Evolutionary psychology,biology, and cultural evolution |
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Authors: | Richard E Nisbett |
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Institution: | (1) Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, P.O. Box 1248, 48106-1248 Ann Arbor, Michigan |
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Abstract: | Evolutionary approaches to behavior, so far from indicating that human behavioral patterns must be universal and wired, actually provide us with good reasons for expecting cultural diversity and good tools for showing how it might develop. Even gender-role related behavior may be very plastic. Highly macho male behavior may be an adaptation to dangerous ecological and economic constraints. Similarly, homicide rates differ massively from culture to culture and may be under the control of specificable ecological and economic constraints.Adapted from a symposium talk given at the annual meeting of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, October 13, 1990, Buffalo, New York. David Buss, Nancy Cantor, and Claude Steele made helpful comments on earlier versions of this paper. |
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