書目名稱 | Perspectives in Ethology | 副標(biāo)題 | Evolution, Culture, | 編輯 | Fran?ois Tonneau,Nicholas S. Thompson | 視頻video | http://file.papertrans.cn/745/744736/744736.mp4 | 叢書名稱 | Perspectives in Ethology | 圖書封面 |  | 描述 | The relations between behavior, evolution, and culture have been a subject of vigorous debate since the publication of Darwin‘s The Descent of Man (1871). The latest volume of Perspectives in Ethology brings anthropologists, ethologists, psychologists, and evolutionary theorists together to reexamine this important relation. With two exceptions (the essays by Brown and Eldredge), all of the present essays were originally presented at the Fifth Biannual Symposium on the Science of Behavior held in Guadalajara, Mexico, in February 1998. The volume opens with the problem of the origins of culture, tackled from two different viewpoints by Richerson and Boyd, and Lancaster, Kaplan, Hill, and Hurtado, respectively. Richerson and Boyd analyze the possible relations between climatic change in the Pleistocene and the evo- lution of social learning, evaluating the boundary conditions under which social learning could increase fitness and contribute to culture. Lancaster, Kaplan, Hill, and Hurtado examine how a shift in the diet of the genus Homo toward difficult-to-acquire food could have determined (or coe- volved with) unique features of the human life cycle. These two essays illus- trate | 出版日期 | Book 2000 | 關(guān)鍵詞 | behavior; biology; evolution; the origin | 版次 | 1 | doi | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1221-9 | isbn_softcover | 978-1-4613-5447-5 | isbn_ebook | 978-1-4615-1221-9Series ISSN 0738-4394 | issn_series | 0738-4394 | copyright | Springer Science+Business Media New York 2000 |
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