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ISSN Approved Journal || eISSN: 2582-8185 || CODEN: IJSRO2 || Impact Factor 8.2 || Google Scholar and CrossRef Indexed

Peer Reviewed and Referred Journal || Free Certificate of Publication

Research and review articles are invited for publication in March 2026 (Volume 18, Issue 3) Submit manuscript

A review of Dr Wrangham’s book, ‘the Goodness Paradox . . . ‘, and insights into the evolution of human language, aesthetics, and free will

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  • A review of Dr Wrangham’s book, ‘the Goodness Paradox . . . ‘, and insights into the evolution of human language, aesthetics, and free will

James Walter 1, 2, * and Charles Hamaker 3

1 Emeritus, Loyola Medical Center, Depart of Urology, Maywood, IL.
2 Emeritus, Edward Hines Jr Veterans Administration Hospital, Research Service, Hines IL.
3 Emeritus, Saint Mary's College of California, Dept. of Mathematics and Computer Science, California.

Review Article
 

International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 2024, 13(01), 218–226.
Article DOI: 10.30574/ijsra.2024.13.1.1504
DOI url: https://doi.org/10.30574/ijsra.2024.13.1.1504

Received on 26 July 2024; revised on 02 September 2024; accepted on 04 September 2024

Dr Richard Wrangham’s book and YouTubes are helping to explain our evolved psychology as primarily occurring in African hunter-gatherer bands before the end of the last ice age. This perspective is supported by the exquisite cave paintings and tool artifacts from this ancient time. The most important evidence about our origins, however, comes from recent anthropological studies of current bands that represent the earlier age. Results showed that 5-psychosocial-behaviors produced both the environment and the natural selection for our psychology. These are: 1) language, coalitional activities and egalitarianism organization, 2) problems of bullies for egalitarianism, 3) management of the problems by gossip, ostracism and executions, 4) those targeted by the management had shorter lives and fewer children demonstrating strong natural selection, 5) reduced targeting occurred for those showing high-quality activities or high status, which increased the complexity of the selection to include all of our psychological abilities. The evolved psychological abilities include those highlighted by Dr Wrangham: emotions, intelligence, conscience and personality, as well as those with only supporting evidence: developmental and social learning, theory of mind, language, aesthetics, and free will. Further support for the importance of the 5-psychosocial-behaviors is provided by evidence from the domestication syndrome, natural selection pressure, and a positive feedback model. In addition, these perspectives can explain issues such as why 50% of our thoughts and behaviors comes from our environment and development as demonstrated in identical twin studies, and why we experience life with agency and free will. Dr Wrangham’s work is producing a new explanation of our nature that can help us all to understand why we are the way we are.

Evolution; Hunter-gatherers; Natural selection; Execution hypothesis; Psychology; Sociology; anthropology

https://ijsra.net/sites/default/files/fulltext_pdf/IJSRA-2024-1504.pdf

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James Walter and Charles Hamaker. A review of Dr Wrangham’s book, ‘the Goodness Paradox . . . ‘, and insights into the evolution of human language, aesthetics, and free will. International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 2024, 13(01), 218–226. https://doi.org/10.30574/ijsra.2024.13.1.1504

Copyright © Author(s). All rights reserved. This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution, and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as appropriate credit is given to the original author(s) and source, a link to the license is provided, and any changes made are indicated.


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