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         Evolutionary:     more books (99)
  1. The Passing Of The Phantoms: A Study Of Evolutionary Psychology And Morals by C. J. Patten, 2010-09-10

141. Pandagon: Evolutionary Psychology Bullshitters Reach A New Low Of Stupid
I think I have to stick up for evolutionary psychology here, Here s one of the many problems with evolutionary psychology if it worked this way in
http://www.pandagon.net/archives/2005/07/evolutionary_ps.html
Main
July 28, 2005
Evolutionary psychology bullshitters reach a new low of stupid
Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 10:04 PM From the comments of Feministing left by one of their misogynist trolls: If I'm looking to get laid, you would be my first pick. If I am looking to procreate, you would be very low on my list. The reason is very simple. Scientific research has shown over and over again that women have a tendency to attempt to mate with the most dominate male they can find, while attempting to have a more compliant male raise the resulting children. Also, when a woman is attempting to become pregnant, she often will mate with more than one male in order to maximize the probability of getting pregnant. This is the second time in two days I've seen someone in a comment thread who thinks he is an expert in biology that has asserted that men are programmed to fuck some women and have children with others. Let this be a lesson to all of you who want to wield your supposed great knowledge of evolution to beat feminists over the head with. If you don't know where babies come from, you have no business blathering on about biology. Filed: Boggles the Mind
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142. Gestalt Therapy And Evolutionary Psychology
An approach informed by evolutionary psychology, however, demands more skill in v studies human behavior both from an evolutionary psychological
http://biology.unm.edu/Biology/pwatson/public_html/GTEP.htm
Gestalt Therapy and Evolutionary Psychology
A five-day residential workshop at Esalen Institute, Big Sur, California, USA October 12 th th Since 1964, Gestalt Therapy has been the seminal theory and technique in support of Esalen's quest to discover “the limits of human ability, the boundaries of human experience, and what it means to be a human being”. Gestalt proved an exciting way of implementing an experimental approach to discover what was possible. Through nearly four decades we have learned a lot. But what now? New doors have been opened by research in neuroscience, motivation, cross-species comparison, and especially, modern psychological applications of evolutionary biology. The revelations are startling. Familiar Gestalt techniques remain essential: group process, dialogic encounter, empty chair and hot seat, figure/ground, and the central role of awareness. An approach informed by evolutionary psychology, however, demands more skill in awareness techniques, offering challenging perspectives concerning the dynamism, bumpiness, and vastness of the awareness continuum. It re-examines implications of phenomenology, extends "Ground" back to the Stone Age, understands Self in relation to brain research, and experiments with new ways of viewing “authentic” “honest” behavior.
We shall grapple experientially and intellectually with questions such as: Is our way of understanding the human mind in relation to others inhabiting nature merely anthropomorphic romanticism, or can important things be learned from cross-species psychological comparisons? Why do people often seem to be doing something different than what they say and feel they are doing? Why have humans evolved to encounter each other so radically intersubjectively? Can we make contact differently? What would be the point?

143. BBC - Science & Nature - Human Body And Mind - Evolutionary Psychology
An introduction to different types of psychology evolutionary psychology.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/humanbody/mind/articles/psychology/psychology_5.sht
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In TV programmes The mind Psychology - an overview Personality and individuality ... Help Like this page? Send it to a friend! You are here: BBC The Mind
Evolutionary Psychology
  • Natural selection and the theory of evolution Survival of the fittest: the case of finches on the Galapagos Islands The pace of evolutionary change Evolution of the human mind Why do humans have such large brains?
Natural selection and the theory of evolution Evolutionary psychology is inspired by the work of Charles Darwin and applies his ideas of natural selection to the mind. Darwin's theory argues that all living species, including humans, arrived at their current biological form through a historical process involving random inheritable changes. Some changes are adaptive, that is, they increase an individual's chances of surviving and reproducing. Changes of this kind are more likely to be passed on to the next generation (natural selection), while changes that hinder survival are lost. Survival of the fittest: the case of finches on the Galapagos Islands Natural selection is driven by changes in the environment. On the Galapagos Islands, the arrival of drought prompted evolutionary changes in the population of a species of finches. Only finches with larger body mass and thicker beaks survived the drought, because they were better adapted to cracking open the larger, tougher seeds that remained when other food sources disappeared. The finch population changed quite radically in a fairly short space of time, in response to the drastic changes in their environment.

144. Evolutionary Psychology - Cambridge University Press
Courses ‘evolutionary psychology’ modules, but also can be used as part of more Introduction to evolutionary psychology; 2. Mechanisms of evolutionary
http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=052180146X

145. Tiscali Webspace - Errore - Sito
An association of Italian Jungian psychoanalysts who promote research and study in Analytic psychology, especially regarding evolutionary aspects of the personality and intersubjective and relational method in psychoanalysis. Also studies the development of Jungian theory, such as the research of Silvia Montefoschi in Italy.
http://web.tiscali.it/cepei/v_english.htm
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146. Simon Gadbois - Introduction
Annotated links and other resources on animal behaviour, behavioural endocrinology, evolutionary and biological psychology, and research on wolves and other canids. Maintained by Simon Gadbois, lecturer at Acadia and Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, Canada.
http://www.gadbois.org/
Simon Gadbois
Academic site • Site acad©mique
This is the academic site of Simon Gadbois, faculty at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. It includes information about courses he taught or is currently teaching, as well as his research, past, present and future. Follow the index at the left of the page to navigate through the site.
Ce site est le site acad©mique de Simon Gadbois, professeur   l'Universit© Dalhousie d'Halifax, en Nouvelle-Ecosse (Canada). Vous y trouverez de l'information sur les cours qu'il enseigne ou a enseign©s ainsi que sur ses recherches pass©es, pr©sentes et projet©es. Suivez l'index   la gauche de la page pour naviguer sur le site.
Simon Gadbois, Ph.D.
Psychology / Neuroscience
Dalhousie University
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Canada, B3H 4J1
email
© 2005 Simon Gadbois

147. Cognitive Science At Michigan State University
Specialization in Cognitive Science is for students in master's and doctoral programs in audiology and speech sciences, computer science, ecology and evolutionary biology, geography, linguistics, neuroscience, philosophy, physics and astronomy, physiology, psychiatry, psychology, telecommunication, and zoology.
http://www.cogsci.msu.edu/
Information Graduate Program 2005-2006 Academic Year Funding News
  • The Undergraduate Specialization in Cognitive Science has been approved and is scheduled to start fall semester 2005. The Cognitive Imaging Research Center ( CIRC ) is now up and running, supporting cognitively oriented fMRI.

updated: 8/22/05 info@cogsci.msu.edu

148. Behavioural Ecology Research Group
Research group studying animal learning, memory, and decisionmaking, using experimental psychology and evolutionary biology as tools. Department of Zoology, University of Oxford.
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~kgroup/

149. Daly, Martin
evolutionary and ecological theories and psychology, particularly epidemiological studies on lethal violence among humans, and the behavioral ecology of desert rodents (McMaster University, Ontario, Canada).
http://www.science.mcmaster.ca/Psychology/md.html
To view pattern on tie click on it
Martin Daly
(Ph.D., Toronto)
daly@mcmaster.ca 905-525-9140, ext.23018 to find out more about the research in our lab click here I am interested in the relevance of evolutionary and ecological theories to psychology. My more specific interests include comparative studies of social diversity among related animal species, sex differences, parent-offspring relations, lethal violence, and the evolutionary consequences of uncertain paternity in animals with internal fertilization.
I conduct research on both human and nonhuman behaviour, usually in collaboration with Margo Wilson. We do field and laboratory research on the behavioural ecology of desert rodents, and we do epidemiological studies of homicide, which we treat as a window on human passions and antagonisms and hence as a sort of assay of interpersonal conflict. To view the Evolution and Human Behavior Website click here
(1994). Discriminativ e parental solicitude and the relevance of evolutionary models to the analysis of motivational systems. Pp. 1269-1286, in M. Gazzaniga, ed., The Cognitive Neurosciences.

150. Margo Wilson PhD Department Of Psychology
evolutionary psychological perspectives on perceptions, emotions and motivations (McMaster University, Ontario, Canada).
http://www.science.mcmaster.ca/Psychology/margo.html
Margo Wilson
(Ph.D., London) to view more about the research in our lab click here
wilson@mcmaster.ca

905-525-9140 ext 23033
  • Currently, I am pursuing two main lines of research questions which derive from taking an evolutionary psychological perspective on perceptions, emotions and motivations.
      1. Interpersonal conflict and violence: These studies in collaboration with Martin Daly and others are mainly epidemiological analyses of patterns of risk of lethal and nonlethal violence in different categories of relationships, especially, marital and parent-offspring relationships. 2. Perceptions and valuations of the environment: A multi-disciplinary research project, Ecowise, was initiated at McMaster University to study various aspects of the ecosystem of Hamilton Harbour and Cootes Paradise. Some of the research on what people like and know about this ecosystem is described on the Ecowise website ( http://www.mcmaster.ca/ecowise
    To view the Evolution and Human Behavior Website click here

Representative Publications Margo Wilson Margo Wilson Life expectancy, economic inequality, homicide, and reproductive timing in Chicago neighbourhoods

151. EVOLUTIONARY THEORY AND THE PSYCHOLOGY OF EATING
Online paper by A. W. Logue.
http://darwin.baruch.cuny.edu/faculty/LogueA.html
Evolutionary Theory and the Psychology of Eating
A W L OGUE
Baruch College, City University of New York
Table of Contents Definitions and Background
Illness-Induced Food Aversion Learning

Preference for High-Fat Foods

Preference for Sweet Foods
...
References
Psychology has been repeatedly accused of consisting of a disparate group of competing, irreconcilable, theories and practices. There is often too little contact between the clinical/applied psychologists who try to use psychological principles to improve our well being, and the experimentalists, who try to discover these principles. Even within these two major groups, there are often major disagreements with respect to theoretical and practical approaches. The American Psychological Association contains over 50 different divisions, each with its own governance structure. Staddon (1993) has stated that "If Psychology is a field it is a field of battle, where contending groups struggle for masterynot a coherent discipline" (p.9). The use of evolutionary theory as a unifying theoretical framework for Psychology is not a new idea. Darwin himself foretold this approach for Psychology in his 1859 book

152. An Evolutionary Hypothesis For Eating Disorders
Riadh T. Abed argues that the roots of some eating disorders may be sexual competition. Published in the British Journal of Medical psychology 71(4)525547.
http://cogprints.soton.ac.uk/documents/disk0/00/00/08/00/cog00000800-00/eatdis~1
The Sexual Competition Hypothesis For Eating Disorders Riadh T. Abed, MBChB, DPM, MRCPsych. Psychiatrist, Department of Psychiatry, Rotherham District General Hospital, Moorgate Road, Rotherham S60 2UD, United Kingdom, and Honorary Clinical Lecturer, University of Sheffield. Fax: 114 2507651; E-mail: abed@globalnet.co.uk Acknowledgements: I am grateful to Dr. R.L. Palmer and Dr. K. de Pauw for reading and commenting on earlier versions of this paper. I also wish to thank Professor P. Gilbert Associate Editor and the two anonymous referees for their critical review of the paper and for offering valuable advice. The Sexual Competition Hypothesis For Eating Disorders Evolutionary science has made few inroads into psychiatry despite the fact that over 130 years have passed since Darwin’s Origin The hypothesis on eating disorders presented here is derived from the evolutionary theory of human sexuality. The present hypothesis is based upon the assumption that, besides shaping anatomical systems, selection also designs psychological and behavioural adaptations that are just as important for the organisms survival and reproductive success (Lorenz, 1937; Dawkins,1982). Hypothesis: The present hypothesis is based upon the following assumptions: 1. In the ancestral environment, the female shape was a generally reliable indicator of the female’s reproductive history and hence her future reproductive potential.

153. Human Reasoning Research
Specialized behavior without specialized modules the massive adaptability hypothesis. In evolutionary and the psychology of Thinking. Ed David E. Over.
http://people.cas.sc.edu/almor/reasoning.html
Amit Almor Human Reasoning
Is human reasoning the product of discrete domain-specific mechanisms, or does it follow some general domain-independent principles that can be applied in many domains?
Psychological Review, 103 View abstract View PDF
In another study, we showed that "perspective reversal" effects in the selection task, the second source of evidence for unique deontic reasoning is more plausibly a consequence of how people represent the problem in the task and not of how they reason about it. This work is described in:
Memory and Cognition, 28 View abstract View PDF
My most recent work focuses on why evolutionary arguments do not necessarily entail domain specialization. This work appears in:
Almor, A. (in press). Specialized behavior without specialized modules: the massive adaptability hypothesis. In: Evolutionary and the Psychology of Thinking . Ed: David E. Over. Psychology Press. Research Language processing: Human Reasoning: All Publications Classes Contact information ... Home page last updated 5.26.02

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