Evolution and Human Kinship

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 1988 M02 11 - 176 pages
While there have been controversial attempts to link conclusions from sociobiological studies of animal populations to humans, few behavioral scientists or anthropologists have made serious progress. In this work, Austin Hughes presents a unique and well-defined theoretical approach to human social behavior that is rooted in evolutionary biology and sociobiology, and which is additionally viewed as a direct continuation of the structural-functional tradition in anthropological research. Using mathematical and statistical techniques, Hughes applies the principles of kin selection theory--which states that natural selection can favor social acts that increase the fitness of both individuals and their relatives--to anthropological data. Among the topics covered are the subdivision of kin groups, selection of leaders in traditional societies, patronage systems, and the correspondence between social and biological kinship. The author concludes that patterns of concentration of relatedness are more important than average relatedness for predicting social behavior. He also shows that social interactions can often be predicted on the basis of common genetic interest in dependent offspring. The result is a major contribution to the field of behavioral biology.
 

Contents

1 Philosophical Background
3
2 The Theory of Kin Selection
22
3 Cooperation and Sharing among Kin
34
4 The Structure of Relatedness
57
5 Kin Group Subdivision and Conflict
72
6 Kinship and Leadership
88
7 The Structure of Kinship Terminologies
116
8 Prospects for a Biologically Based Social Science
132
Appendix A
142
Appendix B
144
Bibliography
145
Author Index
155
Subject Index
158
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