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Healthy Oatmeal Cookies - Whole Grain Gourmet. These little 'cookies' are almost too healthy to be called a cookie. My dad has been on a life long search for a cookie that wasn't too sweet so, after playing around with the ingredients, I have finally achieved what he wanted. In fact, he thinks they are so good and nutritious that we should call them a nutritional supplement! There is no sugar in this recipe, however, if you prefer sugar to honey, then simply alter the recipe....cut the baking soda to 1/4 teaspoon and add an extra tablespoon of water.

Your baking temperature should go to 350 if you are using sugar. When replacing sugar with honey, you have to increase the baking soda to increase the acid and reduce the liquid by 1 tablespoon. Editor's note: I made these today for my preschooler with the following modifications: used unbleached white whole wheat flour (it's what I had)1 teaspoon cinnamon1 tablespoon vanillaincreased the oats by 1/4 cupscooped tablespoons full, and did not press with fork (fuller rounder cookie)

Eksamen. Matoppskrifter. SOUNDS FROM THE RAINBOW's sounds. Blogger. Strikke lue, leaf. Emmaüs France.org, le site de tous les groupes Emmaüs de France. Unseen Tours: London's Street Voices. Video. Music. It’s a Fine Line between Narcissism and Egocentrism. We see the world from the inside out, a fact that leads everyone to be at least somewhat self-centered.

The technical term for this is "egocentrism. " As a cognitive bias , egocentrism refers to the natural restriction on our perception caused by the simple fact that we can only see the world from our perspective. It takes special effort to see the world from any perspective other than through our own eyes. The basic egocentrism built into our cognitive apparatus became an important part of Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget’s theory about child development . In observing children describe the way a small table-sized model of a mountain might look to someone else, Piaget found that prior to the age of 8 or so, this seemingly easy task was surprisingly difficult.

Young children seem cognitively unable to take the perspective of another person. Although we all grow out of this stage of development, even adults find it difficult to overcome completely the cognitive type of egocentrism.