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|a 9781441995209
|9 978-1-4419-9520-9
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|a 10.1007/978-1-4419-9520-9
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|a Origins of Altruism and Cooperation
|h [electronic resource] /
|c edited by Robert W. Sussman, C. Robert Cloninger.
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|a New York, NY :
|b Springer New York,
|c 2011.
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|a XVI, 440 p.
|b online resource.
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|a text
|b txt
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|a Developments in Primatology: Progress and Prospects ;
|v 36
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|a Part I. Cooperation, Altruism and Human Evolution -- Chapter 1-Introduction: Altruism and Cooperation -- Chapter 2. Part 1 Introduction.-Chapter 3. The Influence of Predation on Primate and Early Human Evolution: Impetus for Cooperation -- Chapter 4. Born to cooperate? Altruism as exaptation, and the evolution of human sociality -- Chapter 5. The Phylogenesis of Human Personality:Identifying the Precursors of Cooperation, Altruism, and Well-Being -- Part II. Altruism and Cooperation Among Non-human Primates -- Chapter 6. Cooperation and the Evolution of Social Living: Moving Beyond the Constraints andImplications of Misleading Dogma: Introduction Section II -- Chapter 7. Primates, Niche Construction, and Social Complexity: The Roles of Social Cooperation and Altruism -- Chapter 8. Collective Action and Male Affiliation in Howler Monkeys (Alouatta caraya) -- Chapter 9. Mechanisms of Cohesion in Black Howler Monkeys -- Chapter 10. Social Plasticity and Demographic Variation in Primates -- Part III. Altruism and Cooperation Among Humans: The Ethnographic Evidence -- Chapter 11. Altruism and Cooperation Among Humans: The Ethnographic Evidence: Introduction -- Chapter 12. Violence Reduction among the Gebusi of Papua New Guinea – and Across Humanity -- Chapter 13. Human Nature: The Nomadic Forager Model -- Chapter 14. Born to Live: Challenging Killer Myths -- Chapter 15. Notes toward a human nature for the third Millennium -- Part IV. Neurological and hormonal mechanisms for cooperation and altruism -- Chapter 16. Behavior meets Neuroscience: Achievements, Prospects, and Complexity: Introduction to Section 4 -- Chapter 17. The Neurobiology of Cooperation and Altruism -- Chapter 18. Behavioral and Neuroendocrine Interactions in Affiliation -- Chapter 19. Early Social Experience and the Ontogenesis of Emotion Regulatory Behavior in Children -- Part V. Human Altruism and Cooperation: Needs and the Promotion of Well-being in Modern Life -- Chapter 20: Introduction -- Chapter 21. Altruism as an Aspect of Relational Consciousness and how Culture inhibits it -- Chapter 22. Hope Rekindled: Well-Being, Humanism, and Education -- Chapter 23. Promoting Well-Being in Health Care -- Chapter 24. Moving Beyond the Nature/Nurture Distinction: Promotion of Transdisciplinary Research (Overview of the Institute of Medicine Report on Genes, Behavior, and the Social Environment).
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|a This book is derived from a conference held at Washington University, March, 2009. Authors include academics from around the world and across multiple disciplines – anthropology, psychiatry, human evolution, biology, psychology, religion, philosophy, education, and medicine – to focus on the evolution of cooperation, altruism, and sociality and possible factors that led to the evolution of these characteristics in non-human primates and humans. . The traits of altruism and cooperation often are assumed to be among humanity's essential and defining characteristics. However, it has been difficult to account for the origins and evolution of altruistic behavior. Recently, scientists have found data on cooperative behavior in many animal species, as well as in human societies, that do not conform to evolutionary models based solely on competition and the evolutionary drive to pass on selfish genes. In this volume, recent debates about the nature and origins of cooperative behaviors are reviewed. The hypothesis that unselfish cooperative behavior has evolved in animals that live in social groups is discussed. Many of the mechanisms that primates and humans have evolved for protection against predators, including cooperation and sociality are explored. Social animals, including primates and humans, are not forced to live socially but do so because it benefits them in numerous ways. Through natural selection, primates and humans have developed areas of the brain that respond with pleasure and satisfaction to being cooperative and friendly, even if cooperation involves personal sacrifice. Data are presented supporting the idea that the normal pattern for most diurnal primates and for humans is to be social. Selfishness and aggression are expressions of adaptive responses that are well-regulated in mature and healthy people with the benefit of mechanisms of social evolution in primates. People become non-cooperative and express antisocial behavior as a result of faulty or incomplete development of their natural potential for cooperation and altruism. It is human nature to want to work together and cooperate. A hypothesis is developed and explored that positive social interaction is related to well-being in both non-human primates and in humans. .
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|a Life sciences.
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|a Behavioral sciences.
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|a Animal ecology.
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|a Anthropology.
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|a Life Sciences.
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|a Behavioral Sciences.
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|a Anthropology.
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|a Animal Ecology.
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|a Sussman, Robert W.
|e editor.
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|a Cloninger, C. Robert.
|e editor.
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|a SpringerLink (Online service)
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|t Springer eBooks
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|i Printed edition:
|z 9781441995193
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|a Developments in Primatology: Progress and Prospects ;
|v 36
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|u http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9520-9
|z Full Text via HEAL-Link
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|a ZDB-2-SBL
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|a Biomedical and Life Sciences (Springer-11642)
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