Sentences with phrase «roots in human evolution»

The results of the study suggest that music and language have common roots in human evolution.

Not exact matches

Religion in Human Evolution: From the Paleolithic to the Axial Age is about the evolutionary roots of religious behavior.
To get a proper and adequate understanding of human freedom, one has to see man in the total context of evolution, for freedom did not start with man; it had its evolutionary roots at the infrahuman level.
To name just four academics sympathetic to sociobiology at work in the biology departments of American universities: Timothy Goldsmith of Yale teaches a course called «Biological Roots of Human Nature»; William Zimmerman of Amherst teaches the «Evolutionary Biology of Human Social Behavior»; David Sloan Wilson (Department of Biology, SUNY «Binghamton) researches the evolutionary basis of human behavior; and Randy Thornhill at the University of New Mexico coauthored the infamous book on the evolution of Human Nature»; William Zimmerman of Amherst teaches the «Evolutionary Biology of Human Social Behavior»; David Sloan Wilson (Department of Biology, SUNY «Binghamton) researches the evolutionary basis of human behavior; and Randy Thornhill at the University of New Mexico coauthored the infamous book on the evolution of Human Social Behavior»; David Sloan Wilson (Department of Biology, SUNY «Binghamton) researches the evolutionary basis of human behavior; and Randy Thornhill at the University of New Mexico coauthored the infamous book on the evolution of human behavior; and Randy Thornhill at the University of New Mexico coauthored the infamous book on the evolution of rape.
«We're not addicted to smartphones, we're addicted to social interaction: Mobile - device habits stem from a healthy human need to socialize, rooted in evolution
The notion that humans got to a point in evolutionary history when their bodies were somehow «in sync» with the environment, and that at some time after that point — whether due to the advent of agriculture, the invention of the bow and arrow, or the availability of the hamburger — we went astray from those roots reflects a misunderstanding of evolution.
Rooted in a deepening understanding of how brain architecture is shaped by the interactive effects of both genetic predisposition and environmental influence, and how its developing circuitry affects a lifetime of learning, behavior, and health, advances in the biological sciences underscore the foundational importance of the early years and support an EBD framework for understanding the evolution of human health and disease across the life span.
Attachment to a protective and loving caregiver who provides security and support is a basic human need, rooted in millions of years of evolution.
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