37
                              
                                                                                                                                              
and producer, Among The Wild Chimpanzees, A National Geographic Special,
Produced by The National Geographic Society and WQED/Pittsburgh, Vestron
Video, Stamford, Connecticut, 1987.) For additional details, see Jane Goodall, "Life
and Death at Gombe," National Geographic Magazine, May, 1979,  pp. 605, 614.
48. Kenneth R. Pelletier,  "Stress: Etiology, Assessment, and Management in
Holistic Medicine," in Hans Selye, editor, Selye's Guide To Stress Research,
Volume 3,  p. 53.
49. Even infants treat inanimate objects as if they were people.  Psychologist John
Watson built a number of contraptions that rotated mobiles above the heads of
babies when the youngsters put pressure on a pillow.  Once the infants got the
hang of the apparatus, they tended to smile and coo conversationally whenever the
whirligigs began to turn. Herbert M. Lefcourt, Locus of Control: Current Trends in
Theory and Research--Second Edition,  Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale,
New Jersey, 1982, p. 144.
50. Rhesus monkeys share this need with us.  A simian subject isolated in a box
will pull a lever over and over again just to get a glimpse of another monkey.
(Edward O. Wilson, Sociobiology, p. 7.)
51.  Bruce Bower, "Personality linked to immunity,"  Science News, November 15,
1986, p. 310.  Isolation and the personality test scores correlated with it also
showed up as factors increasing the risk of cancer in a series of studies surveyed in
Science News for February 21, 1987.  (Bruce Bower, "The Character of Cancer,"
Science News, February 21, 1987, pp. 120-121.  See also Bruce Bower, "Heart
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