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2010 | 3 | 109-121

Article title

Adaptacje i ewolucyjna inercja ludzkiego umysłu

Title variants

EN
ADAPTATIONS AND EVOLUTIONARY INERTIA OF HUMAN BRAIN

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
Human brain and its functions evolved under selection pressures. There are at least a few evolutionary approaches to human mind, behaviour and/or preferences. Apart of sociobiology, human behavioural ecology (HBE), it is evolutionary psychology (EP) that have been developed in the last 25 years. EP differs with other approaches to human mind in methodology and in the attitude to human behaviour adaptability. EP methodology, the Environment of Evolutionary Adaptedness and mind modularity concepts, as well as examples of psychological mechanisms related to adaptations acquired in our evolutionary past that do not need to increase biological fitness in modern societies are discussed. These adaptations are: 1.) mechanism of child attachment; 2.) Westermarck effect that explains the emergence sexual aversion to close relatives in childhood and 3.) relationship between man's socio-economic status and his reproductive success in the societies with socially enforced monogamy and effective contraconception. In a few last thousands years man's environment changed dramatically, but due to lack of parallel strong selection pressure, human brain and mind almost did not change. This is why humans have still some psychological mechanisms that might not be perfect adaptations nowadays. EP does not excuse any human behaviour (as EP opponents claim), it only explains the evolutionary roots of psychological mechanisms and preferences. EP provides scientists with the new insight to human mind.

Keywords

Year

Volume

3

Pages

109-121

Physical description

Contributors

  • Katedra Antropologii, ul. Kuźnicza 35, 50-138 Wrocław, tel. i fax: +48 71 375-27-74

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-5ba120ab-7aaf-4b2a-a612-b0feff86ff32
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