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The writing is clear, the organization is great, the illustrations, diagrams, and inset examples are excellent. You can't do better than this to get an overview of S&P. Good introductory or mid-level book. Starts with all the basics (how the ear works, how we see color) and winds up with complex topics like how we perceive music.
A good reference book, it's even fun for browsing, or for sharing with friends and saying "This is so cool! Check this out!" (regarding some of the perceptual illusions and demonstrations etc.) How many textbooks can you say that about?
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Stanley Coren avoids sentimentality by employing the distance and perspective of history, describing the historical situations in which dogs have left their paw prints. It is Coren's contention that dogs have been a motive force in history, not merely chasing sticks into the waters of our past but actually spreading ripples of consequence throughout our lives. The cumulative effect of these historical particulars is to see in them something enduring and universal.
His proof starts at the beginning of our history. And why not? Cave markings reveal that ancient man was greeted by a wagging tail. Coren describes many memorable scenes and anecdotes from the ancient world to the present in which dogs have changed the lives of such diverse figures as Sir Walter Scott, Columbus, Washington, Lincoln, Freud, and Alexander Graham Bell. It adds to my respect for Mr. Lincoln, for example, to learn that he leaped into an icy Wabash River waist-high in order to save his fallen friend. While composing, Wagner went so far as to use his dog's responses to the use of certain musical notes.
Coren's narrative history suggests that our relationship with dogs is significantly different from our relationship with other animals. No one writes poems about pigs or cows. Dogs, on the other hand, have achieved their vaunted status by demonstrating characteristics quite different from the rest of the animal kingdom, characteristics aristocratic and anachronistic in a modern, democratic society: loyalty, honesty, trust, discrimination, and an unconditional love which humans have never been able to match.
Equally remarkable in these stories is how often dogs naturally respond in the most appropriate, admirable ways. A dog's behavior is the result of nature and habit rather than rational calculation-his or ours. It makes sense that people in turn respond to these great gifts with reverence and gratitude. In the introduction to their training manual, the monks of New Skete write that, in a modern, technological world, dogs are the only connection to nature that many of us have and consequently the only connection to something uncreated by us.
This continuity with the infinite is one reason I found Coren's introduction poignant. He imagines a scene some ten thousand years ago where early man lies in a hut, at rest with his family around a dying firelight, while the dog perks his ears toward the primitive night. "What do you hear, my dog?" he asks. "You will tell me if I should worry?" Then he proceeds to relate a brief story, handed down through generations, of how dogs became man's hunter, guardian, and friend. After the story, the alert dog yawns and rests his hands on his paws. Before the man sleeps he asks the question that Stanley Coren ponders in these pages: "What would life be like without you?"
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This book shows that this is not the case. Our western work-ethos has led us to believe that sleeping is for weaklings and that sleeping very little is a sign of discipline and diligence . This book is full of examples of the results of that attitude. As a renowned researcher into the science of sleep, the Author is able to list a considerable number of instances where a lack of sleep did not only lead to less productivity, but led to downright disasters such as the sinking of the "Exxon Valdez" or the Chernobyl nuclear accident.
I found that the book gives a real insight into the importance of obtaining enough sleep. In my case, I found it convincing enough to change some of my habits and go to bed earlier, if need be. As the author shows, a like change throughout society might safe us billions of dollars per year.
Lighter in tone, and much more accessible to the most techno- or medio-phobic of lay readers is Sleep Thieves by Stanley Cohen. While Cohen's book does not have the same claim to impartial accuracy of the researcher, it gains ground by its engrossing style and an ability to merge folklore with medical studies. The whole, as it appears, is then dissected, and Cohen ends up destroying as many myths as Prof. Lavie in The Enchanted World of Sleep (in many cases, the same ones). Cohen does have a purpose with his book, and that is to say that as a culture, we are running up a "sleep debt"; that is, by denying ourselves the amount of sleep that our bodies need, we endanger ourselves and others. Before he gets to this conclusion, his common ground with Prof. Lavie is visited, including studies on sleep deprivation and its results, people's perceptions of sleep, and the amount of sleep that our bodies fall into without the self-regulating clock of the sun. His conclusion is tied together neatly, with a fine work of statistical research using the time lost and gained during the change from and to Daylight Savings Time. Lack of sleep, due to cultural demands, is a major cause of accidents that are often fatal.
Cohen's book, with its amazing conclusion that lives with you, makes it obvious that "sleep debt" is not just a funny phrase, but a real problem, and one that is being ignored by almost everyone. It is time, as Cohen ironically states, for us to wake up about sleep.
There is a test you can perform in order to understand how many hours of sleep you need. It's just great.
I wish all doctors read this masterpiece and instead of giving Valium or whatever to people with sleeping disorders, were giving them advices taken from this book. Once more, thank you Mr.Coren
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The book's title, "The Intelligence of Dogs" should have been "The Intelligence of ALL Dogs," because some people seem to be hung up on "the list" and think the book is about "The Intelligent Dogs." As a psychologist myself, I know how people can focus on rankings and comparative lists, and in the process lose perspective of the whole picture. We get defensive because our Dalmatians were spotted 39th, and angry when our Afghans wagged the distribution's tail in last place. Know what? It doesn't matter. Don't throw the puppy out with the bath water; the rest of the book will balm you even though your Labrador retrieved only a 7 ranking. The canine history section alone is worth the price. But the real problem now is, how do I break the news to brilliance here that he was descended from a proto-cat?
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It is put up in a way so that you read about different bodyparts communications in different chapters. Face talk, body talk, eye talk, ear talk and so on. Each signal from the dog, whether it is a tail wag or a growl is being translated to Human language, so that you better can understand the meaning, ( "If you dont back off, I will fight you" ) even when you have finish the book, you will rememeber the meaning.
The book also gives you a big laugh, when Stanley Coren tells about his own experiments with dogs.
The book is also wery easy to read for "not american " people.
I know because I am from Denmark.
Read this book and learn "how to speak dog".........
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An intriguing idea, but unfortunately not accomplished in this work.
Coren places each breed in one of seven rather indistinct categories: Friendly, Protective, Independent, Self-Assured, Consistent, Steady, Clever.
He tests your personality and indicates which of the groups is best for you. You are then encouraged to choose from among the breeds in that group, breeds he bills as fairly interchangeable compatibility-wise.
A large flaw in this is that no breed is described as having more than one strong characteristic: for example, no breed is listed as both friendly and clever.
Additionally, no other compatibility issues are considered. For example, in matching you with a breed, no consideration is given to the breed's needs/demands for attention and exercise. Nor is consideration given to the breed's tolerance for children and other dogs.
The most noteworthy accomplishment of this book is Coren's very extensive historical description of famous people and their relationships with their dogs, but the contribution of such anecdotes in establishing breed characteristics is rather ambiguous.
Coren groups breeds by personality and matches them to corresponding human personalities. If you're more extroverted or controlling or trustworthy or whatever, you can find the breed to suit you best.
Coren's typing is also useful for the potential owner looking for a mixed breed dog. "Mixed breed" isn't a breed of its own; every mixed breed dog is descended from purebreds, and the genetic components of those dogs' temperaments are passed on to the mix. (Genes don't disappear just because they're in a mixed breed dog.) With this book the potential owner has a better idea of what temperament a little mixed breed puppy will have, and can match the dog to their own personality with greater confidence than otherwise.
This is all very well and fine if the dog you're planning to choose is well-bred. Unfortunately, most dogs out there aren't. Pet store puppies, puppy mill dogs, and puppies bred by people who want the kids to see 'the miracle of life' don't have consistent temperaments. Puppies from these sources have a far higher chance of having both physical and mental problems. In fact, most of the modern prejudices against purebreds come from people who have bought badly tempered dogs from backyard breeders or puppy mill outlets. Coren doesn't address this vital issue. This is far more than an unfortunate oversight; it's forgetting a major piece of the puzzle.