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BLUE PRINT – Atari 2600 Game

Original price was: $41.28.Current price is: $22.06.

-47%
(52 customer reviews)

Available on backorder

only 12 left in stock

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  • 121 Day Warranty Period
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Available on backorder

only 12 left in stock

Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!

  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Guaranteed Safe Checkout

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.

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

  1. Avisheh

    1

  2. Michael Meehan

    Fascinating

  3. Van C. Tran

    With lucid prose and wide-ranging knowledge on the human sciences, this book is a must-read for anyone who is curious about the origins of social groups and societies, as well as the common bonds that Christakis called “the social suite.” This book is not only brilliant in its conception, but also sweeping in its scope. But most importantly, Christakis highlights our shared humanity that lies deep within the evolutionary process over centuries, despite our cultural and social differences. This unifying message is both timely and urgent, especially in this historical moment of great divisions and disparities in the United States and beyond.

  4. Yashua Ruiz

    Excelente

  5. Ms C Whitfield

    Fabulously written

  6. John F.

    A network is a group or system of interconnected people or things that interact to exchange information and other things of value. Through these exchanges positive and negative feedback loops propagate through the network. The sequences of exchanges are like signals through the brain, forming memories and learning with repeated use or otherwise forgetting or remaining ignorant with lack of use. What emerges are behavioral properties of the overall group or system that persists over time and scale, often exhibiting multiple stable patterns. The overall network evolves in structure and behavior via influence of individual group members, and individual group members conversely evolve via the influence of the larger patterns of behavior and the external environment to which the group or system is exposed.Nicholas Christakis sees human nature and human cultural behavior in the context of natural networks on an evolutionary scale. He sees human nature comprised of persistent cooperative and competitive impulses, with individuals and groups exhibiting both benevolent and violent tendencies. These conflicting impulses are intertwined; humans are primed for conflict and hatred but also for love, friendship, and cooperation. We have pessimistic and optimistic tendencies, but genetically evolved through natural selection to be biased toward exchanges with each other that are judged to be good. Morality and moral deliberation is itself a property and behavior of the group that has.

  7. Daniel Jean

    Great book. Essential read.

  8. Kieran

    This is a fascinating and important book. It sets out why human behaviour evolves towards more cooperation and order – it promotes survival. This explains clearly that morality is natural (and does not require any divine prompting).If everyone understood this fundamental point the world would get better faster. This, not by coincidence, is also the theme of the book.

  9. la

    Dr. Christakis is a wealth of information. He manages to be both realistic and optimistic. Not always easy…

  10. Rodrigo Barbosa

    At the heart of this remarkable work is the idea that we are genetically primed to build good societies and that, in fact, this is an evolutionary inevitability. Christakis refers to this deeply ingrained imprint as the social suite. At its core lies our capacity for love, cooperation, friendship, teaching and learning. These capacities manifest in many different ways, from our ability to recognize the identity of strangers to our tendencies toward tribalism and organizing into “mildly hierarchical” societies.In the first chapters, Christakis discusses the critical role of the social suite in determining a society’s continuity. For example, the survival of societies born out of shipwrecks is correlated with the degree of cooperation among its members. A dramatic example is recounted of two separate shipwrecks on an island south of New Zealand in the late 19th century. Risking their own lives, the men in the first shipwreck saved another member from drowning, establishing a sense of cooperation from the outset. Meanwhile, concerned with the scarcity of supplies, members of the second shipwreck decided to leave an injured companion behind. These initial events set the stage for the eventual prosperity of the first and utter collapse of the second community. Christakis also evaluates how artificial societies that attempt to suppress parts of the social suite—such as pair-bonding in both polyamorous and chaste communes in America—almost inevitably collapse.In the second part, the.

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