![]() ![]() Someone else might find out I have 200 quid coming to me and make sure they benefit, not me. What is the subject's previous experience with getting things that have been promised? Do they usually have to share resources? How do I know you will give me 200 pounds next month? I might never see you again! You might be lying. However, like the marshmellow test, this is not a test of self-control or of understanding time duration this is a test of trust. Hammond repeats the common misunderstanding that most people will pick double the money later, but people with ADHD will take the money now: that is, they are unable to wait. Hammond's discussion on the spatial conceptualising of time was interesting, but other parts were too generalistic and made culturally-specific assumptions.Įxample: on page 37 Hammond restates the impulse control test of asking the reader if they would like 100 pounds now, or 200 pounds in a month's time. So instead of pop-physics, about what the hell time is, instead this is pop-psych, about things like how time seems to move more quickly when you are older because a year is only 1/60th of your life, and not 1/8th of your life, as it is when you are a kiddling. This is not 'Time Warped: Unlocking the Mysteries of Time', but instead, 'Time Warped: Unlocking the Mysteries of Time Perception'. ![]() ![]() The moral of my review is when Xmas shopping, and deciding to grab an interesting-looking book for yourself from the shelf, read the whole title. ![]()
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