Adapting Minds

Evolutionary Psychology and the Persistent Quest for Human Nature

Paperback, 564 pages

English language

Published April 1, 2006 by The MIT Press.

ISBN:
978-0-262-52460-5
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Was human nature designed by natural selection in the Pleistocene epoch? The dominant view in evolutionary psychology holds that it was—that our psychological adaptations were designed tens of thousands of years ago to solve problems faced by our hunter-gatherer ancestors. In this provocative and lively book, David Buller examines in detail the major claims of evolutionary psychology—the paradigm popularized by Steven Pinker in The Blank Slate and by David Buss in The Evolution of Desire—and rejects them all. This does not mean that we cannot apply evolutionary theory to human psychology, says Buller, but that the conventional wisdom in evolutionary psychology is misguided.

Evolutionary psychology employs a kind of reverse engineering to explain the evolved design of the mind, figuring out the adaptive problems our ancestors faced and then inferring the psychological adaptations that evolved to solve them. In the carefully argued central chapters of Adapting Minds, Buller scrutinizes several …

4 editions

Subjects

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Psychology
  • Evolutionary Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Developmental Biology
  • Evolutionary Biology