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Evolutionary Psychology

Evolutionary Psychology

The New Science of the Mind
by David Buss 2019 518 pages
4.34
1k+ ratings
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Key Takeaways

1. Evolution shapes human mating strategies and preferences

"Standards of beauty are not arbitrary; they embody reliable cues to fertility and reproductive value."

Evolutionary pressures have molded human mating psychology over millions of years. Our ancestors faced recurring adaptive problems related to survival and reproduction, leading to the development of specific mate preferences and strategies. These evolved mechanisms continue to influence modern human behavior, even in novel environments.

Key adaptive problems in mating:

  • Identifying fertile partners
  • Securing resources for offspring
  • Ensuring paternity
  • Balancing quantity vs. quality of offspring

Cross-cultural universals in mate preferences provide evidence for evolutionary origins. For example, men universally value youth and physical attractiveness in long-term mates, while women consistently prioritize status and resources. These preferences reflect solutions to different adaptive problems faced by each sex throughout evolutionary history.

2. Men and women have distinct long-term mating strategies

"Women across all continents, all political systems (including socialism and communism), all racial groups, all religious groups, and all systems of mating (from intense polygyny to presumptive monogamy), placed more value than men on good financial prospects."

Men's long-term strategies focus on securing reproductive certainty and maximizing offspring quality. They tend to prefer younger partners with clear signs of fertility and sexual fidelity. This addresses the adaptive problem of paternity uncertainty.

Key male preferences in long-term mates:

  • Youth
  • Physical attractiveness
  • Sexual fidelity

Women's long-term strategies emphasize acquiring resources and protection for themselves and their offspring. They typically seek partners with high status, ambition, and the ability to invest in children. This reflects the adaptive challenges of pregnancy, childbirth, and child-rearing.

Key female preferences in long-term mates:

  • Resources and status
  • Ambition and industriousness
  • Commitment and emotional stability

3. Physical attractiveness signals fertility and health

"Men's standards of beauty have evolved to correspond to these cues—clear skin, full lips, small lower jaw, symmetrical features, white teeth, absence of sores and lesions, facial femininity, facial symmetry, facial averageness, and a small ratio of waist to hips."

Beauty is functional, not arbitrary. Physical features that humans find attractive are reliable indicators of health, fertility, and good genes. These preferences evolved because they helped our ancestors identify high-quality mates who could produce healthy offspring.

Universal markers of attractiveness:

  • Facial symmetry
  • Clear skin
  • Body shape (e.g., waist-to-hip ratio in women, shoulder-to-hip ratio in men)
  • Youthful features

Cultural variations in beauty standards often reflect local ecological conditions. For example, body weight preferences may differ based on food scarcity or abundance. However, the underlying principles of what makes someone attractive (health, fertility, and genetic quality) remain consistent across cultures.

4. Short-term mating serves different purposes for men and women

"Men's desire for sexual variety is one of the largest, most replicable, and most cross-culturally robust psychological sex differences ever documented."

Men's short-term strategy aims to maximize reproductive output by mating with multiple partners. This reflects the fact that men can potentially increase their number of offspring through casual mating. However, short-term mating also carries risks, such as sexually transmitted infections and reputational damage.

Benefits of short-term mating for men:

  • Increased reproductive opportunities
  • Genetic diversity of offspring
  • Potential for "sexy sons"

Women's short-term strategy is more complex and context-dependent. Potential benefits include acquiring good genes, resources, or assessing long-term mate potential. Women are generally more selective in short-term mating due to higher potential costs (e.g., pregnancy, reputational damage).

Potential benefits of short-term mating for women:

  • Genetic benefits for offspring
  • Resource acquisition
  • Mate switching or mate insurance

5. Parental investment theory explains sex differences in mating behavior

"Because women invest heavily in children, they have evolved to be choosy when they pick mates—the standard prediction from parental investment theory."

Parental investment theory, developed by Robert Trivers, provides a framework for understanding sex differences in mating behavior. The sex that invests more in offspring (typically females) becomes a limiting resource, leading to competition among the other sex (typically males) for mating opportunities.

Key predictions of parental investment theory:

  • The higher-investing sex will be more choosy in mate selection
  • The lower-investing sex will compete more intensely for mates
  • The lower-investing sex will be more interested in casual mating

In humans, women's higher obligatory parental investment (pregnancy, lactation) leads to greater selectivity in mate choice. Men, with lower minimum parental investment, show greater interest in casual mating and compete more intensely for access to mates.

6. Context and individual differences influence mating strategies

"Everyone knows some men who are womanizers and others who would never stray. Everyone knows some women who enjoy casual sex and others who could not imagine sex without commitment."

Mating strategies are flexible, not fixed. Individuals adjust their mating behavior based on personal characteristics, environmental cues, and life circumstances. This strategic pluralism allows humans to adapt to varying ecological and social conditions.

Factors influencing mating strategies:

  • Personal mate value
  • Sex ratio in the mating pool
  • Resource availability
  • Presence of pathogens
  • Cultural norms and constraints

Individual differences in personality, sociosexual orientation, and attachment style also play a role in shaping mating behavior. For example, people high in extraversion and low in conscientiousness tend to engage in more short-term mating.

7. Evolved psychological mechanisms guide human mating decisions

"An evolved psychological mechanism is a set of processes inside an organism that exists in the form that it does because it solved a specific problem of survival or reproduction recurrently over evolutionary history."

Human mating psychology consists of numerous specialized mechanisms designed to solve specific adaptive problems. These mechanisms process environmental and social cues to produce emotions, preferences, and behaviors that guide mating decisions.

Examples of evolved mating mechanisms:

  • Jealousy as a mate retention strategy
  • Disgust as a pathogen avoidance mechanism
  • Attraction to specific physical features
  • Mate value self-assessment

Modern environments often differ significantly from the ancestral conditions in which these mechanisms evolved. This mismatch can sometimes lead to maladaptive outcomes, such as overconsumption of high-calorie foods or unrealistic beauty standards influenced by media.

8. Parent-offspring conflict arises from genetic differences

"Because women in our evolutionary past risked investing enormously as a consequence of having sex, evolution favored women who were highly selective about their mates."

Genetic conflict between parents and offspring stems from their different levels of genetic relatedness. Parents are equally related to all their children (50%), while each child is 100% related to itself but only 50% related to its siblings. This leads to differing optimal levels of parental investment from each perspective.

Areas of parent-offspring conflict:

  • Resource allocation among siblings
  • Weaning timing
  • Mate choice

Parental influence on offspring mating decisions can be seen as an extension of parental investment. Parents may attempt to influence their children's mate choices to maximize their own inclusive fitness, sometimes leading to conflict with the offspring's preferences.

9. Kinship affects altruism and family dynamics

"Humans have powerful incest-avoidance mechanisms, such as the emotion of disgust at the thought of passionately kissing or having sex with a sibling."

Inclusive fitness theory, developed by William Hamilton, explains how altruism can evolve between genetic relatives. The theory predicts that individuals will be more likely to help kin than non-kin, and that the degree of altruism will be proportional to the degree of genetic relatedness.

Predictions of inclusive fitness theory:

  • Greater helping behavior towards close kin
  • Nepotism in resource allocation
  • Incest avoidance mechanisms

Family dynamics are shaped by varying degrees of genetic relatedness among family members. This can lead to differential treatment of full siblings vs. half-siblings, as well as conflicts between genetic relatives and step-relatives. Understanding these evolutionary principles can provide insights into family relationships and conflicts.

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Review Summary

4.34 out of 5
Average of 1k+ ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind is praised as an informative and accessible textbook on evolutionary psychology. Readers appreciate its comprehensive coverage of topics like mating strategies, parenting, and social behavior from an evolutionary perspective. The book provides insights into human behavior and psychology, though some find it repetitive or overly focused on mating. Many consider it a valuable resource for understanding human nature, though a few are skeptical of some theories presented. Overall, it is highly regarded as an introduction to the field of evolutionary psychology.

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About the Author

David M. Buss is a prominent evolutionary psychologist and professor at the University of Texas at Austin. He earned his PhD from UC Berkeley in 1981 and has held positions at Harvard and the University of Michigan. Buss's research focuses on human mating strategies, conflict between sexes, and evolutionary perspectives on behavior. He has authored numerous scientific articles and books, including "The Evolution of Desire" and "Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind." Buss has received awards for his contributions to psychology and edited "The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology." His work involves cross-cultural research and he frequently lectures in the United States.

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