 5.1 Did Washoe
have complex PTSD? Living conditions and the turning of James Mahoney 5.2
Finding and building sanctuary 9. Chapter 6: When All The Chimps Have Gone
6.1 How do we look to the future? 6.2 How not to repeat history. Existing
models of good practice 6.3 How to honour the memory of Washoe and the
other Oklahoma chimpanzees 6.4 The last word
1. Acknowledgment 2. Chimpanzee Family Trees 3. Introduction 4. Chapter 1:
50 Years Later 1.1 Fifty years since language experiments on chimpanzees
1.2 When we swap chimpanzee for child 1.3 A biography of Washoe 5. Chapter
2: Narratives for Flourishing 2.1 Why language and Noam Chomsky for Nim
Chimpsky? 2.2 The introduction of language to a chimpanzee, order of the
signs, and human parallels 2.3 Age of acquisition, order of acquisition 2.4
Trauma and language 6. Chapter 3: One of Us 3.1 Humans' need for a healthy
upbringing and the needs of a chimpanzee 3.2 Washoe in her enclosure,
existing not living, and self efficacy in humans 3.3 Survivors: The effects
of trauma on the brain in humans: the Romanian orphanages and the Holocaust
3.4 "Man is the master of animals": the morality behind the authoritarian
model over chimpanzees 7. Chapter 4: The Truth About Washoe 4.1 Washoe's
preparation for mothering. What do good mothers do? 4.2 The true story of
the death of Sequoyah 4.3 Was Washoe abnormal? Definition of abnormality in
humans and in chimpanzees, with use of the DSM-5 4.4 Parental narcissism in
humans and in chimpanzees: a sense of self worth, parental neglect, and
chimpanzee trust 8. Chapter 5: Post Traumatic Chimpanzees 5.1 Did Washoe
have complex PTSD? Living conditions and the turning of James Mahoney 5.2
Finding and building sanctuary 9. Chapter 6: When All The Chimps Have Gone
6.1 How do we look to the future? 6.2 How not to repeat history. Existing
models of good practice 6.3 How to honour the memory of Washoe and the
other Oklahoma chimpanzees 6.4 The last word
50 Years Later 1.1 Fifty years since language experiments on chimpanzees
1.2 When we swap chimpanzee for child 1.3 A biography of Washoe 5. Chapter
2: Narratives for Flourishing 2.1 Why language and Noam Chomsky for Nim
Chimpsky? 2.2 The introduction of language to a chimpanzee, order of the
signs, and human parallels 2.3 Age of acquisition, order of acquisition 2.4
Trauma and language 6. Chapter 3: One of Us 3.1 Humans' need for a healthy
upbringing and the needs of a chimpanzee 3.2 Washoe in her enclosure,
existing not living, and self efficacy in humans 3.3 Survivors: The effects
of trauma on the brain in humans: the Romanian orphanages and the Holocaust
3.4 "Man is the master of animals": the morality behind the authoritarian
model over chimpanzees 7. Chapter 4: The Truth About Washoe 4.1 Washoe's
preparation for mothering. What do good mothers do? 4.2 The true story of
the death of Sequoyah 4.3 Was Washoe abnormal? Definition of abnormality in
humans and in chimpanzees, with use of the DSM-5 4.4 Parental narcissism in
humans and in chimpanzees: a sense of self worth, parental neglect, and
chimpanzee trust 8. Chapter 5: Post Traumatic Chimpanzees 5.1 Did Washoe
have complex PTSD? Living conditions and the turning of James Mahoney 5.2
Finding and building sanctuary 9. Chapter 6: When All The Chimps Have Gone
6.1 How do we look to the future? 6.2 How not to repeat history. Existing
models of good practice 6.3 How to honour the memory of Washoe and the
other Oklahoma chimpanzees 6.4 The last word