Read How Many Friends Does One Person Need? Online
Authors: Robin Dunbar
Moore, Patrick, 217
morality, 268–74
Morley, Edward, 218
morning sickness, 9, 103–6
motherese, 76–8
MRSA, 99, 100, 116
MUPs (major urinary proteins), 245–6
Murdoch, John, 219
music, 69–72, 78, 137, 217–18, 287
mutation, genetic, 49–50, 85, 115, 244–5
MySpace, 21
Na-Dene languages, 53
names, 41–4
Nash, John, 206
Native Americans, 123
natural selection, 7–8, 99–100, 115–16, 157
nature versus nurture, 184–5
Neanderthals, 127, 128, 138–41
neocortex, 15–17, 23–4, 29, 181, 272–3
nepotism, 35–7
Nettle, Daniel, 45, 207–8
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 40–1
Newton, Isaac, 119
night time, 83–4
Nocks, Elaine, 163
Nogués-Bravo, David, 150, 151
nursery rhymes, 78, 225
Obama, Barack, 9, 164, 167
odour,
see
smell optics, 118–19
orang pendek, 132
orang utans: ancestry, 122; capacity for theory of mind, 176–7, 179; classification, 274–5; extinction threat, 145; habitat, 132, 145; language, 196, 275
Organ, Chris, 120, 121
Oring, Lewis, 260
Orrorin tugenensis
, 132–5
Ota Benga, 267
Othello
, 198–201
oxytocin, 64–6, 262
pairbonds, 12, 13, 65, 239
Pakistan, 55
Paley, William, 114
parrots, 196
Partridge, Giselle, 251
paternity, 95–6, 254–8
Pawlowski, Boguslaw, 207, 238
peacocks, 70, 75, 258
pelvis, 93–4
penicillin, 99
Pennebaker, James, 237
Pepper, Gillian, 105
Perrett, David, 235
Pérusse, Daniel, 263
phlogiston theory, 185–6
Phoenicians, 55–6
Pinker, Steven, 70
Plato, 7, 33, 118
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Pleistocene Overkill, 150
poetry, 154–5, 182, 218–22
polygamy, 254
polymaths, 216–18
pop stars, 71
Popper, Karl, 280
population, human: density, 102, 151; increase, 109, 145–6, 157–9; movement, 130; sex ratio, 111–12
Portugal, primogeniture, 110–11
premature birth, 77, 85, 92–5
presidential elections, 164–9
Priestley, Joseph, 185–6
primates: babies, 85; brain size, 12, 22–4, 81, 272–3; brain structure, 15–16, 181, 272; colour perception, 19; diet, 90; earliest, 157; extinction, 144; female–female bonding, 16, 80; grooming, 80, 286; group size, 16, 23–5, 81, 273; mating systems, 253, 255; rank and mating success, 29; social interactions, 31–2, 35, 178–9, 282, 285–6; tactical deception, 29–31, 178–9
primogeniture, 110–11
probability theory, 184
Provine, Robert, 68
psychology, 161
Pygmy peoples, 131, 267
reasoning, 181
Reid, Thomas, 219
relationships: number, 24–8; quality, 31–2
religion: education in Scotland, 212–13; evolution of, 279–81, 288–9; evolutionary role, 9, 279–87; fundamentalism, 116–17, 119; geographical distribution, 102; moral system, 271–2; rituals, 284–7; shamanic, 284, 287
Renaissance Man, 216, 218
rhesus negative gene, 53
Rijkers, Toon, 148–9
risk-takers, 248–51
ritual, 284–7
Roberts, Craig, 105, 165–7
Roman: army, 27; empire, 153; occupation of Britain, 57; slaves, 57, 59
rote learning, 225–6
Russian Marxist biology, 117–18
Sahelanthropus tchadensis
(
toumaï
), 133–5
saliva, 245
San Bushmen, 33, 90, 182, 287
Sandell, Maria, 259–60
Sanz de Sautuola, Marcelino, 135
Saxe, Rebecca, 270
Saxton, Tamsin, 247
Schumacher, Arnold, 162–3
science: attitudes to, 215–16; education, 214; polymaths, 216–18
Scopes, John, 114
Scots: education, 212–14; migration, 35–8, 146, 213; origins, 50–1
Scottish Enlightenment, 213, 219
Scythians, 50–1
selection ratio, 238–9
sex differences in colour sensitivity, 17–20
sex ratio, 110–12
sexual selection, 8, 70–1
Seyfarth, Robert, 195–6
Shakespeare, William, 9, 198–201
shamanic religions, 284, 287
shared knowledge, 82–3
Shultz, Suzanne, 12
sickle cell anaemia, 101–2
singing: biological importance,
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69–70; Hebridean waulking songs, 78, 155; mothers and babies, 76; religious rituals, 284, 291; social bonding, 72
singles bars, 237
skeletons, 122–6
skin colour, 87–8, 89–92, 140–1
skuas, 261
slaves, 56–9
smell, 245, 247–8
Smith, Adam, 213, 219
Smuts, Barbara, 262
Snow, C. P., 217
social bonding, 71–2, 79–80
social cognition, 178, 181, 272–3
social contract systems, 285–6
social intelligence theory, 23
social networking sites, 21
social skills, 16–17, 233
Solzhenitsyn, Alexander, 216
sound, 184
speed-dating, 247–8
spices, 105–6
spine, 93–4
sports, 208–9, 211
starlings, 259–60
stone tools, 131, 137
story-telling, 81–4, 200
striate cortex, 272–3
stroke patients, 269
subconscious, 210, 246, 257
Suku Anak Dalam people, 132
symmetry: bodily, 206–7, 208; facial, 164–5, 258
sympathy group, 33
tactical deception, 29–30, 179
tall people, 162–4, 166–9, 207
tamarin monkeys, 254–5
Taylor, A. J. P., 223
temperature rises, 156–7
testes, size, 253
testosterone, 247
tetrachromatic women, 17–18
theology, 287–8
Thomas, Dylan, 22
Thornhill, Randy, 102
titis, 259
tits, 193, 260
Tomasello, Mike, 194
tools, 131, 137, 192
touching, 61–3
toumaï
(
Sahelanthropus tchadensis
), 133–5
traders, 54–6
tree-climbing, 134
Treherne, John, 217
tribal groupings, 25–6
‘trolley problem’, 269–70
trust, 63–6
tsunami, Indian Ocean, 145, 156
turtles, 98
Tusi, Nasir al-Din, 119
Tyrannosaurus rex
, 120, 121
ultraviolet radiation (UVR), 89–91
Upper Palaeolithic Revolution, 137
vasopressin, 262–5
Venus figures, 137
vervet monkeys, 195–6
village sizes, 27
visual processing, 181, 272–3
vitamin: B, 90, 92; D, 87, 90–2
Vivaldi, Antonio, 71
Voland, Eckart, 42, 227, 237
voting patterns, 165–9
Vugt, Mark van, 68
walking upright,
see
bipedalism Walum, Hasse, 262
war chiefs, 250–1
waulking songs, 78, 155
Waynforth, David, 231, 236
wealth: advertising, 233, 236, 241; differentials, 227–8, 230, 240;
[Page 301]
inherited, 221; IQ and, 207
Whiten, Andy, 29, 179
Wilberforce, ‘Soapy Sam’, 117
Wilson, Edward O., 5
Wilson, Margo, 259
Wilson, Sandra, 95–6
Winston, Robert, 217
women: attractiveness, 233–5; colour vision, 17–20; conversations, 75, 79–80; extra-pair mating, 258–9; female–female bonding, 16, 79–80; Lonely Hearts adverts, 228–32; marriage, 227–8; skin colour, 91; social skills, 16–17
Young, Thomas, 183
Younger Dryas Event, 156–7
Zulus, 90
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