The ape and the sushi master : cultural reflections by a primatologist.
Material type:
TextLanguage: Spanish Publication details: New York : Basic Books, 2001.Description: 433 sISBN: - 0465041752
- 9780465041756
- 156
- QL 785 W111a 2001
- Uekl.88
- Ugae.2
- Ugae.5
- Ugi.88
- Ugi.9
| Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Humanidades | Humanidades (4to. Piso) | QL 785 W111a 2001 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000068830 |
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| QL 751.5 A598 1991 Animal behavior / | QL 757 M379m 1994 Manual de recolección y preparación de ectoparásitos : malofagos, anopluros, sifonapteros y acaros / | QL 785 H376w 2000 Wild minds : what animals really think / | QL 785 W111a 2001 The ape and the sushi master : cultural reflections by a primatologist. | QL 795 O12t 2001 Tras la sonrisa del delfin : el hombre que decidió devolver a los delfines a su hábitat natural / | QL 795 S949r 2003 Rats : observations on the history and habitat of the city's most unwanted inhabitants / | QM16.R3 R969s 1987 Santiago Ramón y Cajal : el hombre, el sabio y el pensador / |
Whole animal : childhood talismans and excessive fear of anthropomorphism --
Fate of gurus : when silverbacks become stumbling blocks --
Bonobos and fig leaves : primate hippies in a Puritan landscape --
Animal art : would you hang a Congo on the wall? --
Predicting Mount Fuji, and a visit to Koshima, where the monkeys salt their potatoes --
Last rubicon : can other animals have culture? --
Nutcracker Suite : reliance on culture in nature --
Cultural naturals : tea and Tibetan macaques --
Apes with self-esteem : Abraham Maslow and the taboo on power --
Survival of the kindest : of selfish genes and unselfish dogs --
Down with dualism! : two millennia of debate about human goodness.
"The Ape and the Sushi Master challenges our most basic assumptions about who we are and how we differ from other animals. In a delightful mix of autobiographical anecdote, rigorous research, and speculation, eminent primatologist Frans de Waal leads us to consider the possibility that apes have their own culture. We think that only we humans are culturally free and sophisticated, varying our behavior from group to group. But what if apes react to situations with behavior learned through observation of their elders (culture) rather than through pure genetic instinct (nature)? Such a scenario shakes our centuries-old convictions about what makes humans distinct. It also counters our recent tendency to look at other animals as slaves of their genetic programs: if animals learn from each other the way we do, this brings them much closer to us."--Jacket.
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