This View of Life
Blog
This View of Life is an interdisciplinary academic journal dedicated to exploring the application of evolutionary science across all aspects of human life.

W.D. Hamilton is best known for developing Inclusive Fitness Theory. What is less well known is that Hamilton changed his mind about the relationship between his theory and group selection.

PsychTable.org is an open-science taxonomy devoted to uncovering the richness and complexity of our evolved human behavior.

Many systems in nature consist of a large number of relatively simple units that interact only locally, and without a central control, yet the system as a whole can produce intricate globally coordinated behaviors.

Human psychology evolved over millions of years in relatively stable environments in small-scale communities. But, in the modern world, evolutionary mismatch can occur where a trait adapted for one environment is out of place where we live today.

The fact that evolutionary selection pressures so often result in social pathologies might be hard to accept, but once faced squarely it can lead to an optimistic point of view.

Human beings are subject to the workings of evolution and are also aware of their role as shapers of the environment so as to consciously direct evolutionary change.

On a global scale, mismatches between ethnic identity and nation-states have caused more death and suffering than any variety of extremism.

My approach is explored by considering Aristotelian Causal Categories, focusing on Final Cause. I then consider the possibility of understanding this question from an ‘internalist’ perspective.

In a world that is being ripped apart by polarized views and fake news, scientific discourse might be the last bastion of constructive disagreement based on respect for objective knowledge.

If most MD, as it is currently diagnosed, is not a disorder, should we keep calling it Major Depression?

ProSocial is inherently about equity and co-production starting at the scale of small groups and then applying the same principles at multiple levels.

A new study shows that chimpanzees and bonobos are far more similar in their gender roles than previously thought. In order to understand the range of complexity in our evolutionary cousins’ social lives, perhaps we first need to recognize the range of complexity that exists in our own.
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