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
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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
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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
RushHourGirl –
Such an interesting book – read it all through and will dip back in for reference. Widened my horizons from my sofa!
LacyKovacek –
The book is so great, I think about it all the time and learned so much
G. Riggs –
This book made me think about and reconsider the question is human nature fundamentally selfish or altruistic, questions about nature vs. nurture, and the idea of emergent properties. I appreciated how the new ideas presented were backed up with plenty of supporting evidence from prior observational and research studies. I thought the author did a great job narrating.
Danny Cote –
A scientifically based account of how society, good or bad will develop, and how genes and culture interact to promote survival, mastery of the environment, or cooperation.
pattycake –
I heard about this book after listening to the author on Joe Rogan’s Podcast. This book is so well-written with much science, insight and humor into how we socially evolved. Loved the podcast as well!!
Chip T. –
Christakis put so much data behind the postulates he asserts. This book is fascinating all the way through; it builds and builds so that the final couple chapters are just amazing. Very highly recommended!!!
Yukiko –
I love the book, but this new book arrived with the front cover bent in half.
shane higgins –
Fantastic book! Well written and hard to put down.
Roger Sweeny –
I suppose this book has two purposes. One, to convince the reader that humans are basically good, and can live basically good lives in basically good societies. Two, that this is because we have a genetically encoded (and evolutionarily derived) suite of abilities and propensities that make a good society possible. He calls this “the social suite†and it consists of (p. 13):(1) The capacity to have and recognize individual identity [i.e., we realize every human is a distinct person](2) Love for partners and offspring(3) Friendship(4) Social networks(5) Cooperation(6) Preference for one’s own group (that is, “in-group biasâ€)(7) Mild hierarchy (that is, relative egalitarianism)(8) Social learning and teachingWith the help of eight (!) research assistants who he graciously names and thanks, Christakis dredged through numerous scholarly literatures and presents the results (along with 80 pages of notes!). He touches on so many things. A small sampling would include societies set up by shipwrecked sailors, graphs of social networks, co-operation in animals, prestige and domination, the near universality of play, did Maslow have it backwards? The result is more broad than deep. And not terribly focused. Often fascinating. Perhaps convincing. YMMV.
ksp –
Great book in all regards.