Intention.”
HeartMath Research Center, Institute of HeartMath, publications no. 03–
08, Boulder Creek, CA, 2003.
[9] “Stress,” Your Dictionary, http://www.yourdictionary.com/stress.
Emphasis mine.
[10] Sheldon Cohen et al., “Psychological Stress and Disease,” JAMA 14
(2007):
1685, http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20120619-how-stress-could-cause-illness;
http://www.stress.org/stress-and-heart-disease/.
[11] Brian Luke Seaward, Managing Stress: Principles and Strategies for Health and Wellbeing (London: Jones and Bartlett Learning, 2006).
[12] “Cancer Statistics and Views of Causes,” Science News 115, no. 2
(January 13, 1979): 23.
[13] Lipton, The Biology of Belief.
[14] Nijhout, “Metaphors and the Role of Genes and Development.”
[15] Willett, “Balancing Lifestyle and Genomics Research for Disease
Prevention.”
[16] “Stress and Heart Disease,” http://www.stress.org/stress-and-heart-disease/.
[17] Jeffery Rosen, “The Brain on the Stand,” New York Times, March 11, 2007,
www.nytimes.com/2007/03/11/magazine/11Neurolaw.t.html.
[18] Francis Crick, quoted in John Tierney, “Do You Have Free Will? Yes, It’s the Only Choice,” New York Times, March 21, 2011,
www.nytimes.com/2011/03/22/science/22tier.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0.
[19] Benjamin Libet, “Unconscious Cerebral Initiative and the Role of
Conscious Will in Voluntary Action,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8
(1985): 529–66; John Dylan-Haynes et al., “Unconscious Determinants of
Free Decisions in the Human
Brain,” Nature Neuroscience 11 (2008): 543–45.
[20] Hagop Sarkissian et al., “Is Belief in Free Will a Cultural
Universal?” Mind and Language 25 (2010): 346–58.
[21] Kathleen D. Vohs and Jonathan W. Schooler, “The Value of Believing in Free Will: Encouraging a Belief in Determinism Increases Cheating,”
www.csom.umn.edu/assets/91974.pdf.
[22] Articles in Science and NewScientist have recently discussed x- phi work on free will from authors including Eddy Nahmias and Dylan Murray,
“Experimental
Philosophy on Free Will: An Error Theory for Incompatibilist Intuitions,”
in New Waves in Philosophy of Action, ed. Jess Aguilar, Andrei Buckare», and Keith
Frankish (Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2011); and Eddy Nahmias, Stephen G. Morris, Thomas Nadelhoffer, and Jason Turner “Is
Incompatibilism Intuitive?” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 73, no. 1
(2006): 28– 53.
[23] H. S. Mayberg, “Defining the Neural Circuitry of Depression: Toward a New
Nosology with Therapeutic Implications,” Biological Psychiatry 61, no. 6
(March 2007): 729–30.
[24] Church, Genie in Your Genes; “Epigenetics: A Web Tour,” Science,
www.sciencemag.org/feature/plus/sfg/resources/res_epigenetics.dtl.; Ethan Watters,
“DNA Is Not Destiny: The New Science of Epigenetics Rewrites the Rules of Disease, Heredity, and Identity,” Discover, November 2006,
http://discovermagazine.com/2006/nov/cover.
[25] Elizabeth Pennisi, “Behind the Scenes of Gene Expression,” Science 293, no.
553 (2001): 1064–67.
[26] Ibid.
[27] Ken Richardson, The Making of Intelligence (New York: Columbia