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Killer Instinct
Nadine Weidman
其他書名
The Popular Science of Human Nature in Twentieth-Century America
出版
Harvard University Press
, 2021-10-19
主題
Science / History
Psychology / History
Psychology / Evolutionary Psychology
Science / General
Science / Life Sciences / Biology
Social Science / Popular Culture
ISBN
0674983475
9780674983472
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=8vs8EAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
A historian of science examines key public debates about the fundamental nature of humans to ask why a polarized discourse about nature versus nurture became so entrenched in the popular sciences of animal and human behavior.
Are humans innately aggressive or innately cooperative? In the 1960s, bestselling books enthralled American readers with the startling claim that humans possessed an instinct for violence inherited from primate ancestors. Critics responded that humans were inherently loving and altruistic. The resulting debateÑfiercely contested and highly publicÑleft a lasting impression on the popular science discourse surrounding what it means to be human.
Killer Instinct
traces how Konrad Lorenz, Robert Ardrey, and their followers drew on the sciences of animal behavior and paleoanthropology to argue that the aggression instinct drove human evolutionary progress. Their message, spread throughout popular media, brought pointed ripostes. Led by the anthropologist Ashley Montagu, opponents presented a rival vision of human nature, equally based in biological evidence, that humans possessed inborn drives toward love and cooperation. Over the course of the debate, however, each side accused the other of holding an extremist position: that behavior was either determined entirely by genes or shaped solely by environment. Nadine Weidman shows that what started as a dispute over the innate tendencies of animals and humans transformed into an opposition between nature and nurture. This polarized formulation proved powerful. When E. O. Wilson introduced his sociobiology in 1975, he tried to rise above the oppositional terms of the aggression debate. But the controversy over WilsonÕs workÑled by critics like the feminist biologist Ruth HubbardÑwas ultimately absorbed back into the nature-versus-nurture formulation.
Killer Instinct
explores what happens and what gets lost when polemics dominate discussions of the science of human nature.