Anthropology 114 - Evolutn of Human Nature

Spring
2017
01
4.00
William Zimmerman
TTH 11:30AM-12:50PM
Amherst College
ANTH-114-01-1617S
MERR 4
wfzimmerman@amherst.edu
BIOL-114-01,ANTH-114-01

(Offered as BIOL 114 and ANTH 114.)  After consideration of the relevant principles of animal behavior, genetics, and population biology, it will be shown that extensions of the theory of natural selection---kin selection, reciprocal altruism, parent-offspring conflict, sexual selection, and parental manipulation of sex ratios---provide unifying explanations for the many kinds of social interactions found in nature, from those between groups, between individuals within groups and between genes within individuals. The emphasis throughout will be on the special physical, social and psychological adaptations that humans have evolved, including the instincts to create language and culture, conflict and cooperation within and between the sexes, moral emotions, the mating system and family, kinship and inheritance, reciprocity and exchange, cooking, long distance running, homicide, socioeconomic hierarchies, warfare, patriarchy, religions and religious beliefs, deceit and self-deception, systems of laws and justice and the production, performance and appreciation of art. Along the way, we will consider how misrepresentations of evolutionary theory have been used to support political and social ideologies and, more recently, to attack evolutionary theory itself as scientifically flawed and morally corrupt.


Limited to 60 students.  Spring semester. Professor Emeritus Zimmerman.


 

Permission is required for interchange registration during all registration periods.