Wilson's Panchreston: the inclusive fitness hypothesis of sociobiology re-examined
Autor: | Mildred Dickemann |
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Rok vydání: | 1995 |
Předmět: |
Male
Social Psychology Kin recognition Genotype Fitness landscape media_common.quotation_subject Sexual Behavior Kin selection Social Environment Education Gender Studies Gene Frequency Phenomenon Animals Humans Homosexuality Selection Genetic General Psychology media_common Natural selection Sociobiology Reproduction Inclusive fitness Gender Identity General Medicine Epistemology Phenotype Female Sex Psychology Social psychology |
Zdroj: | Journal of homosexuality. 28(1-2) |
ISSN: | 0091-8369 |
Popis: | Of several hypotheses proposed by sociobiologists to explain "homosexuality", the most widely discussed is the inclusive fitness hypothesis, which is examined here in the work of the primary sociobiological proponents, E. O. Wilson, Michael Ruse, and James Weinrich. After reviewing the basic evolutionary concepts of natural selection, adaptation, and inclusive fitness/kin selection, I analyze the inclusive fitness hypotheses of homosexuality, taking as an exemplar the initial statement of E. O. Wilson. The implicit assumptions is this hypothesis are identified: that "homosexuality" is a unitary phenomenon, of direct genetic origin, occurring at similar frequencies across societies and through time, without direct reproductive gain, with therefore must be of genetic advantage to relatives. Each of these implicit assumptions is discussed and assessed in turn. The inclusive fitness hypothesis, derived primarily from current stereotypes about homosexuals in Western society, is found to be misconceived and without scientific merit. A general discussion of the nature-nurture, or essentialist-social-constructionist, controversy as it involves this hypothesis concludes the essay. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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