The Principles of Social Evolution

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Clarendon Press, 1986 - 412 páginas
Dispelling the general assumption that social institutions survive because of their sophisticated adaptive advantages, this ground-breaking work asserts that the commonest customs and institutions may endure because of their very simplicity or as a result of simple human proclivity. Using religious, military, and kinship institutions to illustrate this argument, the author shows that a precise combination of these factors may lead to the emergence of new forms of social evolution.

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Contenido

Introduction
1
Inheritance and variation
47
Competition and cooperation
56
Derechos de autor

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