Mind, Machine and Morality
In Mind, Machine and Morality, Peter Hancock asks questions about this insensate progress and has the temerity to suggest some cognate answers.
Pegasus Professor, Provost’s Distinguished Researcher
In Mind, Machine and Morality, Peter Hancock asks questions about this insensate progress and has the temerity to suggest some cognate answers.
This book argues that there are consistent temporal processing differences between the sexes and that these differences are of the same order of magnitude as the already known spatial processing differences. “Gaia and Chronos” is a treatise on the sensory and cognitive differences between the sexes in the dimension of time.
PhD, Human Factors and Ergonomics, University of Central Florida
B.S., Psychology, Clemson University 2000 – 2004
Citation:
Hancock, P.A., & Hancock, G.M. (2009). The moulding and melding of mind and machine. The Ergonomist, 464, 12-13.
Abstract:
Studies in contemporary ergonomics are clothed by the contextual impact of surrounding environments and socio-technical influences. However, at heart, ergonomics is about how individual human beings interact with the technologies they create.
Defended May 2, 2008
at United States Military Academy, West Point