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Melvin Konner

    Melvin Konner ist Professor für Anthropologie sowie für Neurowissenschaften und Verhaltensbiologie an der Emory University. Seine Werke untersuchen die Schnittstellen von Biologie, Medizin und menschlichem Verhalten. In seinen Schriften befasst er sich mit komplexen Fragen der menschlichen Existenz und Moral. Leser schätzen seine Fähigkeit, wissenschaftliche Erkenntnisse mit einem tiefen Verständnis der menschlichen Erfahrung zu verbinden.

    Why the Reckless Survive ...and Other Secrets of Human Nature
    The evolution of childhood
    Medicine at the Crossroads
    Die unvollkommene Gattung
    • 2010

      The evolution of childhood

      Relationships, emotion, mind

      • 943 Seiten
      • 34 Lesestunden
      3,9(70)Abgeben

      This book is an intellectual tour de force: a comprehensive Darwinian interpretation of human development. Looking at the entire range of human evolutionary history, Melvin Konner tells the compelling and complex story of how cross-cultural and universal characteristics of our growth from infancy to adolescence became rooted in genetically inherited characteristics of the human brain. All study of our evolution starts with one simple truth: human beings take an extraordinarily long time to grow up. What does this extended period of dependency have to do with human brain growth and social interactions? And why is play a sign of cognitive complexity, and a spur for cultural evolution? As Konner explores these questions, and topics ranging from bipedal walking to incest taboos, he firmly lays the foundations of psychology in biology. As his book eloquently explains, human learning and the greatest human intellectual accomplishments are rooted in our inherited capacity for attachments to each other. In our love of those we learn from, we find our way as individuals and as a species. Never before has this intersection of the biology and psychology of childhood been so brilliantly described. "Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution," wrote Dobzhansky. In this remarkable book, Melvin Konner shows that nothing in childhood makes sense except in the light of evolution.

      The evolution of childhood
    • 1993

      Examines such problems as the high cost of health care, the channeling of funds to high-tech research instead of prevention programs, the medical insurance gap, and other critical issues

      Medicine at the Crossroads
    • 1991