
Curriculum Vitae/Contact Information
Moti Nissani (June
2014)
Education
Ph.D., Genetics, University of Pittsburgh, 1975.
B.A., philosophy, psychology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
1972.
Academic
Employment
2006-present: Professor Emeritus, Department of
Biology, Wayne State University
1987-2006: Faculty, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies,
Wayne State University.
1986-87: Faculty, Old College (1980-1987), Reno, Nevada.
1978-80: Research Fellow, Center for Developmental Biology,
University of California, Irvine.
1977-78: Research Fellow, School of Biological Sciences,
Flinders University of South Australia.
1975-77: NIH postdoctoral Trainee, Department of Genetics,
University of Wisconsin, Madison.
1972-75: Teaching Assistant, Departments of Psychology and
Biology, University of Pittsburgh.
Temporary
Positions
March 2003: Visiting Professor, Department of Zoology,
Yangon University, Yangon, Burma (Myanmar).
November 2002-February 2003: Elephant researcher, Kyet
Shar, Magu, and Myaing Hay Wun Logging Camps, Burma (Myanmar).
August-November 2002: Teaching English and conducting
faculty workshops, New Hong Hu First Middle School, 1 East Wenquan
Road, Hong Hu City, Hubei Province, 433200, People's Republic of
China.
July-Sept. 2000: U.S.I.A.-sponsored American Studies
specialist, Central Department of English, Tribhuvan University,
Kathmandu, Nepal (8 weeks).
1998: Visiting Professor, Instituto Superior de Ciencias Medicas,
Santiago de Cuba (5 weeks).
1995-96: Senior Fulbright Scholar, Central Department of English,
Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal (10 months).
1978-79: Individual National Research Service Award (from the
National Institutes of Health--1 year).
Undergraduate
Courses Taught (Number of Semesters)
As a Teaching Assistant: Introduction to Psychology (2) /
Genetics (3) / Biology (1).
As a Member of a Team: Science and Religion (1) /
Third World Perspectives (1) / Development of Western Culture (1).
As a Single Instructor or as a Coordinator of a Team:
Biology Today (1) / What is Science? (2) / Changing Life on Earth
(introduction to biology) (4) / Animal and Human Nature (1) /
Health Concepts and Strategies (4) / Atoms & Stars (an
introduction to astronomy, physics, and the nature of science)
(7) / Introduction to the University and its Libraries (1) / The Cold War and American
Politics (1) / Practical Mathematics: Concepts and
Applications (3) / The
History and Concepts of Mathematics: An Interdisciplinary
Introduction (5) / Living
in the Environment (human ecology) (5) / Critical Thinking
(5) / Case for Interdisciplinarity (1) / Written Communication
Skills (freshman composition) (5) / Developmental Reading and
Writing (1) / Interdisciplinary Studies Seminar (3) /
Interdisciplinary Core Seminar (4) / Senior Seminar (2) /
Intermediate Reading & Writing (4) / Media in America (2) / Elephants: An
Interdisciplinary Perspective (1), Senior Essay/Project (4),
Capstone Project (2), World War
I as a Turning Point (1), Senior Seminar: Around
the World in One Semester (1), Computers
& Society (2).
100% Online Courses
Graduate
Courses Taught
- Interdisciplinary Core Seminar (3)
- Aging (1)
Free
Instructional Hypertexts:
Computers & Society / Critical Reading
/ Reading and Writing
/ Freshman
Introduction to College and Interdisciplinarity /
A Historical
Introduction to Astronomy, Physics, and the Nature of Science
/ Around the World
in One Semester (interdisciplinary geography)
/ World War I
(interdisciplinary history) /
Faculty
Workshops
- American Studies (conducted in Nepal)
- Interdisciplinarity (Cuba and Nepal)
- Research Methodologies (Cuba, Myanmar, Nepal)
- Teaching of Science (Cuba, Myanmar, Nepal)
- Teaching of English (Cuba, Nepal, China)
Recent
Invited Talks
Refereed
Journal & Book Essays
- A new behavioral
bioassay for an analysis of sexual attraction and pheromones
in insects. Journal of Experimental Zoology 192:
271-275 (1975).
- Cell lineage analysis of kynurenine producing organs in Drosophila
melanogaster. Genetical Research 26: 63-72 (1975).
- Gynandromorph analysis of some aspects of sexual behaviour of
Drosophila melanogaster. Animal Behaviour 25:
555-566 (1977).
-
Cell lineage analysis of germ cells of Drosophila
melanogaster. Nature 265: 729-731 (1977).
- A
study of germinal mosaicism in Drosophila melanogaster.
Wilhelm Roux's Archives of Developmental Biology 182: 203-211
(1977).
- On the
interpretation of mutagenically-induced mosaicism in Drosophila.
Genetics 86: 779-787 (1977).
- (Nissani, M. & Lipow, C.). A method
for estimating the number of blastoderm cells which give rise
to Drosophila imaginal discs. Theoretical and
Applied Genetics 49: 3-8 (1977). (Nissani, M. & Liu,
C. P.).
Experiments with the maroon-like mutation of Drosophila
melanogaster. Genetical Research 29: 159-170
(1977).
- (Nissani, M. & Fellinger, K.). A method for studying
tissue specificity of maternally affected Drosophila
mutants: mosaic analysis of cinnamon. Developmental
Biology 66: 117-127 (1978).
- (Nissani, M. Brink, N. & Nissani H.). The
site of function of the Y chromosome in Drosophila
melanogaster males. Molecular and General
Genetics 165: 221-224 (1978).
- An
experimental paradigm for the study of conceptual conservatism
and change. Psychological Reports 65: 19-24
(1989).
- A hands-on
instructional approach to the conceptual shift aspect of
scientific discovery. Journal of College Science
Teaching 19: 105-107 (1989).
- A class exercise for
teaching the genetic code. The Science Teacher 56
(No. 3): 76-78 (1989).
- A cognitive
reinterpretation of Stanley Milgram's observations on
obedience to authority. American Psychologist 45:
1384-1385 (1990).
- (Nissani, M. & Hoefler-Nissani, D. M.). Experimental studies
of belief-dependence of observations and of resistance to
conceptual change. Cognition and Instruction 9:
97-111 (1992).
- Psychological,
historical, and ethical reflections on the Mendelian paradox.
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 37: 182-196 (1994).
- (Nissani, M., Maier, C. L. & Shifrin, N.). A guided discovery
exercise for introductory physics labs. The Physics
Teacher 32: 104-107 (1994).
- Conceptual
conservatism: an understated variable in human affairs? Social
Science Journal 31: 307-318 (1994).
- Phases of the
moon: a guided discovery activity for clarifying the nature of
science. Science Activities 31 (#3): 26-29 (1994).
- The plight of the
obscure innovator in science. Social Studies of
Science 25: 165-183 (1995).
-
An experiential component in teaching philosophy of science.
Teaching Philosophy 18: 147-154 (1995).
- Fruits, salads, and
smoothies: a working definition of interdisciplinarity.
Journal of Educational Thought 29: 119-126 (1995).
- Conceptual
conservatism in literature. Literary Studies (a
Nepali journal) 15: 22-37 (1996).
- Dancing flies: a
guided discovery illustration of the nature of science.
American Biology Teacher 58 (#3): 168-171 (1996).
- The
greenhouse effect: an interdisciplinary perspective. Population
and Environment: A Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies
17: 459-489 (1996).
- The apprenticeship
approach to writing instruction. Visible Language
30 (#3): 284-313 (1996).
- Can the persistence
of misconceptions be generalized and explained? Journal
of Thought 32 (#1): 69-76 (1997).
- Ten cheers for
interdisciplinarity. Social Science Journal 34
(#2): 201-216 (1997).
- Brass-tacks ecology.
The Trumpeter, 14 (#3): 143-148 (1997).
- Media coverage of the
greenhouse effect, Population and Environment: A
Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 21: 27-43 (1999).
- Can taste aversion
prevent bruxism? Applied
Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, 25 (#1), March 2000,
45-56.
- A
bibliographical survey of bruxism with special emphasis on
non-traditional treatment modalities. Journal
of Oral Science, 43 (2): 73-83 (2001).
- Theory of Mind
and Insight in Chimpanzees, Elephants, and Other Animals?
Chapter 7 of: Comparative Vertebrate Cognition.
Rogers, Lesley J & Kaplan, Gisela (eds.), pp. 227-261
(January 2004). [No. 4 of Series: Developments in
Primatology: Progress and Prospects. Russell H.
Tuttle, Series Editor.] Kluwer Academic / Plenum
Publishers: New York.
- (Nissani, M., Hoefler-Nissani, D. Lay, U T., & Htun, U
W.)
Simultaneous Visual Discrimination in Asian Elephants.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 83:
15-29 (2005).
- Do
Asian elephants apply causal reasoning to tool use
tasks? Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal
Behavior Processes, 31: 91-96 (2006).
- (Nissani, M., Hoefler-Nissani, D.) Absence of Mirror Self-Referential Behavior in Two
Asian Elephants.
Journal of Medical and Biological
Sciences, Vol. 1, Issue 1 (2006).
- Do Asian Elephants (Elephas
maximus) Apply Causal Reasoning to Tool-Use Tasks? Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal
Behavior Processes, Volume
32(1), January 2006, pages 91-96
(a
summary is available here).
-
Elephant Cognition: A Review of Recent Experiments.
Gajah 28 (2008), 44-52.
- Do
Elephants, Chimpanzees, and Dolphins Think?
(Reflections on an Unfortunate Paradigm Shift in Ethology).
A Talk Given at the
30th International Ethological Conference, August 18, 2007,
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Patents
United States Patent 6,164,278, December 26, 2000. Taste-Based
Approach to the Prevention of Teeth Clenching and Grinding.
Books
Lives in the Balance: The Cold War and
American Politics, 1945-1991 (1992), 323 pages.
A Bird's Eye View of Contrived Terror
(2013):
I. A
Preview
II.
Backdrop
of Terror
III.
The
Gladio Conspiracy
IV. 19
Telltale Signs of Fake Terror
V.
History:
Read it and Learn
VI.
Give
me Logic or Give me Terror
Textbook
Nissani, M. & Lohani, Shreedhar P. Flax-Golden Tales: An
Interdisciplinary Approach to the Teaching of English (several
printings, 2009-2017), 496 pages. Kathmandu: Ekta
Books (an extensive revision of the same authors' Adventures
in English, 1996). Accompanying materials include:
Film
(with Donna
Nissani). The
Inner Life of Elephants: Experiments in Myanmar and
Detroit (2004).
Current
Project:

|
- Documenting the unspeakable
crimes of the world's controllers. In
part, these crimes consist of robbing us of the few
freedoms and possessions we have left; brutally
suppressing and assassinating friends of the
biosphere and the people; controlling our every
thought and desire; provoking chaos, civil wars, and
hunger the world over; and irreversibly destroying
the very physical and biological foundations of life
on earth.
- Convincing the few of us who are aware and who
care that we must focus more of our energies on the
overthrow of our criminal rulers--and far less on
documenting their never-ending depravities.
- Showing that there is only one
strategy that has some chance of overthrowing
our psychopathic rulers.
- Arguing that the world's vicious,
self-destructive, oligarchic system ought to be
replaced with real
democracies.
|
 |
| The questions we
face are these: How do we overthrow our rulers,
that is, the likes of David Rockefeller (above), Evelyn
Rothschild, and a handful of other monstrously conniving
bankers? And, how do we replace their vicious
oligarchic system with . . . |
|
We
the People? |
Moti
Nissani's Homepage