Biosocial interactions in modernisation:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
[Brno]
Masaryk Univ. Press
2010
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXII, 693 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9788021049864 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Brief
Table of Contents
PREFACE
xxix
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
xxxi
Chapter
1
EVOLUTIONARY BACKGROUND OF
BIOSOCIAL
INTERACTIONS
1
Chapter
2
INDIVIDUAL VARIATION AND INDIVIDUALISM
53
Chapter
3
AGE VARIATION AND AGEISM
123
Chapter
4
SEXUAL VARIATION AND SEXISM
183
Chapter
5
FAMILY VARIATION AND FAMILISM
253
Chapter
6
REPRODUCTIVE VARIATION AND PRO/ANTI-NATALISM
313
Chapter
7
SOCIAL CLASS VARIATION AND CLASSISM
375
Chapter
8
RACIAL VARIATION AND RACISM
437
Chapter
9
INTERGENERATIONAL VARIATION AND DYSGENISM
503
Chapter
10
ETHICAL AND POLICY CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING
THE
BIOSOCIAL FUTURE
OF HUMANKIND
557
NAME INDEX
621
SUBJECT INDEX
661
Detailed Table of Contents
List of Tables
xxi
List of Figures
xxiii
Preface
xxix
Acknowledgements
xxxi
CHAPTER
1:
EVOLUTIONARY BACKGROUND OF
BIOSOCIAL
INTERACTIONS
INTRODUCTION
3
THE BIOLOGICAL AND CULTURAL EVOLUTION
OF HUMANKIND
4
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE STUDY OF
BIOSOCIAL
INTERACTIONS
7
THE STUDY OF THE BIOLOGICAL EVOLUTION OF SOCIALITY
10
The evolution of social behaviour
14
The recent controversy about sociobiology
19
SIGNIFICANCE FOR THE SOCIAL AND BEHAVIOURAL
SCIENCES
26
FACTS AND VALUES IN
BIOSOCIAL
INTERACTIONS
27
The evolutionary origin and function of ethics
28
The Is/ought controversy
32
THE SOCIAL BIOLOGY OF MODERNISATION
33
The major types of
biosocial
variation
36
The major
biosocial
challenges in modern culture
38
Individual variation and individualism
40
Age variation and ageism
40
Sexual variation and sexism
41
Family variation and familism
41
Reproductive variation and pro/anti-natalism
41
Social class variation and classisim
42
Racial variation and racism
42
Intergenerational variation and dysgenism
43
Policy implications
43
REFERENCES
43
CHAPTER
2:
INDIVIDUAL VARIATION
AND INDIVIDUALISM
INTRODUCTION
55
EVOLUTIONARY BACKGROUND
55
Some basic genetic concepts
55
The genetic unique identity of the individual
57
Evolutionary mechanisms and individual variation
59
The Hardy-
Weinberg
law
5 9
Mutation
61
Selection
61
Genetic drift
62
Genetic migration
62
Partner choice
63
The
leve!
of selection: individual or group selection?
64
GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL CAUSES OF INDIVIDUAL VARIATION
66
The obsolete nature-nurture discussion
67
Measuring the relative impact of genetic and environmental factors
68
The poly genie inheritance system
69
Dissecting the variance of quantitative traits
72
Two sensitive matters: IQ and criminality.
.. 76
The fractioning oflQ
76
Defining and measuring dimensions of cognitive abilities
11
Heritability of intelligence
78
The role of environmental factors in the development of intelligence
82
Criminal behaviour
85
Genetics and criminality
86
The
neurosciences
and delinquency
88
Evolutionary biology and antisocial behaviour
90
Concluding considerations concerning biology and crime
94
BIOLOGICAL SOURCES OF INDIVIDUAL VARIATION
95
General variation
95
Normality versus abnormality
96
General variation within the normality
range
97
Age variation
97
Sexual variation
98
Racial variation
99
INDIVIDUAL-SOCIETAL INTERDEPENDENCY
99
The ontogenetic interdependency between individuals
100
The genetic interrelationship between individual and population
101
Individual competition versus social cooperation
103
INDIVIDUALISM IN MODERN SOCIETY
106
REFERENCES
109
Xl
CHAPTER
3:
AGE VARIATION AND AGEISM
INTRODUCTION
125
GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT
126
Evolutionary background
127
Secular growth acceleration
129
The increasing gap between biological maturation and social maturity
130
AGEING AND SENESCENCE
131
Evolutionary background
134
The evolutionary theory of senescence
134
Population genetic mechanisms of the evolution of senescence
135
Brain development and the evolution of the lifespan
137
Longevity and ageing/senescence
139
From a concave to a convex survival curve
139
From curve squaring to life extension?
143
Demographic implications of ageing
146
Population greying
147
Population dejuvenation
148
Societal implications of individual and population ageing
149
Attitudinal ambiguities
150
The expected increasing elderly dependency burden
152
The expected growing need for health and welfare care
153
Labour shortage
154
Intergenerational relations
154
Social differentials in longevity
156
DEATH
156
The biological meaning of death
157
The prolongation of the dying process
157
Death control
158
Palliative care
160
Euthanasia
161
Definition
161
Legislation
162
Attitudes
162
Palliative sedation versus euthanasia
164
AGEISM
164
Ageist attitudes and behaviour towards seniors
165
Social exclusion of seniors
165
Increasing gap between social and biological ageing in modern culture
166
AGEING AND AGEISM IN EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVE
167
REFERENCES
170
CHAPTER
4:
SEXUAL VARIATION AND SEXISM
INTRODUCTION
185
EVOLUTIONARY ORIGINS OF SEXUAL VARIATION
186
Sexual selection
186
Féminisation
of the human male
188
Sexual evolution of the human female
190
Evolution of sexual steering
191
Explanation of human sexual dimorphism
192
ONTOGENETIC DETERMINANTS OF SEXUAL VARIATION
193
Sex and gender identity/role
193
Socially important aspects of sexual determination and differentiation
196
MAJOR SOCIALLY RELEVANT CHARACTERISTICS
OF HUMAN SEXUAL DIMORPHISM
199
Mind
200
Body build
204
Genital sexuality
205
Reproduction
207
Health
208
OTHER SEXUALLY DIFFERENTIAL BEHAVIOURAL FEATURES
210
Crime
210
Homosexuality
211
Proximate causes of homosexuality
212
Endocrinological findings
213
Neurological findings
214
Genetic findings
214
Evolutionary explanations
215
Homophobia
218
The future of homosexuality
219
Sex-related social differences
220
Sexism
223
Sexist ideologies
224
Sexism, sexual emancipation, and science
225
Female social inferiority versus biological superiority: a paradox?
229
Feminism and masculism
230
MALADAPTATION
OF SEXUAL DIMORPHISM IN MODERN CULTURE
235
REFERENCES
239
CHAPTER
5:
FAMILY VARIATION AND FAMILISM
INTRODUCTION
255
BIOLOGICAL ORIGINS AND FUNCTIONS OF THE FAMILY
256
Parental investment in slowly-maturing offspring
257
The origin and evolution of love
258
FAMILIES IN MODERN CULTURE
261
Recent trends in family (related) behaviour
261
Background of the modern family transition
264
Determinants of recent family changes
266
PARTNERSHIP IN MODERN CULTURE
267
Partner choice
267
Preferred and selected partner features
268
Good genes theory
268
Parental investment theory
269
Reproductive value theory
269
Paternity confidence theory
273
Combined partner features
274
Mate selection
274
Sex assortment
216
Kin assortment
276
Assortative mating in general
280
Types of partnership
282
Single partnership
283
Multiple partnerships
284
Dynamics of partnership
286
Causes and consequences
287
THE FUTURE OF THE FAMILY
290
Disappearance of the family
291
Back to the traditional family?
293
Modern family variation
294
What about the more distant future?
299
REFERENCES
301
CHAPTER
6:
REPRODUCTIVE VARIATION AND
PRO/ANTI-NAT ALISM
INTRODUCTION
315
THE EVOLUTIONARY BACKGROUND OF HUMAN
REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR
315
General evolutionary trends with respect to reproduction
315
Maximisation of inclusive fitness
316
The paradox between maximisation of inclusive fitness
and the demographic transition
317
Explanations for the paradox
319
Changed relations between phenotypic and
genotypie
fitness
in modernisation
321
THE IMPACT OF MODERNISATION ON HUMAN REPRODUCTION
324
Sexual maturation
324
Pair bonding
326
Desired fertility
/
Childbearing motivation
326
Coital behaviour
328
Fecundity
329
Preceptive behaviour
330
Contraceptive behaviour
331
The contraceptive transitions in modern culture
331
Effects of the second contraceptive transition
334
Pregnancy
336
Effects of medical interventions
337
Spontaneous and induced abortion
338
Delivery and birth
339
Birth interval
340
Menopause
341
Sterility
343
Fertility
344
Fertility at the family level
345
Fertility at the population level
347
Below-replacement fertility
347
Population deiuvenation
351
Population decline
352
Qualitative effects of the new fertility regime
354
Parenting
357
Evolutionary background: increased parental investment
357
Parenthood in modern culture
358
PRO- AND ANTI-NATALISM
359
REFERENCES
361
XV
CHAPTER
7:
SOCIAL CLASS VARIATION AND CLASSISM
INTRODUCTION
377
THE EVOLUTIONARY BACKGROUND OF WITHIN-POPULATION GROUP
VARIATION
379
HISTORICAL THEORIES ABOUT
BIOSOCIAL
INEQUALITIES
380
The anthropo-sociological school of thought
381
Social Darwinism
382
Marxist biological doctrine
383
THE SOCIAL-BIOLOGICAL APPROACH OF
BIOSOCIAL
INTERACTIONS
385
Social assortment and social selection
385
Environmental influences
390
Genetic-environmental covariance
391
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION AND BIOLOGICAL VARIATION
392
Body size and body build
392
Growth and maturation
393
Health and longevity
393
Measured intelligence
394
CAUSES OF INTERRELATIONS BETWEEN BIOLOGICAL VARIATION
AND SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
395
Environmental influences linked to social status differences
395
Social assortment: social mobility and biological variation
397
Empirical findings about the relationship between social mobility
and biological variation
397
Explanations of the relationship between social mobility and
biological variation
403
GENETICS AND SOCIAL MOBILITY
406
The assortment of phenotypes and genotypes
407
Implications of segregation and recombination of genes
for social mobility
408
The role of mate choice in the social assortment of
biological characteristics
416
The controversy over The Bell Curve
416
EGALITARIANISM VERSUS MERITOCRACY?
419
REFERENCES
421
XVI
CHAPTER
8:
RACIAL VARIATION AND RACISM
INTRODUCTION
439
THE EVOLUTIONARY BACKGROUND OF BETWEEN-POPULATION
VARIATION
443
Splitting of populations
444
Fusion
445
Adaptation
448
BIOLOGICAL BETWEEN-POPULATION DIFFERENCES
451
Behavioural-genetic between-population differences
453
Jensen s default hypothesis
of between-population differences4
in cognitive ability
456
The culture-only
hypothesis of between-population differences
in cognitive ability
460
Drawing conclusions about the genetic-environmental controversy
over between-population differences in cognitive ability
463
Evolutionary explanations for the origin of between-population
differences in cognitive ability
465
IN-GROUP/OUT-GROUP BEHAVIOUR
466
Typology
466
The cultural history of racism, ethnocentrism, and xenophobia
468
Behavioural patterns related to in-group/out-group relations
470
Explanations for sociological dominant/subordinate relations
471
Inferior and superior populations
? 472
EVOLUTIONARY EXPLANATIONS FOR THE IN-GROUP/OUT-GROUP
SYNDROME
473
Kin selection theory
474
Reciprocity theory
475
Similarity theory
476
Selfish gene theory as basis for in-group/out-group antagonisms
477
Balance of power theory
478
In-group/out-group syndrome: maladapted to the novel environment
of modern culture.
479
CULTURAL AUTONOMISM, INTEGRATIONALISM, OR
MULTICULTURALISM?
480
Cultural autonomism/independence for historical ethnic components
481
Integration of recent immigrant groups
482
Multiculturalism: fact or fiction?
484
THE FUTURE OF BETWEEN-POPULATION DIFFERENCES
AND RELATIONS
487
REFERENCES
488
CHAPTER
9:
INTERGENERATIONAL VARIATION
AND DYSGENISM
INTRODUCTION
505
TIME DIMENSION
505
HERITAGE OF THE PAST
506
Biological heritage
507
Cultural heritage
507
Conflicting and competing value and norm systems
508
Emergence of modern science
509
Effects of modern culture on intergenerational variation
509
Phenotypic effects
509
Genetic effects
510
Contra-selective effects of modern culture
513
Contraselective effects of replacement therapies
514
Contra-selective effects of differential reproduction with
respect to intelligence
515
CRUCIAL CULTURAL DETERMINANTS FOR THE FUTURE
520
Future scientific and technological developments
520
Ethical goals for the future
520
Euphenic goals
523
Eugenic goals
523
The ultimate aim of eugenics: carrying forward the hominisation
process
524
Rationale for the preservation and the advancement of
human-specific characteristics
527
General societal conditions for implementing a eugenic programme
529
Scientific and social dimensions of eugenics
530
Broad and narrow eugenics
531
Eugenic target levels
531
Eugenic benefits and costs
532
Eugenic fallacies of the past
534
ETHICAL CONCERNS
538
Ethical concerns about eugenics in general
538
Ethical issues in eugenic practice
541
Attitudes towards eugenics
544
REFERENCES
545
CHAPTER
10:
ETHICAL AND POLICY CONSIDERATIONS
REGARDING THE
BIOSOCIAL
FUTURE OF HUMANKIND
INTRODUCTION
559
BASIC ETHICAL OPTIONS RELEVANT FOR THE BIOLOGICAL
FUTURE OF THE HUMAN SPECIES
559
Intervention versus non-intervention
560
Quality versus quantity
562
Equality versus inequality
563
Cooperation versus competition
564
Out-group versus in-group
565
Intergenerational versus intragenerational care
566
COMMON FEATURES AND CHALLENGES OF
BIOSOCIAL
SOURCES
OF VARIATION IN MODERN SOCIETY
567
ADAPTIVE REQUIREMENTS FOR SUSTAINED AND SUSTAINABLE
FURTHER PROGRESS
569
Individual variation
569
Difference
φ
inequality
569
Adjusting individual aspirations to societal demands
572
Age variation
572
Active ageing
-
sense of reality or lip service?
573
Combatting ageism
-
adapting to ageing
574
Increasing age at retirement
575
Varying age at retirement
576
Death control
577
Sexual variation
577
Reconciliation of productive and reproductive functions
578
Empowerment of women
579
Mastering male competitive behaviour
581
Family variation
582
Reproductive variation
583
Policy implications regarding fertility control
584
Policies regarding contraception
584
Policy implications regarding abortion
585
Policy implications regarding fertility
586
Policy goals regarding fertility
586
Feasibility of policy measures regarding fertility
587
Policy measures for redressing fertility at or around replacement level
588
Rebalancing individual and societal values with
respect to intergenerational continuity
589
Rethinking the entire life course perspective regarding
education, employment and retirement
589
Within-population group variation
592
Inter-population variation
593
Reducing between-group inequalities
593
Combating the in-group/out-group syndrome
595
Exposing the false notion of multieulturalism
596
Intergenerational variation
597
Euphenic engineering
597
Eugenic engineering
598
Biotechnology
599
Genetically differential demographic behaviour
600
Individual/family oriented eugenics
600
Population oriented eugenics
601
How to achieve differential reproduction?
605
THE FAR FUTURE
606
Evolutionary extinction
608
Evolutionary regression
609
Evolutionary stabilisation
609
Evolutionary progression
609
REFERENCES
611
NAME INDEX
621
SUBJECT INDEX
661
|
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publisher | Masaryk Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Cliquet, Robert 1934- Verfasser (DE-588)122676084 aut Biosocial interactions in modernisation Robert Cliquet Biosocial interactions in modernization Modernization [Brno] Masaryk Univ. Press 2010 XXXII, 693 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Moderne (DE-588)4039827-4 gnd rswk-swf Mensch (DE-588)4038639-9 gnd rswk-swf Soziobiologie (DE-588)4069490-2 gnd rswk-swf Evolution (DE-588)4071050-6 gnd rswk-swf Mensch (DE-588)4038639-9 s Evolution (DE-588)4071050-6 s Moderne (DE-588)4039827-4 s Soziobiologie (DE-588)4069490-2 s DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018975679&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Cliquet, Robert 1934- Biosocial interactions in modernisation Moderne (DE-588)4039827-4 gnd Mensch (DE-588)4038639-9 gnd Soziobiologie (DE-588)4069490-2 gnd Evolution (DE-588)4071050-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4039827-4 (DE-588)4038639-9 (DE-588)4069490-2 (DE-588)4071050-6 |
title | Biosocial interactions in modernisation |
title_alt | Biosocial interactions in modernization Modernization |
title_auth | Biosocial interactions in modernisation |
title_exact_search | Biosocial interactions in modernisation |
title_full | Biosocial interactions in modernisation Robert Cliquet |
title_fullStr | Biosocial interactions in modernisation Robert Cliquet |
title_full_unstemmed | Biosocial interactions in modernisation Robert Cliquet |
title_short | Biosocial interactions in modernisation |
title_sort | biosocial interactions in modernisation |
topic | Moderne (DE-588)4039827-4 gnd Mensch (DE-588)4038639-9 gnd Soziobiologie (DE-588)4069490-2 gnd Evolution (DE-588)4071050-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Moderne Mensch Soziobiologie Evolution |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018975679&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT cliquetrobert biosocialinteractionsinmodernisation AT cliquetrobert biosocialinteractionsinmodernization AT cliquetrobert modernization |