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CogNet Library: Journals
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Cambridge University Press
Volume 32 Issue 6
Dec 01, 2009
ISSN: 0140525x
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Volume 32 : Issue 6
Table of Contents
The evolution of misbelief
Ryan T. McKay and Daniel C. Dennett
Page
493
When is it good to believe bad things?
Joshua M. Ackerman, Jenessa R. Shapiro and Jon K. Maner
Page
510
Non-instrumental belief is largely founded on singularity
1
George Ainslie
Page
511
False beliefs and naive beliefs: They can be good for you
Marco Bertamini and Roberto Casati
Page
512
Extending the range of adaptive misbelief: Memory distortions as functional features
Pascal Boyer
Page
513
Positive illusions and positive collusions: How social life abets self-enhancing beliefs
Jonathon D. Brown
Page
514
Ideology as cooperative affordance
Joseph Bulbulia and Richard Sosis
Page
515
Adaptive diversity and misbelief
1
Edward T. Cokely and Adam Feltz
Page
516
Misbelief and the neglect of environmental context
David Dunning
Page
517
Why we don't need built-in misbeliefs
Carol S. Dweck
Page
518
Can do attitudes: Some positive illusions are not misbeliefs
Owen Flanagan
Page
519
Adaptive misbelief or judicious pragmatic acceptance?
Keith Frankish
Page
520
On the adaptive advantage of always being right (even when one is not)
Nathalia L. Gjersoe and Bruce M. Hood
Page
521
Error management theory and the evolution of misbeliefs
Martie G. Haselton and David M. Buss
Page
522
God would be a costly accident: Supernatural beliefs as adaptive
Dominic D. P. Johnson
Page
523
A positive illusion about positive illusions?
Vladimir J. Koneni
Page
524
Benign folie \xE0 deux: The social construction of positive illusions
Dennis L. Krebs and Kathy Denton
Page
525
(Not so) positive illusions
Justin Kruger, Steven Chan and Neal Roese
Page
526
Pathological and non-pathological factors in delusional misbelief
Robyn Langdon
Page
527
Are beliefs the proper targets of adaptationist analyses?
James R. Liddle and Todd K. Shackelford
Page
528
It is likely misbelief never has a function
Ruth Garrett Millikan
Page
529
Are delusions biologically adaptive? Salvaging the doxastic shear pin
Aaron L. Mishara and Phil Corlett
Page
530
The evolution of religious misbelief
Ara Norenzayan, Azim F. Shariff and Will M. Gervais
Page
531
The (mis)management of agency: Conscious belief and nonconscious self-control
Brandon Randolph-Seng
Page
532
You can't always get what you want: Evolution and true beliefs
Jeffrey P. Schloss and Michael J. Murray
Page
533
Culturally transmitted misbeliefs
Dan Sperber
Page
534
Adaptive misbeliefs and false memories
John Sutton
Page
535
Effective untestability and bounded rationality help in seeing religion as adaptive misbelief
Konrad Talmont-Kaminski
Page
536
Belief in evolved belief systems: Artifact of a limited evolutionary model?
Tyler J. Wereha and Timothy P. Racine
Page
537
Lamarck, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and belief
Yorick Wilks
Page
538
Adaptive misbeliefs are pervasive, but the case for positive illusions is weak
David Sloan Wilson and Steven Jay Lynn
Page
539
Adaptive self-directed misbeliefs: More than just a rarefied phenomenon?
Tadeusz W. Zawidzki
Page
540
Our evolving beliefs about evolved misbelief
Ryan T. McKay and Daniel C. Dennett
Page
541
BBS volume 32 issue 6 Cover and Back matter
Page
b1
BBS volume 32 issue 6 Cover and Front matter
Page
f1
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