Sociobiology Quotes

Quotes tagged as "sociobiology" Showing 1-7 of 7
J. Philippe Rushton
“Culture wars' are really undeclared 'gene wars”
J. Philippe Rushton

“The great leap was one from adaptation to, to control over the natural environment.”
Pierre L. van den Berghe, Man in society: A biosocial view

Joseph Campbell
“Mythology is not invented rationally; mythology cannot be rationally understood.”
Joseph Campbell, The Masks of God, Volume 1: Primitive Mythology

“Page 308
The Competitive Exclusion Principle. No two organisms that compete in every activity can coexist indefinitely in the same environment. To coexist in time, organisms that are potentially completely competitive must be geographically isolated from each other. Otherwise, the one that is the less efficient yields to the more efficient, no matter how slight the difference. When two competing organisms coexist in the same geographical region, close examination always shows that they are not complete competitors, that one of them draws on a resource of the environment that is not available to the other. The corollary of the principle is that where there is no geographical isolation of genetically and reproductively isolated populations, there must be as many ecological niches as there are populations. The necessary condition for geographical coexistence is ecological specialization.”
Garrett Hardin, Nature and Man's Fate

“I have sought to prove ... that the code of enmity is a necessary part of the machinery of evolution. He who feels generous towards his enemy, and more especially if he feels forgiveness towards him, has in reality abandoned the code of enmity and so has given up his place in the turmoil of evolutionary competition. Hence the benign feeling of perfect peace that descends on him.”
Arthur Keith, A New Theory of Human Evolution

“Wikipedia: Amity-enmity complex

The amity-enmity complex theory was introduced by Sir Arthur Keith in his work, A New Theory of Human Evolution (1948). He posited that humans evolved as differing races, tribes, and cultures, exhibiting patriotism, morality, leadership and nationalism. Those who belong are part of the in-group, and tolerated; all others are classed as out-group, and subject to hostility…”
Wikipedia Contributors

“It is not that a whole is more than the sum of its parts, but that the parts themselves are redefined and re-created in the process of their interaction. So the reductionist sociobiologists argue that individual human limitations place constraints on society, but, in fact, social organization is the negation of individual limitations.”
Richard Lewontin