 |
| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
|
Volume 29
Issue 5 |
| Oct 01, 2006 |
|
ISSN: 0140525x |
 |
|
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|  |
Volume 29 :
Issue 5
Table of Contents
|
-
The folk psychology of souls

Jesse M. Bering
Page 453
-
Simulation constraints, afterlife beliefs, and common-sense dualism

Michael V. Antony
Page 462
-
Social cognition of religion

William Sims Bainbridge
Page 463
-
Parenting, not religion, makes us into moral agents

Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi
Page 464
-
Religion and morality: An anthropological comment

Maurice Bloch
Page 465
-
Prosocial aspects of afterlife beliefs: Maybe another by-product

Pascal Boyer
Page 466
-
Production of supernatural beliefs during Cotards syndrome, a rare psychotic depression

David Cohen and Angle Consoli
Page 468
-
Evidence for early dualism and a more direct path to afterlife beliefs

David Estes
Page 470
-
A case of stunted development? Existential reasoning is contingent on a developing theory of mind

E. Margaret Evans and Henry M. Wellman
Page 471
-
Culture and development matter to understanding souls, no matter what our evolutionary design

Michel Ferrari
Page 472
-
Autism, language, and the folk psychology of souls

Stephen Flusberg and Helen Tager-Flusberg
Page 473
-
Souls do not live by cognitive inclinations alone, but by the desire to exist beyond death as well

Jeff Greenberg, Daniel Sullivan, Spee Kosloff and Sheldon Solomon
Page 474
-
Learning that there is life after death

Paul L. Harris and Rita Astuti
Page 475
-
Folk psychology meets folk Darwinism

Jay Hegd and Norman A. Johnson
Page 476
-
Natural selection and religiosity: Validity issues in the empirical examination of afterlife cognitions

Brian M. Hughes
Page 477
-
Six feet over: Out-of-body experiences and their relevance to the folk psychology of souls

David Kemmerer and Rupa Gupta
Page 478
-
Cultural adaptation and evolved, general-purpose cognitive mechanisms are sufficient to explain belief in souls

Kenneth R. Livingston
Page 479
-
Beliefs in afterlife as a by-product of persistence judgments

George E. Newman, Sergey V. Blok and Lance J. Rips
Page 480
-
Do children think of the self as the soul?

Shaun Nichols
Page 481
-
The Godfather of soul

Jesse Preston, Kurt Gray and Daniel M. Wegner
Page 482
-
No evidence of a specific adaptation

Ilkka Pyysiinen
Page 483
-
An unconstrained mind: Explaining belief in the afterlife

Philip Robbins and Anthony I. Jack
Page 484
-
Reasoning about dead agents: A cross-cultural perspective

Harvey Whitehouse
Page 485
-
The cognitive science of souls: Clarifications and extensions of the evolutionary model

Jesse M. Bering
Page 486
-
The unified theory of repression

Matthew Hugh Erdelyi
Page 499
-
Encouraging the nascent cognitive neuroscience of repression

Michael C. Anderson and Benjamin J. Levy
Page 511
-
Can repression become a conscious process?

Simon Boag
Page 513
-
Motive and consequence in repression

Joseph M. Boden
Page 514
-
The illusion of repressed memory

George A. Bonanno
Page 515
-
What Erdelyi has repressed

Frederick Crews
Page 516
-
Freud did not anticipate modern reconstructive memory processes

Allen Esterson and Stephen J. Ceci
Page 517
-
The social psychology of cognitive repression

Jennifer J. Freyd
Page 518
-
Forging a link between cognitive and emotional repression

Esther Fujiwara and Marcel Kinsbourne
Page 519
-
Dialectical repression theory

David H. Gleaves
Page 520
-
On the continuing lack of scientific evidence for repression

Harlene Hayne, Maryanne Garry and Elizabeth F. Loftus
Page 521
-
Reduced autobiographical memory specificity, avoidance, and repression

Dirk Hermans, Filip Raes, Carlos Iberico and J. Mark G. Williams
Page 522
-
Universal repression from consciousness versus abnormal dissociation from self-consciousness

Robert G. Kunzendorf
Page 523
-
Repression and the unconscious

Robert Langnickel and Hans Markowitsch
Page 524
-
Is Erdelyis swan a goose?

Malcolm Macmillan
Page 525
-
Let Freud rest in peace

Richard J. McNally
Page 526
-
Learning from repression: Emotional memory and emotional numbing

Nick Medford and Anthony S. David
Page 527
-
The United States of Repression

Sadia Najmi and Daniel M. Wegner
Page 528
-
Social incoherence and the narrative construction of memory

Judith Pintar and Steven Jay Lynn
Page 529
-
Towards a post-Freudian theory of repression: Reflections on the role of inhibitory functions

Ralph E. Schmidt and Martial Van der Linden
Page 530
-
Repression and dreaming: An open empirical question

Michael Schredl
Page 531
-
The mnemic neglect model: Experimental demonstrations of inhibitory repression in normal adults

Constantine Sedikides and Jeffrey D. Green
Page 532
-
Repression, suppression, and oppression (in depression)

Golan Shahar
Page 533
-
Resolving repression

Steven M. Smith
Page 534
-
The return of the repressed

Matthew Hugh Erdelyi
Page 535
|
|