@misc{cogprints5410, editor = {Oscar Villaroya and Francesc Forn}, title = {Evan}, author = {Stevan Harnad}, publisher = {{\'E}ditions Rodopi, Amsterdam/New York}, year = {2007}, note = {Also available at publisher's website: http://www.rodopi.nl/senj.asp?SerieId=CS}, journal = {Social Brain Matters. Stances on the Neurobiology of Social Cognition}, keywords = {category learning, uncomplemented categories, early experience, socialization, critical period, ethnocentrism, we/they distinction}, url = {http://cogprints.org/5410/}, abstract = {A fictional account of how a speculative hypothesis about how to eliminate the "we/they" distinction is implemented by rearing children (during early critical years) in "aggregates in flux" instead of in kinship-based families: In "aggregates in flux," the individual members would be constantly varying (and unrelated, genetically). The only invariant would be that they were all human.} }