Sentences with phrase «humans behave the way we do»

This is unfortunate, seeing as it's impossible to make sense of why we humans behave the way we do and why and how different mental illnesses develop if one doesn't know anything about the evolutionary pressures that sculpted the human brain.

Not exact matches

It's just a way that our human minds measures how physical reality behaves (some of us, like Hawking, do this better than others, but either way, it's just all in our heads, or if we write it down, it becomes an abstraction on paper.
Yet because God created a world where people have genuine freedom and can behave in ways that are contrary to His will, God can not take away human freedom when they try to use it in ways that He doesn't like.
It therefore follows that humans did not always evolve to choose to behave in ways that promoted health but instead were coerced by nature.
Chimps don't teach their young to be nice the way humans do, but in 2007 scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, found that chimps do behave selflessly, helping their human caretakers reach a stick or unfamiliar chimps open a cage full of food, without expecting a reward.
Teams in the U.S. and the U.K. have developed stem cell — based models of Alzheimer's that behave the same way cells do in the human brain.
Does that mean the change we're seeing now is normal, or is the climate behaving in new ways because of human influence?
In this case, sets of oscillating ions can be made to act as if they are connected, even though equivalent human - scale objects, like pendulums and springs, «certainly don't behave in this entangled way,» Hanneke says.
They study how humans have evolved to behave the way we do.
Canine behaviorist and host of the British TV show «Dogs Behaving Badly» Graeme Hall suggests dogs get stressed the same way humans do.
Although pets quickly become cherished members of the family, they aren't people and don't always behave or the react the same way your human family members do.
This award - winning book depicts dogs as they really are... why they behave as they do... and how to teach them the ways of the human world.
An applied animal behaviorist and dog trainer with more than twenty years experience, Dr. Patricia McConnell looks at humans as just another interesting species, and muses about why we behave the way we do around our dogs, how dogs might interpret our behavior, and how to interact with our dogs in ways that bring out the best in our four - legged friends.
She's interested in the way human beings behave and exist in space — and it doesn't matter that her subjects aren't even real.
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