tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7910834.post7108162174450424206..comments2023-10-15T08:40:12.715-05:00Comments on Interdisciplinary World: For All My Poetry (Eventually)Troy Camplinhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16515578686042143845noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7910834.post-28470802800993496782011-09-16T09:10:01.335-05:002011-09-16T09:10:01.335-05:00From the article:
"Draper, Harpending, and B...From the article:<br /><br />"Draper, Harpending, and Belsky have argued that men evolved to<br />specialize in one of the two mating strategies and have found that, cross-culturally, cads and dads show distinct clusters of personality traits. They believe that cads and dads are different human morphs, just as workers<br />and queens are different morphs of ants, and that whether a man becomes one or the other depends on an environmental trigger: the presence or absence of the father in the household where the son grows up. The sons of father-absent households will become cads, and those of father-present<br />households will become dads (Draper and Harpending 1982, 1988; Draper and Belsky 1990)" (pg. 307-8)<br /><br />Draper, Patricia, and Jay Belsky<br />1990 Personality Development in Evolutionary Perspective. Journal of Personality 58:141–161.<br /><br />Draper, Patricia, and Henry Harpending 1982 Father Absence and Reproductive Strategy: An Evolutionary Perspective. Journal of Anthropological Research 38:252–273.<br /><br />1988 A Sociobiological Perspective on the Development of Human Reproductive Strategies. In Sociobiological Perspectives on Human Development, Kevin B.<br />MacDonald, ed. Pp. 340–372. New York: Springer.Troy Camplinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16515578686042143845noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7910834.post-80478895704280445022011-09-15T20:54:09.785-05:002011-09-15T20:54:09.785-05:00I read your comment noting the different combinati...I read your <a href="http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/2011/09/willpower.html#154509" rel="nofollow">comment</a> noting the different combinations of cads & dads in a child's life. When I skimmed the paper you linked to I didn't any mention of such combinations.TGGPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11017651009634767649noreply@blogger.com