Culture, People, Nature: An Introduction to General Anthropology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 78
Page 66
... behavior of bomber crews , who never see the people whom they annihilate . Perhaps the most distinctively human consequence of the loss of genetic controls over aggression is the inability of the human victim to influence an aggressor ...
... behavior of bomber crews , who never see the people whom they annihilate . Perhaps the most distinctively human consequence of the loss of genetic controls over aggression is the inability of the human victim to influence an aggressor ...
Page 146
... behavior of the previous generation but to replicate the replications . Each generation learns to reward behavior that conforms to the patterns of its own enculturation experience and to punish , or at least not reward , behavior that ...
... behavior of the previous generation but to replicate the replications . Each generation learns to reward behavior that conforms to the patterns of its own enculturation experience and to punish , or at least not reward , behavior that ...
Page 161
... behavior . Etics and Communication One additional point remains to be cleared up . Etic studies need not be restricted to nonverbal behavior . Observers may make judgments concerning what people say to each other that need not depend ...
... behavior . Etics and Communication One additional point remains to be cleared up . Etic studies need not be restricted to nonverbal behavior . Observers may make judgments concerning what people say to each other that need not depend ...
Contents
Biological Evolution | 7 |
FIGURES 11 Anthropologists at Work 289 | 8 |
Population Genetics | 13 |
Copyright | |
56 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Acheulian achieved adaptive Africa agriculture alleles Alorese American Indian ancestors animals anthropologists apes australopithecines basic behavior biological bipedalism bone calories canines chimpanzees chromosomes complex cultural evolution cultural systems descent domestic domesticants ecological economic enculturation English Europe European evolutionary example exchange female Figure food production forest fossil function genes genetic graciles grammatical groups habilines habitat hominid Hominoidea Homo erectus Homo sapiens human hunters hunting and gathering increase individuals industrial irrigation known labor land language linguistic living Lower Paleolithic males mammals matrilineal matrilocality Mesolithic Middle East Middle Paleolithic million modern monkeys natural selection Neandertals Neolithic occur Olduvai organisms patterns peasants percent phonemes pigs plants political pongids population population density potlatch preindustrial primates racial relationship reproductive result ritual sexual shaman skin skull social societies species structure tion traits Tsembaga Upper Paleolithic village warfare women Yanomamö