Significant Others: The Ape-Human Continuum and the Quest for Human Nature

Bibliographic Collection: 
Anthropogeny
Publication Type: Book
Authors: Stanford, Craig B.
Year of Publication: 2001
Edition: 1st Ed.
Number of Pages: 236
Publisher: Basic Books
City: New York
Publication Language: eng
ISBN Number: 046508172X
Keywords: Apes, Biological psychiatry., Genetic psychology, Hominidae, Human behavior, Human evolution, Pongidae, Sociobiology
Abstract:

Evolutionary scientists know that the line that divides humans from other animals has grown increasingly blurry, yet many other fields, especially in the social sciences, have not really absorbed this knowledge. At the same time, the knowledge that all humans are genetically and cognitively modern has left the apes as our only true "savages." Thus if we want to learn about human nature and how we came to be as we are, we must look to the apes. In this sweeping, fresh, controversial book, primatologist Craig Stanford does just that, giving us fascinating insights--and debunks many myths--about infanticide, mating practices, and the origins of human cognition.

Label: 2001