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Mar 2005
ISBN 0262582511
561 pp.
14 illus.
BUY THE BOOK
Perspectives on Imitation - Volume 2
Susan Hurley and Nick Chater

"Hurley and Chater have put together the definitive collection on imitation. From mirror neurons to media violence to meme theory, you'll find it all here, cogently presented and debated. The set includes multiple chapters on mechanisms, the animal record, human development, and culture, each with a lively exchange of views and interpretations. A must-read for students of behavior, sociality, and culture."
-- William H. Durham, Bing Professor in Human Biology and Chair of Anthropological Sciences, Stanford University

Imitation is not the low-level, cognitively undemanding behavior it is often assumed to be, but rather-along with language and the ability to understand other minds-one of a trio of related capacities that are fundamental to human mentality. In these landmark volumes, leading researchers across a range of disciplines provide a state-of-the-art view of imitation, integrating the latest findings and theories with reviews of seminal work, and revealing why imitation is a topic of such intense current scientific interest. Perspectives are drawn from neuroscience and brain imaging, animal and developmental psychology, primatology, ethology, philosophy, anthropology, media studies, economics, sociology, education, and law. These volumes provide a resource that makes this research accessible across disciplines and clarifies its importance for the social sciences and philosophy as well as for the cognitive sciences. As a further aid to cross-fertilization, each volume includes extensive interdisciplinary commentary and discussion.

Table of Contents
 Contents of Volume 1
 Introduction: The Importance of Imitation
by Susan Hurley and Nick Chater
 Imitation and Human Development
1 Imitation and Other Minds: The ``Like Me'' Hypothesis
by Andrew N. Meltzoff
2 Imitation, Mind Reading, and Simulation
by Alvin I. Goldman
3 Intentional Agents Like Myself
by Robert M. Gordon
4 No Compelling Evidence to Dispute Piaget's Timetable of the Development of Representational Imitation in Infancy
by Moshe Anisfeld
5 Intention Reading and Imitative Learning
by Michael Tomasello and Malinda Carpenter
6 On Learning What Not to Do: The Emergence of Selective Imitation in Tool Use by Young Children
by Paul L. Harris and Stephen Want
7 Imitation as Entrainment: Brain Mechanisms and Social Consequences
by Marcel Kinsbourne
8 Commentary and Discussion on Imitation and Human Development
 Imitation and Culture
9 Why We Are Social Animals: The High Road to Imitation as Social Glue
by Ap Dijksterhuis
10 Deceptive Mimicry in Humans
by Diego Gambetta
11 What Effects Does the Treatment of Violence in the Mass Media Have on People's Conduct? A Controversy Reconsidered
by John Eldridge
12 Imitation and the Effects of Observing Media Violence on Behavior
by L. Rowell Huesmann
13 Imitation and Moral Development
by Jesse J. Prinz
14 Imitation and Mimesis
by Merlin Donald
15 Imitation and Rationality
by Robert Sugden
16 Common Misunderstandings of Memes (and Genes): The Promise and the Limits of the Genetic Analogy to Cultural Transmission Processes
by Francisco J. Gil-White
17 Goals versus Memes: Explanation in the Theory of Cultural Evolution
by Mark Greenberg
18 Mendelian and Darwinian Views of Memes and Cultural Change
by Nick Chater
19 Commentary and Discussion on Imitation and Culture
 Bibliography for Volumes 1 and 2
 Contributors to Volumes 1 and 2
 Index to Volume 1
 Index to Volume 2
 
 


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