Books > Social sciences > Psychology > Social, group or collective psychology
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Evolutionary Social Psychology (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,200
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Evolutionary Social Psychology (Hardcover)
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What a pity it would have been if biologists had refused to accept
Darwin's theory of natural selection, which has been essential in
helping biologists understand a wide range of phenomena in many
animal species. These days, to study any animal species while
refusing to consider the evolved adaptive significance of their
behavior would be considered pure folly--unless, of course, the
species is "homo sapiens." Graduate students training to study this
particular primate species may never take a single course in
evolutionary theory, although they may take two undergraduate and
up to four graduate courses in statistics. These methodologically
sophisticated students then embark on a career studying human
aggression, cooperation, mating behavior, family relationships, or
altruism with little or no understanding of the general
evolutionary forces and principles that shaped the behaviors they
are investigating. This book hopes to redress that wrong.
It is one of the first to apply evolutionary theories to
mainstream problems in personality and social psychology that are
relevant to a wide range of important social phenomena, many of
which have been shaped and molded by natural selection during the
course of human evolution. These phenomena include selective biases
that people have concerning how and why a variety of activities
occur. For example:
* information exchanged during social encounters is initially
perceived and interpreted;
* people are romantically attracted to some potential mates but
not others;
* people often guard, protect, and work hard at maintaining their
closest relationships;
* people form shifting and highly complicated coalitions with kin
and close friends; and
* people terminate close, long-standing relationships.
"Evolutionary Social Psychology" begins to disentangle the
complex, interwoven patterns of interaction that define our social
lives and relationships.
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