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The Handbook of Sex Differences is a four-volume reference work
assembled and written to assess sex differences in human traits
(although findings regarding other species are also included).
Based on the authors’ highly influential 2008 book Sex
Differences, these volumes highlight important new research
findings from the last decade and a half alongside earlier
findings. Conclusions reached by meta-analyses are also included.
In this, the work’s third volume, findings from thousands of
studies pertaining to behavior, broadly defined, are summarized.
Traits covered include those involving personality, social
behavior, criminality, work, and sex stereotypes. The eight
chapters comprising Volume III are as follows: 16. Personality and
Behavioral Tendencies 17. Social Behavior 18. Acquiring, Selling,
and Consuming Behavior 19. Criminality, Near-Criminality, and
Victimization 20. Education, Work, Social Status, and Territorial
Behavior 21. Sex Stereotypes 22. Attitudes and Actions Toward
Others According to their Sex 23. Ecologically Based Sex
Differences The Handbook of Sex Differences is of significant
importance for any researcher, student, or professional who
requires a comprehensive resource on sex differences.
The Handbook of Sex Differences is a four-volume reference work
written to assess sex differences, with a primary focus on the
human species. Based on the authors’ highly influential 2008 book
Sex Differences, these volumes highlight important new research
findings from the last decade and a half alongside earlier
findings. In this, the work’s fourth and last volume, two related
questions are addressed: Are there universal sex differences (i.e.,
sex differences found in all societies)? And if the answer is yes,
what are they and how can each one be theoretically explained? To
answer the first of these two questions, this volume condenses much
of the research findings amassed in the book’s first three
volumes into summary tables. Then, to help identify likely
universal sex differences, three versions of social role theory and
two versions of evolutionary theory are examined relative to each
possible universal sex difference. Consideration is even given to
religious scriptures as a sixth type of explanation. In the
concluding analyses, 308 likely universal sex differences are
identified. No single theory was able to explain all these
differences. Nevertheless, the two evolutionary theories were
better in this regard than any of the three social role theories,
including the recently proposed biosocial version of social role
theory. The Handbook of Sex Differences is of importance for any
researcher, student, or professional who requires a comprehensive
resource on sex differences.
The Handbook of Sex Differences is a four-volume reference work
assembled and written to assess sex differences in human traits
(although findings regarding other species are also included).
Based on the authors’ highly influential 2008 book Sex
Differences, these volumes highlight important new research
findings from the last decade and a half alongside earlier
findings. Conclusions reached by meta-analyses are also included.
In this, the work’s first volume, findings from thousands of
studies are summarized regarding basic biology. Results having to
do with sex ratios at birth and traits involving a wide range of
bodily features are reported along with numerous complex aspects of
biochemistry, neurology, and physical health. The eight chapters
comprising Volume I are as follows: 1. Reproduction, Development,
and Morphology 2. Anatomical and Physiological Factors 3. Bodily
Fluids, Biochemicals, and Biochemical Receptors 4. The Brain:
Structure and Functioning 5. Physical Health and Illness 6.
Responses to Physical and Chemical Environmental Factors 7.
Responses to Stress and to Pain 8. Prenatal Factors The Handbook of
Sex Differences is of significant importance for any researcher,
student, or professional who requires a comprehensive resource on
sex differences.
The Handbook of Sex Differences is a four-volume reference work
assembled and written to assess sex differences in human traits
(although findings regarding other species are also included).
Based on the authors’ highly influential 2008 book Sex
Differences, these volumes highlight important new research
findings from the last decade and a half alongside earlier
findings. Conclusions reached by meta-analyses are also included.
This, the work’s second volume, summarizes results from thousands
of studies pertaining to cognition, broadly defined. Variables
related to perceptual and motor skills, emotions, intellectual
abilities, and mental disorders are among those examined. Even sex
differences in attitudes, beliefs, preferences, and interests are
documented in this volume. The seven chapters comprising Volume II
are as follows: 9. Perceptual Abilities and Motor Functioning 10.
Emotional Factors 11. Cognitive, Academic, and Intellectual Factors
12. Learning, Memory, Knowledge, and Cognitive States 13.
Self-Assessments and States Of Mind 14. Mental Health and Illness
15. Attitudes, Beliefs, Interests, and Preferences The Handbook of
Sex Differences is of importance for any researcher, student, or
professional who requires a comprehensive resource on sex
differences.
Spanning many different epochs and varieties of religious
experience, this book develops a new approach to religion and its
role in human history. The authors look across a range of religious
phenomena-from ancestor worship to totemism, shamanism, and
worldwide modern religions-to offer a new explanation of the
evolutionary success of religious behaviors. Their book is more
empirical and verifiable than most previous books on evolution and
religion because they develop an approach that removes guesswork
about beliefs in the supernatural, focusing instead on the
behaviors of individuals. The result is a pioneering look at how
and why natural selection has favored religious behaviors
throughout history.
A fundamentally new approach to religion that differs from all
other explanations by defining religion not in terms of
unidentifiable beliefs in the supernatural, but by the identifiable
behavior of communicating acceptance of supernatural claims. This
approach distinguishes different forms of religious behavior, from
the ancestor worship, totemism, and shamanism of traditional
societies, to the behavior of prophets that started the world
religions, by their different supernatural claims. Communicating
acceptance of any supernatural claim tends to promote cooperative
social relationships because it communicates a willingness to
accept unskeptically the influence of the speaker in a way similar
to a child's acceptance of the influence of a parent. This is why
the clearest identifiable effect of religious behavior is the
promotion of cooperative family-like social relationships:
parent/child-like relationships between the individuals making and
accepting the supernatural claims and sibling-like relationships
among coacceptors of those claims. As religious behaviors, and the
increased cooperation they produce, are copied from one generation
to the next, the number of cooperating codescendants has tended to
increase. Thus, religion can be seen as a descendant-leaving
strategy of our ancestors that has been favored by natural
selection and has become a human universal found in all known
cultures.
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