The Evolution of Societal Patriarchy: Human Groupishness

Date
Tue March 1st 2022, 5:00pm
Event Sponsor
McCoy Family Center for Ethics in Society
Office of the President

Our March 2022 Tanner Lectures are given by Richard Wrangham, the Ruth Moore Professor of Biological Anthropology in the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University. The overall title of these Tanner Lectures is: "The Evolution of Societal Patriarchy."

A unique and puzzling feature of human behavior is that individuals routinely sacrifice their own selfish interests for the sake of a wider good. Conventional theory has failed to explain the evolution of this “groupishness.” Wrangham argues that human groupishness evolved as a result of a novel ability: unlike other species, Homo sapiens could use language to conspire against resented rivals and kill them. Victims of these executions tended to be domineering bullies, nonconformists and other kinds of selfish personalities. Socially approved executions meant that antisocial behavior was selected against, while groupishness became positively favored. This evolutionary process led to the domination of social groups by coalitions of breeding males, a system that continues today in the form of societal patriarchy.

This lecture is the first of two lectures and is entitled: Human Groupishness

For more than 2,000 years scholars have inferred that humans are a domesticated species, partly because humans are less likely than other animals to react aggressively to conflict. New understanding of genetic and developmental mechanisms supports the idea of self-domestication in Homo sapiens. In this lecture Wrangham reviews biological parallels between humans and domesticated mammals, shows the evidence for self-domestication, and uses ethnographic data to infer how and why it happened. Among the many important consequences of self-domestication, moral intuitions evolved to serve the needs of the group, not just the individual.

Lecture 2, entitled "The Origins of Societal Patriarchy and its Moral Consequences," takes place on Wed, March 2 at 5:00pm.

A discussion seminar that focuses on both lectures takes place on Thurs, March 3 at 10:00am.