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Volume 155, Number 23 (June 5, 1999)

References & Sources
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When Stones Come to Life

Researchers ponder the curious human tendency to view all sorts of things as alive

The widespread tendency to attribute life to all sorts of objects and events may arise in the course of forming close relationships with features of one's environment.

References:

Bird-David, N. 1999. "Animism" revisited. Current Anthropology 40(February):S67.

Guthrie, S.E. 1993. Faces in the Clouds. New York: Oxford University Press.

Lillard, A. 1998. Ethnopsychologies: Cultural variations in theories of mind. Psychological Bulletin 123(January):3.

Further Readings:

Bower, B. 1996. Digging into natural-world insights. Science News 150(Nov. 16):308.

______. 1993. A child's theory of mind. Science News 144(July 17):40.

Ingold, T. 1997. Life beyond the edge of nature? Or, the mirage of society. In The Mark of the Social, J.B. Greenwood, ed. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.

Sources:

Scott Atran
University of Michigan
Institute for Social Research
Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248

Nurit Bird-David
University of Haifa
Department of Social Anthropology
Mount Carmel, Haifa 31905
Israel

Tim Ingold
University of Manchester
Department of Social Anthropology
Oxford Road
Manchester M13 9PL
England

Angeline Lillard
University of Virginia
Department of Psychology
102 Gilmer Hall
Charlottesville, VA 22903-2477

Gísli Pálsson
University of Iceland
Department of Anthropology
101 Reykjavik
Iceland

From Science News, Vol. 155, No. 23, June 5, 1999, p. 360. Copyright © 1999, Science Service.


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