Transcript
Page 1: Evolutionary ideas predate Darwin: Anaximander Greek philosopher (c. 610 BC – c. 546 BC)

Chapter 1: Goetz, A. T., & Shackelford, T. K. Introduction to evolutionary theory and its modern application to human behavior and cognition (pp. 1-20).

• Evolutionary ideas predate Darwin: Anaximander Greek philosopher (c. 610 BC – c. 546 BC)

• Authors give us an unreferenced quote: “in water the first animal arose covered with spiny skin and with the lapse of time some crawled onto dry land…”

• Darwin’s contribution was the major mechanism by which evolution could operate: Natural selection

• Distinguish Natural Selection from Sexual Selection.

Page 2: Evolutionary ideas predate Darwin: Anaximander Greek philosopher (c. 610 BC – c. 546 BC)

Evolution: Basic Principles

Evolution: Change over time; decent with modification

Natural Selection: Primary mechanism producing evolution (change over time). There are other mechanisms such as: sexual selection, social selection, drift.

Basic principles of NS:

1. Variability: stuff varies

2. Heritability: variation is passed on genetically

3. Competition: limited resources

4. Selection: some variations are advantageous in securing limited resources and tend to passed on more than others = change over time

Spencer’s misleading summary of NS: “survival of the fittest.”

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Sexual selection

Some traits may actually be detrimental to survival but provide an advantage in mating.

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Sexual selection: intra-sexual competition

• Typically male-male competition for mates, resources, and status.

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Intra-sexual coalitional competition

• Chimpanzees are especially well-known for forming male coalitions to challenge other males for dominance.

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Other key concepts

• Modern Synthesis: combo of Darwinian selection with Mendelian genetics.

• Adaptations: inherited, phenotypic solutions to adaptive problems

• Byproducts: non-adaptive incidental tag-alongs to adaptive traits. Navel is byproduct of adaptation of umbilical connection of mammalian mother to offspring.

• Noise: Random non-adaptive characteristics of adaptations or byproducts. Inny vs. outie navel; dry hair, frizzy hair etc.

• Evolutionary psychology: human mental/emotional functioning as evolved solutions to adaptive problems.

Ex: face processing; jealousy. Inputs-decision rules- outputs

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More concepts

• Domain specificity: A psychological adaptation is specific to an adaptive problem, does not apply generally to a range of potential problems. Ex: cheater detection mechanism. Controversy as to how widespread this type of design is.

• EEA: Environment of Evolutionary Adaptiveness. The original selection pressures which shaped the present adaptation.

• Inclusive fitness: W.D. Hamilton – fitness should include not just direct offspring but kin offspring as well; gene’s eye view of evolution

• Connection to sociobiology: EP – greater emphasis on psychological mechanisms and less on current adaptive significance. Humans as “adaption executers, not fitness maximizers.”

• Key concept: NS cannot make you have alot of offspring, it can only motivate you to engage in those behaviors that in the past were associated with higher rates of reproduction.

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Evolutionary basis for male competition

• Gamete size (cheap sperm vs. expensive eggs)

• Parental investment (mating vs. parenting effort)

• Parental certainty (paternal vs. maternal certainty)

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Social Selection

• Some traits help animals get along better in their social groups which in turn increases their survival and reproduction. Ex: more socially skilled female baboons tend to have more surviving offspring.


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