Pressestimmen
"The important branch of evolutionary anthropology that concentrates on the co-evolution of genes and culture has been in need of its definitive textbook. Here it has found its perfect expression in one of those rare texts that is also a grand synthesis and a contribution in its own right." Robin Fox, University Professor of Social Theory, Rutgers University "Stone and Lurquin have integrated what we know about bones, genes, and languages to produce a uniquely valuable account. By focusing on the science of human evolution, the authors avoid the stultifying debates about what is culture and does it evolve. With this volume, evolutionary anthropology becomes a coherent discipline accessible to all students and scholars in the human sciences." Marc Feldman, Stanford University "The first textbook that uses evolutionary theory to combine the study of human culture and genetics." Australian Journal of Anthropology
Kurzbeschreibung
"Genes, Culture, and Human Evolution: A Synthesisis" is a textbook on human evolution that offers students a unique combination of cultural anthropology and genetics. It is written by two geneticists - including a world-renowned scientist and founder of the Human Genome Diversity Project - and a socio-cultural anthropologist. It is based on recent findings in genetics and anthropology that indicate the analysis of human culture and evolution demands an integration of these fields of study. The book focuses on evolution - or, rather, co-evolution - viewed from the standpoint of genes and culture, and their inescapable interactions; unifies cultural and genetic concepts rather than rehashing nonempirical sociobiological musings; demonstrates that empirical genetic evidence, based on modern DNA analysis and population studies; and, provides an excellent foundation for understanding human cultural diversity.