The Politics of Human Nature by John H. Kautsky

The Politics of Human Nature by John H. Kautsky

Author:John H. Kautsky [Kautsky, John H.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781138537552
Google: 8lKRtAEACAAJ
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Group
Published: 2017-09-20T03:27:44+00:00


Notes

1. For figures on divorce, see tables in Statistical Abstract of the United States 1986 (Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office), 37, 45, 79.

2. See Crime in the United States (Washington: Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1980).

3. Alice S. Rossi, “Gender and Parenthood,” American Sciological Review 49 (1984), 4.

4. Sar A. Levitan and Richard S. Belous, What’s Happening to the American Family? (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980), 21 ff.

5. William N. Stephens, The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1963), 8 ff.

6. Paul Bohannon, Social Anthropology (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1963), 72.

7. G.P. Murdock, Social Structures, 25.

8. Stephens, op. cit., 34.

9. Robin Fox, “Primate Kin and Human Kinship” in Robin Fox, ed. Biosocial Anthropology, (New York: Wiley, 1975) 11 ff.

10. Phyllis Jay, “The Common Langur of North India” in Irven Devore, ed. Primate Behavior: Field Studies of Monkeys and Apes (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1965), 221.

11. Adolph H. Schultz, “Some Factors Influencing the Social Life of Primates in General and of Early Man in Particular,” in Sherwood L. Washburn, Social Life of Early Man.

12. Sherwood L. Washburn and Irven Devore, “Social Behavior of Baboons and Early Man” in Social Life of Early Man, 96 ff.

13. Duane Qui at t and Jack Kelso, “Household Economics and Hominid Origins,” Current Anthropology 26 (1985), 207–11.

14. G.P. Murdock, Social Structure, 23 ff.

15. Robert L, Trivers, “Parent-Offspring Conflict,” American Zoologist 14 (1974), 249–64; cf. Robert L. Trivers and D.E. Willard, “Natural Selection of Parental Ability to Vary the Sex Ratio of Offspring,” Science 179 (1973), 90–92. Gary Becker applies an economic analysis to the same set of problems and concludes that altruism predominates in family relationships. See A Treatise on the Family, 172 ff.

16. Richard Dawkins, The Extended Phenotype: The gene as the unit of selection (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1982), 209–27.

17. Nicomachen Ethics, 1.9, 1100a.

18. Michael Panoff, “Patrifiliation as Ideology and Practice in a Matrilineal Society,” Ethnology 12 (1976), 175–88.

19. A.I. Richards, “Some Types of Family Structure Amongst the Central Bantu” in Meyer Fortes and E.E. Evans Pritchard, eds. African Political Systems (London: Oxford University Press, 1940), 246 if.

20. TO. Beidelman, The Kaguru: A Matrilineal People of East Africa (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971), 43 ff.

21. Elizabeth Colson, Marriage and the Family Among the Plateau Tonga of Northern Rhodesia (Manchester: University of Manchester Press, 1958), 345 ff; cf.

22. Roger V. Burton and John W.M. Whiting, “The Absent Father and Cross-Sex Identity” in Zubin and Money, 231–45.

23. Pierre L. Van den Berghe, Human Family Systems: An Evolutionary View (New York: Elsevier, 1979), 101.

24. See John Härtung, “On Natural Selection and the Inheritance of Wealth,” Current Anthropology 17, (year?) 607–22.

25. Emile Durkheim, Incest: The Nature and Origin of Taboo, trans, by Edward Sagarin (New York: Lyle Stuart, 1963), 65 ff.

26. Norbert Bischof, “Comparative Ethology of Incest Avoidance” in Robin Fox, Bi-osocial Anthropology, 42 ff.

27. Edward A. Westermarck, The History of Human Marriage 5th ed. (London: Mac-millan, 1921), I, 164.

28. Justine McCabe, “FBD Marriage: Further Support for the Westermarck Hypothesis of the Incest Taboo?,” American Anthropologist 85 (1983), 50–69.



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