Blue Print Atari 2600 Game. Game only. Great condition!!! Tested and works like new.
———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.
BLACK JACK - Atari 2600 Game
$38.40 Original price was: $38.40.$19.18Current price is: $19.18.
BOWLING - Atari 2600 Game
$43.20 Original price was: $43.20.$19.18Current price is: $19.18.
BLUE PRINT – Atari 2600 Game
$41.28 Original price was: $41.28.$22.06Current price is: $22.06.
Rated 4.83 out of 5 based on 52 customer ratings
(52 customer reviews)
Available on backorder
Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!
- 121 Day Warranty Period
- Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Available on backorder
Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!
- 121 Day Warranty Period
- Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Additional information
Weight | 8 lbs |
---|---|
Product Type | |
Platform | Atari 2600 |
ESRB Rating | Everyone |
Genre | Action & Adventure |
Players | 1-2 |
Condition | Used |
52 reviews for BLUE PRINT – Atari 2600 Game
Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
SKU: 4808542584855
Category: Atari 2600
Tags: atari2600, ESRB Rating_Unrated/Unlisted, game, Genre_Other/Unlisted, low, notbestseller, previous, Price_$10 to $20, Product Type_Game
JamilFriesen –
One keeps thinking while reading Nicholas Christakis’s wonderful new book and one hugely annotated and blurbed by famous and important scholars alike, that its basic premise was laid down by EO Wilson’s “The Social Conquest of Earth” in 2012. For those looking for treatments and arguments that continue the thesis that man’s blueprint was both socially-dependent and evolutionarily borne out to form groups and be mutually beneficial in their common evolutionary challenges, “Blueprint” will make a great read.
EllsworthLuettgen –
Very interesting read.Loved it ! Thanks
TL –
I know of no other book that is this well researched, written, and wide-ranging. This guy is amazing.
Eamonn Toland –
A great book by an eminent scientist that shows just how sociable human really are
Jesse C. –
This book was a great perspective from another view of the world and history. Beautifully done and I would highly recommend. Sincerely open minded hillbilly.Also check out the JRE podcast with Nicholas Christakis he’s a pretty cool dude.
EWBL –
Amazing book by a superlative human being
vjg –
Blueprint ties together the social and natural sciences to explain human culture. It gave me a new perspective on society, and I found it hard to put the book down.
Campbell-Sack –
And uplifting and original contribution to understanding the human species.
CarliBatz –
Blueprint is phenomenal, enjoyable, and a must-read for anyone interested in human nature. It’s fun to read and accessible to anyone, whether layman or academic. With outstanding breadth and scope, Christakis combines works from evolutionary biology, anthropology, history, medicine, and more (including original research) to create a unified theory that bridges genetics, society and culture, while sending a strong positive message about our future as humans. The audio book, read by the author, is also excellent.
Athan –
Author Nicholas Christakis spells out the main claim of this book on page 397: “The social suite is founded on human evolutionary biology and is therefore a universal feature of our societies.†In other words, the way we behave versus one another, the structure of our society, is built-in and it’s gotten to where it is now through natural selection.I read the whole thing, carefully, and my feeling is that “the jury’s out,†but I truly enjoyed this (epically discursive) exploration regardless.The structure of the book is that the author does not get down to the business of laying out his argument straight away. You’re first taken on a number of “tours†where you get to observe behavioral traits of groups. The sundry tours include, among other things:1. an enumeration of castaways from the nineteenth century: what binds these people is that they did not plan to form a “societyâ€2. a tour of utopian (American) experiments, who explicitly aimed to do so;3. an attempt at describing a taxonomy of communities;4. a full exploration of all the ways societies make their family arrangements (from Hazda foragers of Tanzania to the Na people in the Himalayas via the the Nuer of Sudan and the Tapirape people of Brazil)5. a study of monogamy and polygamy in animals (including its relation to “key†genes that might potentially catalyze these behaviors)6. an exploration of friendship in animals, including the examination of mathematical graphs of the links between animal “friends†which –am.