Exact(13)
Multiple intelligences, theory of human intelligence first proposed by the psychologist Howard Gardner in his book Frames of Mind (1983).
The Harvard psychologist Howard Gardner called his version of this theory "multiple intelligences" in his seminal 1983 book, "Frames of Mind".
Based on a series of columns he wrote for Slate, the book frames a series of anecdotes about child rearing in terms well suited to Father's Day.
The book frames Carlos's life, from his prerevolutionary bourgeois childhood through the first dozen years of the Castro era, as an exercise in "self-criticism" — the socialist equivalent of what Roman Catholics call "examination of conscience".
The human figures are flat, and their movements are sometimes rendered through a series of still pictures, like comic book frames, while the backgrounds are three-dimensional and unceasingly kinetic.
Moved by her own perception of what she possesses so abundantly and lacks so conspicuously, Temple inclines to a modular view of the brain, the sense that it has a multiplicity of separate, autonomous computational powers or "intelligences" — much as the psychologist Howard Gardner proposes in his book, "Frames of Mind".
Similar(47)
When their characters start talking, you start to wish their words were in a book framed by lots of description.
Though she spends much of the book framing herself as John's girlfriend, she finally emerges as a strong character in her own right.
Geraldine was named for Gerard, but in her book "Framing a Life: A Family Memoir," written with Catherine Whitney, Ms. Ferraro said her mother had emphasized that she was not taking his place.
But instead of following the book frame by frame, Mr. Zwigoff and Mr. Clowes (who collaborated on the screenplay) have added new, sharper story lines and fashioned a tighter narrative framework.
In his subsequent book, "Frame-Up" (Outerbridge & Dienstfrey, 1971), Mr. Weisberg maintained that although Mr. Ray was a member of a racist group, he was merely a decoy and had been pressured into a confession, which he later recanted.
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