MOTHER AND OTHERS: The Evolutionary Origins Of Mutual Understanding

母親與他者:相互理解的進化起源

類別 : 社會科學
ISBN:978-0674060326
頁數 : 432
出版 : The Belknap Press, 2011 年 4 月 15 日
版本 : 平裝版
版權窗口 : 繁體博達代理Mingming / 简体版權已售

內容介紹

一百萬年前,在非洲的某個地方,一支系的類人猿開始以不同於類人猿祖先的方式哺育幼兒。這種新的照料方式產生了新的相互接觸和相互理解的方式。這種獨特的人類能力是如何進化而來的,又是如何讓我們世世代代生存下來的,這就是這本大膽而廣闊的人類情感進化新視角所揭示的奧秘。

 

《母親與他者》從靈長類動物獨特的童年時期中找到了關鍵。要想在食物匱乏的世界中生存下去,年幼的孩子不僅需要母親的照顧,還需要兄弟姐妹、姑姑、父親、朋友的照顧,運氣好的話,還需要祖母的照顧。莎拉•布萊弗•赫迪教授認為,從這種複雜而偶然的育兒方式中,產生了人類理解他人的能力。母親和其他人教會我們誰會關心誰,誰不會關心誰。

 

從開篇對"飛機上的猿猴"的想像,到對狨猴、黑猩猩、狼和獅子照顧嬰兒的描述,再到對狩獵採集社會中男性為何共同狩獵的解釋,《母親與他者》一書具有很強的可讀性。但它也是一個錯綜複雜的論證:自更新世以來,養育孩子就需要一個村莊──而這又是如何讓我們的遠古祖先在成為情感豐富的現代人的道路上率先邁進的。

相關影片

作者介紹

1969年畢業於萊德克里夫學院(Radcliffe College),畢業論文是探討心理適應如何、且為何影響人類創造幻想的妖魔。這篇論文後來出版,書名為《奇納坎坦的黑人:一個中美洲傳說》(The Black-man of Zinacantan: A Central American Legend)。赫迪是科班出身的人類學家,轉而對靈長目動物的社會學產生興趣。為了研究一種猴類雄性的殺嬰行為,進入哈佛大學研究所,於1975年獲得博士學位,論文以《印度黑面長尾猴的兩性生殖策略》(The Langurs of Abu: Female and Male Strategies of Adaptation)為書名出版,成為第一部從社會學角度分析靈長目動物兩性對立的研究。

 

多年來,赫迪發表作品甚多。《紐約時報》曾將她的《從未進化的女性》(The Woman That Never Evolved)列入1981年的重要書目。本書詳論雌性靈長目動物如何成為適應策略的主動者,有競爭性,而且在性的方面有自我主張。1984年間,她發表《殺嬰行為:比較的與進化的視角》(Infanticide: Comparative and Evolutionary Perspectives),獲選為當年的傑出學術著作。她擔任「人類行為基金會」書籍系列主編多年,至今仍任職《美國靈長目動物學、演化人類學、人性期刊》(The American Journal of Primatology, Evolutionary Anthropology, and Human Nature)的編輯委員。她於一九九六年辭去加州大學戴維斯分校教職,與家人居住加州北部,從事棲地重建,並兼農作。《母性》是赫迪1999年發表的鉅作,是她最暢銷的一本書,被《出版者周刊》(Publishres Weekly)及《圖書館期刊》(Library Journal)選為當年年度好書。

書評

“In the study of mothering, Sarah Hrdy has no peer. In Mothers and Others, we are treated to Hrdy's infectious writing, taking the reader on a tour of our evolved history as a cooperatively parenting species. The ideas are big, bold, and brain-bending.”―Marc Hauser, author of Moral Minds: How Nature Designed Our Universal Sense of Right and Wrong

 

“Boldly conceived and beautifully written, Mothers and Others makes a strong case that we humans are (or should be) cooperative breeders. It is an indispensable contribution to the debate about how and why we came to be the most successful primate of them all.”―Melvin Konner, author of The Tangled Wing: Biological Constraints on the Human Spirit

 

“As was the case for her earlier classic, Mother Nature, Sarah Hrdy's Mothers and Others is a brilliant work on a profoundly important subject. The leading scientific authority on motherhood has come through again.”―E. O. Wilson

 

“"What if I were traveling with a planeload of chimpanzees? Any one of us would be lucky to disembark with all ten fingers and toes still attached...Even among the famously peaceful bonobos...veterinarians sometimes have to be called in following altercations to stitch back on a scrotum or penis," Hrdy writes. What she found is that our unique mothering instinct, quite different from gorillas and chimpanzees, meant that the children most likely to survive were those who could relate to and solicit help from others. We evolved to be wired for empathy for, consideration of, and intuition into how others are feeling.”―Jessa Crispin, Smart Set

 

“To explain the rise of cooperative breeding among our forebears, Hrdy synthesizes an array of new research in anthropology, genetics, infant development, comparative biology.”―Natalie Angier, New York Times

 

“For as long as she's been a sociobiologist, Sarah Blaffer Hrdy has been playfully dismantling traditional notions of motherhood and gender relations...Hrdy is back with another book, Mothers and Others, and another big idea. She argues that human cooperation is rooted not in war making, as sociobiologists have believed, but in baby making and baby-sitting. Hrdy's conception of early human society is far different from the classic sociobiological view of a primeval nuclear family, with dad off hunting big game and mom tending the cave and the kids. Instead, Hrdy paints a picture of a cooperative breeding culture in which parenting duties were spread out across a network of friends and relatives. The effect on our development was profound.”―Julia Wallace, Salon

 

“Hrdy's lucid and comprehensively researched book takes us to the heart of what it means to be human.”―Camilla Power, Times Higher Education

 

“Hrdy's much-awaited new book, is another mind-expanding, paradigm-shifting, rigorously scientific yet eminently readable treatise...Mothers and Others lays the foundation for a new hypothesis about human evolution...Mothers and Others is overflowing with fascinating information and thinking. It's a book you read, pausing regularly to consider the full import of what you just read...Sarah Blaffer Hrdy has added another enormous building block to our thinking about our origins with this new book. Our species is lucky to have her.”―Claudia Casper, Globe and Mail

 

“Provocative. [Hrdy] argues that unlike other apes, Homo sapiens could never have evolved if human mothers had been required to raise their offspring on their own. Human infants are too helpless and too expensive in their demands for care and resources. So human females have to line up helpers--sometimes extending beyond their own kin--to raise their young. That requires both males and females to invest heavily in social skills for bargaining with other members of their groups. Hrdy suggests that females in ancestral hunting and gathering groups may have thrived because they were free to be flexible in this way. Female flexibility was reduced when humans established settlements requiring male coalitions to defend them, probably leading to greater control of females by males...The most refreshing aspect of [this] book is the challenge [it] offers to what we thought we already knew.”―John Odling-Smee, Nature

 

“If Sarah Blaffer Hrdy were a male scientist, I might be tempted to say that her new book Mothers and Others arrives like an intellectual time bomb, or that it throws a grenade into accepted notions of human evolution. But those are aggressive, competitive metaphors, and one of the essential points of Mothers and Others is that aggression and competition have been given far too central a place in the standard accounts of how our species came into being. From Charles Darwin onward, those accounts are mostly the work of men, and Hrdy points out in meticulous detail how partial and biased was their understanding of the remote past...Mothers and Others offers enormous rewards. It is not only revolutionary; it is also wise and humane.”―Mark Abley, Calgary Herald

 

“More than a million years ago, somewhere in Africa, a group of apes began to rear their young differently. Unlike almost all other primates, they were willing to let others share in the care of infants. The reasons for this innovation are lost in the ancient past, but according to well-known anthropologist Hrdy, it was crucial that these mothers had related--and therefore trusted--females nearby and that the helpers provided food as well as care. Out of this "communal care," she argues, grew the human capacity for understanding one another: mothers and others teach us who will care and who will not. Beginning with her opening conceit of apes on an airplane (you wouldn't want to be on this flight) and continuing through her informed insights into the behavior of other species, Hrdy's reasoning is fascinating to follow.”―Michelle Press, Scientific American

 

“One of the boldest thinkers in her field...Hrdy's scope is huge...To build her arguments, she expertly knits together research from a variety of fields--fossil evidence, endocrinology, psychology, history, child development, genetics, comparative primatology and field research among hunter-gatherer societies. Her book is at once entertaining, full of apt, often colorful anecdotes, sometimes culled from her own experiences, and rich with information and case studies...Hrdy is not only synthesizing her own research on female reproductive strategies (initially on langur monkeys in India), but that of hundreds of other researchers to create what amounts to a sweeping new meta-paradigm.”―Michele Pridmore-Brown, Times Literary Supplement

 

“In this compelling and wide-ranging book, Hrdy sets out to explain the mystery of how humans evolved into cooperative apes. The demands of raising our slow-growing and energetically expensive offspring led to cooperative child-rearing, she argues, which was key to our survival.”―Alison Motluk, New Scientist

 

“Using evidence from diverse research fields (including ethnography, archaeology, developmental psychology, primatology, endocrinology, and genetics), Hrdy builds an engaging and compelling argument for an evolutionary history of cooperative offspring care that requires us to rethink entrenched views about how we came to be human...Mothers and Others provides a fascinating, readable account of how our hominin ancestors might have negotiated the obstacles to raising offspring. Hrdy presents a well-argued case for human evolutionary history being characterized by cooperative offspring care, which opens fresh avenues of research into the history of our species. In addition, she prompts readers to consider far-reaching questions, such as whether the nuclear family is the "best" unit in which to raise children and how learned parenting practices might determine the future of human evolution. Her thought-provoking book will interest students, specialists, and general readers alike and should focus attention on the neglected roles of mothers and others within human evolutionary theory.”―Gillian R. Brown, Science

 

“Hrdy presents her hypothesis systematically and painstakingly, chapter by chapter, so that the result is compellingly plausible.”―William McGrew, American Scientist

 

“Understanding the evolution of the human mind has become the holy grail of modern evolutionary anthropology and evolutionary psychology, and those who pursue it feel themselves closing in on something big. Mothers and Others is a heroic contribution to this quest. It is an anthropological T(A)E: a theory of (almost) everything, a genre for which I must confess a weakness. It stands above most other examples of the genre, however, for both its scholarship and its craft. Hrdy draws on a broad literature extending beyond the traditional domains of primatology and anthropology, with particular emphasis on developmental psychology, but breadth of scholarship and lucid vision have long been the trademarks of her writing...Hrdy is at least as gifted as a writer as [Stephen Jay] Gould and at least as clear a thinker...This is a very important book, and a beautiful one. It is a book that will delight a broad lay readership coming to it from disparate perspectives. It will be a wonderful book to assign to undergraduates in a range of courses. But most importantly, it is a challenging and provocative book for academics and scientists interested in human cognition and human evolution. Once again, Hrdy has woven together strands of material from many sources into an elegant tapestry of insight and logic, emblazoned with her vision of who we are, and why.”―Peter Ellison, Evolutionary Psychology

 

“The book is an impressive and sustained argument for why, unlike other apes, humans are cooperative breeders...Hrdy offers some fascinating speculations about the problems whose solution might have facilitated the emergence of cooperative breeding.”―Pierre Jacob, International Cognition and Culture Institute blog

 

“Mothers and Others is an engaging book. It is full of fascinating information from diverse fields, imaginatively harnessed to produce a coherent account of our genetic predispositions as a species. Above all, it challenges the pervasively sexist tradition within evolutionary psychology, which routinely highlights aggression and maternal care at the expense of sociability and shared care. In doing so, the book provides a rich foundation for engagement with the social sciences, exploring the articulation between our genetic predispositions and contemporary human societies.”―Michael Gilding, Australian Book Review

 

“Convincing about the importance of alloparenting, [Hrdy] makes a rich case that draws on wide erudition about many primate species and current arguments about human cooperation.”―B. Weston, Choice

 

“In Mothers and Others: The Evolutionary Origins of Mutual Understanding, Sarah Hrdy argues that what makes humans different from other apes is our need to rear children cooperatively. Elegantly written and, to any parent, compellingly argued.”―Morgan Kelly, Irish Times

 

“Sarah Blaffer Hrdy is one of the most original and influential minds in evolutionary anthropology...It is possible to see Hrdy's most recent book, Mothers and Others, as the third in a trilogy that began with The Woman That Never Evolved. It may be the most important...[It's her] most ambitious contribution. In Mothers and Others, she situates this pivotal mother-infant pair not in an empty expanse of savanna, waiting for a man to arrive with his killed game, but where it actually belongs, in the dense social setting of a hunter-gatherer or, before that, an ape or monkey group. Hrdy argues convincingly that social support was crucial to human success, that compared with other primates, humans are uniquely cooperative, and that it was precisely cooperation in child care that gave rise to this general bent...Hrdy's gracefully written, expert account of human behavior focuses on the positive, and its most important contribution is to give cooperation its rightful place in child care. Through a lifetime of pathbreaking work, she has repeatedly undermined our complacent, solipsistic, masculine notions of what women were meant "by nature" to be. Here as elsewhere she urges caution and compassion toward women whose maternal role must be constantly rethought and readjusted to meet the demands of a changing world. Women have done this successfully for millions of years, and their success will not stop now. But neither Hrdy nor I nor anyone else can know whether the strong human tendency to help mothers care for children can produce the species-wide level of cooperation that we now need to survive.”―Melvin Konner, New York Review of Books

母親與他者:相互理解的進化起源

MOTHER AND OTHERS: The Evolutionary Origins Of Mutual Understanding

母親與他者:相互理解的進化起源

回到最上層回到最上層