The Vital Touch: How Intimate Contact With Your Baby Leads To Happier, Healthier DevelopmentHenry Holt and Company, 2014/09/23 - 288 ページ Using a lively array of anthropological and sociological sources, The Vital Touch: How Intimate Contact with Your Baby Leads to Happier, Healthier Development by Sharon Heller, PhD, presents a provocative examination of the reasons why, now more than ever, we need to make consistent physical connections with our infants and children. |
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4 ページ
... behavior, the baby's brain evolved through natural selection to exPect life to be “a womb with a view,” as Ashley Montagu phrased it in Touching, with the mother's brain hardwired to provide that closeness. The need to stay in touch ...
... behavior, the baby's brain evolved through natural selection to exPect life to be “a womb with a view,” as Ashley Montagu phrased it in Touching, with the mother's brain hardwired to provide that closeness. The need to stay in touch ...
6 ページ
... doesn't remove them: We can vary our behavior from these original patterns, but we can't alter our basic human nature. Carrying our babies to the car in a container, out %vaé¢cflwa ' 7 of the car in a container, through.
... doesn't remove them: We can vary our behavior from these original patterns, but we can't alter our basic human nature. Carrying our babies to the car in a container, out %vaé¢cflwa ' 7 of the car in a container, through.
8 ページ
... behavioral generalizations. That's all right. Each baby demonstrates uniformity (our inherited biology) and individuality (our unique inheritance from our parents and from our culture). And, in order to avoid the gender problem inherent ...
... behavioral generalizations. That's all right. Each baby demonstrates uniformity (our inherited biology) and individuality (our unique inheritance from our parents and from our culture). And, in order to avoid the gender problem inherent ...
13 ページ
... behavior and punishing the bad. Dependency was bad. To “form” an independent child, we needed to nip infantile cravings in the bud, before the newborn had the chance to learn dependent habits. Hold your babies too much, mothers were ...
... behavior and punishing the bad. Dependency was bad. To “form” an independent child, we needed to nip infantile cravings in the bud, before the newborn had the chance to learn dependent habits. Hold your babies too much, mothers were ...
15 ページ
... behavior are products of natu' ral selection, fine'tuned over several million years to best assure the sur~ vival of our species. Our large brains, for instance, evolved as an adaptation to the large variations and unpredictability ...
... behavior are products of natu' ral selection, fine'tuned over several million years to best assure the sur~ vival of our species. Our large brains, for instance, evolved as an adaptation to the large variations and unpredictability ...
目次
3 | |
9?WPET | 104 |
8 SENSORY OVERKILL | 125 |
THE BODY FORBIDDEN | 143 |
BREAST OR BOTTLE? | 163 |
fiemky 12 | 213 |
FINISHING TOUCHES | 231 |
257 | |
267 | |
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