The Search for Love in Human Evolution: Primate Social Bonds and a New Science of Emotion

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Aaron A. Sandel
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Abstract

Love defines the human experience but often defies scientific study. Biological anthropologists flirt with the topic of love by studying monogamy and affiliative relationships. The interest in monogamy, I argue, is misplaced. But the interest in affiliative relationships is productive and deserves greater theoretical and methodological innovation. Social bonds have been carefully described for decades by primatologists, but I suggest that we still lack conceptual clarity and the crucial data needed to distinguish them from other types of relationships. A deeper understanding of social bonds, and pair bonds in particular, will be possible through the application of new methods to study affective states, or “emotions,” in wild primates and other animals. By studying the emotions that underly various relationships, we will make progress toward answering prevailing questions about the origins and future of love, romance, and friendship.

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在人类进化中寻找爱:灵长类动物的社会纽带和一门新的情感科学
爱情定义了人类的经历,但往往无法科学研究。生物人类学家通过研究一夫一妻制和附属关系来研究爱的话题。我认为,对一夫一妻制的兴趣是错位的。但对附属关系的兴趣是富有成效的,值得更多的理论和方法创新。几十年来,灵长类动物学家一直在仔细地描述社会关系,但我认为,我们仍然缺乏清晰的概念,也缺乏将它们与其他类型的关系区分开来所需的关键数据。通过应用新的方法来研究野生灵长类动物和其他动物的情感状态或“情绪”,对社会关系,特别是伴侣关系的更深入理解将成为可能。通过研究各种关系背后的情感,我们将在回答关于爱情、浪漫和友谊的起源和未来的普遍问题方面取得进展。
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