- Savanna principle
The Savanna Principle is a theory about the evolutionary roots of the human brain. Developed and researched by
Satoshi Kanazawa it asserts that the environment that molded the human brain throughnatural selection is drastically different than the world humans currently live in. This disparity between what man was designed to do and what he currently can do leads to a host of societal difficulties, according to the theory. For example, ancestors who craved sugary and fatty foods lived longer and were healthier than those who didn't, in a time that such things were relatively scarce. Today, the abundance of such temptations leads toobesity andheart disease . Similar scenarios are illustrated with television [cite web
url = http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/MES/pdf/JCEP2006.pdf
title = WHY THE LESS INTELLIGENT MAY ENJOY TELEVISION MORE THAN THE MORE ...
author = Satoshi Kanazawa
accessdate = 2007-11-05 ] , sex, and jealousy. The theory is espoused heavily in Kanazawa's book "Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters". [Kanazawa, Satoshi "Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters" (2007) All, ISBN 978-0399533655.]Origins of Life
As humans lived in relative stability for thousands of years in Africa, certain traits beneficial to that environment evolved into dominance. Individuals lived in tribes of roughly 150 people, regularly practiced war and often engaged in polygamy.
Dunbar's Number takes its roots from this cultural past. It was later popularized byMalcolm Gladwell in "The Tipping Point " as an integral part of human psychology. In these small bands of people, things like sexual jealousy (preventing cuckoldry), infanticide (limiting the spending of resources), paranoia (safety), martyrdom (helping the survival of a relative with shared genes) developed as effective and necessary traits. From these seeds grew behaviors that are both condemned and lauded in today's society.Challenges
Obviously, the majority of the human race no longer calls the Savanna home, and fewer still live in tribal societies. According to the Principle, though our morality has moved forward, our brains remain stuck in the Savanna. In other words, the stability of our modernity has existed for a far shorter time than the years spent in the plains of Africa, and
human nature often reflects that disparity.Criticism
The Savanna Principle holds that the brain has undergone little if no change in the last 10,000 years. Some scholars challenge this view. Author Gregory Clark claims that population pressures and a Malthusian Trap drastically altered Western society between
1200 AD and theIndustrial Revolution . [cite web
url = http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/02/business/02scene.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
title = What Makes a Nation Wealthy? Maybe It’s the Working Stiff
publisher = New York Times
author = Cowen, Tyler
date = 2, November, 2006
accessdate = 2007-11-06 ] [Clark, Gregory "A Farewell To Alms" (2007) All, ISBN 978-0691121352.] According to him, the disparity between the reproduction rates of the rich and poor led the natural selection favor of vastly different traits and thus contradicts, at least in part, the idea that the human brain has not changed since the days of the Savanna. And it also challenges the belief that traits cannot be bred our of the popularity in a relatively short period of time.ee also
*
Evolutionary Psychology
*Tit for tat
*Gene-centered view of evolution Notes
External links
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