The Biology of Peace and War: Men, Animals, and Aggression |
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Page 22
... species preserves itself : rabbits produce rabbits and ducklings hatch out of ducks ' eggs . Only if we follow a species ' fortunes over long periods of time do we note that there is no such thing as its preservation . What is preserved ...
... species preserves itself : rabbits produce rabbits and ducklings hatch out of ducks ' eggs . Only if we follow a species ' fortunes over long periods of time do we note that there is no such thing as its preservation . What is preserved ...
Page 23
... species change through genetic adapta- tion is relatively well known to us . Undirected hereditary changes , mutations , result in a genetically conditioned variability of indi- viduals , and it is on this variability that selection ...
... species change through genetic adapta- tion is relatively well known to us . Undirected hereditary changes , mutations , result in a genetically conditioned variability of indi- viduals , and it is on this variability that selection ...
Page 36
... species con- cerned ( p . 57 ) . Psychoanalysts sometimes define aggression too broadly , in my opinion . Hacker describes it as " the disposition and energy inherent in man that expresses itself originally in activity and later in ...
... species con- cerned ( p . 57 ) . Psychoanalysts sometimes define aggression too broadly , in my opinion . Hacker describes it as " the disposition and energy inherent in man that expresses itself originally in activity and later in ...
Contents
Is Aggression Inevitable? | 1 |
Seeking the Causes of Behavior | 7 |
1 | 31 |
Copyright | |
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abreact according activity aggres aggressive behavior animal kingdom Anthropology arrows attack Bambuti band battle behavior patterns biological norm bite Bushmen certainly chimpanzees cichlid clan clashes conflict conspecifics cultural evolution defend described destructive duel effect Eibl-Eibesfeldt enemy Eskimos ethologists Ethology experiments fact feasts female fighting food gatherers friendly function Hadza Haplochromis havior human aggression hunters and food hunting idem individual inhibitions innate instance intergroup intragroup intraspecific killed Konrad Lorenz Kortlandt Kung Kung Bushmen learning live Lorenz males Mount Hagen Munich norm filter observed open groups organism party peace phylogenetic phylogenetic adaptations pigs play primates ranking order releasing result rituals Schmidbauer sexual side sion Social Psychology society spears species sticks stimuli strangers striking take place Tasaday tension territory threatening tion tribes Verhalten vertebrates vorprogrammierte Mensch warfare warlike warriors weapons Wickler women Yamaka Yanomami York young