The article analyzes three schools that can be understood as central in studies of the evolution of human behavior within the paradigm of evolution by natural selection: human behavioral ecology (HBE), evolutionary psychology, and dual inheritance. These three streams of thought are used to depict the Darwinist landscape and pinpoint its strong suits and limitations. Theoretical gaps were identified that seem to reduce these schools’ ability to account for the diversity of human evolutionary behavior. Their weak points include issues related to the concept of reproductive success, types of adaptation, and targets of selection. An interdisciplinary approach is proposed as the solution to this dilemma, where complex adaptive systems would serve as a source.
CITATION STYLE
Peric, M., & Murrieta, R. S. S. (2015). A evolução do comportamento cultural humano: Apontamentos sobre darwinismo e complexidade. Historia, Ciencias, Saude - Manguinhos, 22, 1715–1733. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-59702015000500010
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