The Evolution of Mind: Fundamental Questions and ControversiesSteven W. Gangestad, Jeffry A. Simpson In the past two decades, an explosion of research has generated many compelling insights--as well as hotly debated controversies--about the evolutionary bases of human nature. This important volume brings together leading proponents of different theoretical and methodological perspectives to provide a balanced look at 12 key questions at the core of the field today. In 43 concise, accessible chapters, followed by an integrative conclusion, the contributors present viewpoints informed by human behavioral ecology, evolutionary psychology, and gene-culture coevolutionary approaches. Topics include the strengths and limitations of different methodologies; metatheoretical issues; and debates concerning the evolution of the human brain, intellectual abilities, culture, and sexual behavior. |
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Page 2
... human behavior quickly ensued. Within a decade, several promising alternative approaches were founded, including human behavioral ecology (e.g., Chagnon & Irons, 1979), gene–culture coevolutionary approaches (e.g., Boyd & Richerson ...
... human behavior quickly ensued. Within a decade, several promising alternative approaches were founded, including human behavioral ecology (e.g., Chagnon & Irons, 1979), gene–culture coevolutionary approaches (e.g., Boyd & Richerson ...
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... Human Behavior (2000), Barrett, Dunbar, and Lycett's Human Evolutionary Psychology (2002), and Palmer and Palmer's Evolutionary Psychology: The Ultimate Origins of Human Behavior (2002), to name a few. These textbooks provide excellent ...
... Human Behavior (2000), Barrett, Dunbar, and Lycett's Human Evolutionary Psychology (2002), and Palmer and Palmer's Evolutionary Psychology: The Ultimate Origins of Human Behavior (2002), to name a few. These textbooks provide excellent ...
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... HUMAN EVOLUTIONARY BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE Four main perspectives can be identified in human evolutionary behavioral ... behavior of organisms within various taxa—with the final chapter focusing on humans. Shortly thereafter, Wilson (1978) ...
... HUMAN EVOLUTIONARY BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE Four main perspectives can be identified in human evolutionary behavioral ... behavior of organisms within various taxa—with the final chapter focusing on humans. Shortly thereafter, Wilson (1978) ...
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... behaviors, implying that behavior itself is inherited and relatively insensitive to environmental influences. For these reasons, most major approaches in human evolutionary behavioral science today fashion themselves as reactions ...
... behaviors, implying that behavior itself is inherited and relatively insensitive to environmental influences. For these reasons, most major approaches in human evolutionary behavioral science today fashion themselves as reactions ...
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... behavior. Human behavioral ecologists then measure actual performance (e.g., the actual amount of time spent hunting) and compare it to the estimated optimum. If a discrepancy exists, they usually refine the model by taking into account ...
... behavior. Human behavioral ecologists then measure actual performance (e.g., the actual amount of time spent hunting) and compare it to the estimated optimum. If a discrepancy exists, they usually refine the model by taking into account ...
Contents
1 | |
23 | |
PART II Fundamental Metatheoretical Issues | 145 |
PART III Debates Concerning Important Human Evolutionary Outcomes | 233 |
Whither Science of the Evolution of Mind? | 397 |
Index | 439 |
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ability adaptationism adaptationist adaptive problems ancestral environments Anthropology apes approach argue Barrett behavioral ecologists benefits Borgerhoff Mulder Boyd Buss Byrne Cambridge causal chimpanzees cognitive mechanisms complex computational cooperation Cosmides culture Darwin developmental systems domains Dunbar ecological estrus evidence evolutionary biology evolutionary history evolutionary psychology evolved example exaptation favored fitness Flinn foraging function Gangestad genes genetic group selection hominid human behavior human behavioral ecology human brain human evolution human evolutionary human mating hunter-gatherer hypotheses important individuals inferences intelligence interactions issues Kaplan language male Mithen models modern humans modular modules natural selection Neanderthals neocortex norms one’s organisms Oxford University Press perspective phenotypic phylogenetic Pleistocene primates processes produce psychological adaptations REFERENCES relative reproductive success Richerson role selection pressures sexual selection social selection Sociobiology solve species strategies structure Thornhill tion Tooby traits understanding variation women York