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The Friendliest Human


Humans Evolved to Be Friendly | Scientific American

Human Self-Domesticators. Compared with other human species, it turns out we were the friendliest. What allowed us to thrive was a kind of ...

The Friendliest Human | SAGE Center for the Study of the Mind

Dr. Hare researches the evolution of cognition by studying both humans, our close relatives the primates (especially bonobos and chimpanzees), and species whose ...

Understanding Our Origins and Rediscovering Our Common Humanity

Survival of the Friendliest offers us a new way to look at our cultural as well as cognitive evolution and sends a clear message:

#36. Survival of the Friendliest - by Peter Gray

I suggested that this followed upon or coincided with physical changes in Homo sapiens that distinguish modern humans from an earlier version of ...

Survival of the friendliest? Why Homo sapiens outlived other humans

We once shared the planet with at least seven other types of human. Ironically, our success may have been due to our deepest vulnerability: being dependent on ...

The Friendliest Human | Psychological & Brain Sciences | UCSB

Location. Psychology 1312. Info. Until ~25,000 years ago we shared the planet with other human species. These humans were large brained, ...

Survival of the... Friendliest? - Duke Research Blog

“Dogs have remarkable social genius,” Hare said, they are able to understand communicative gestures and in return communicate with humans in a ...

Humans owe our evolutionary success to friendship - Popular Science

Friends. Our ability to show each other compassion could be the quality that has kept humans alive for so long.

Survival of the friendliest: Why kindness, not aggression, helped ...

Our views of human nature shape almost everything we do as a society. It informs who heal or ignore. Who we protect or persecute.

Survival of the Friendliest by Brian Hare, Vanessa Woods

A powerful new theory of human nature suggests that our secret to success as a species is our unique friendliness.

Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods, Review of Survival of the Friendliest

... humans thereby evolved to be friendly, gregarious organisms. I am a fan of the self-domestication theory, but I think it's worth noting that it did not ...

Survival of the Friendliest ft. Brian Hare - YouTube

Survival of the Friendliest ft. Brian Hare. 1.6K views ... Rutger Bregman on elites, survival of the friendliest, rethinking human history.

Survival of the Friendliest. Random House, New York; 2020

A new book, Survival of the Friendliest: Understanding our Origins and Rediscovering our Common Humanity.

Friendliness and Cooperation Are Secrets of Humans' Success

An interview with Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods about their riveting new book, "Survival of the Friendliest," a fascinating read about ...

The Friendliest, Not the Fittest, People Survive: Book

Contrary to the common understanding of Darwin's evolutionary theory, people who are friendly are more likely to survive and pass on their genes ...

Homo sapiens Evolved via Selection for Prosociality - PubMed

The challenge of studying human cognitive evolution is identifying unique features of our intelligence while explaining the processes by ...

Homo sapiens Evolved via Selection for Prosociality - Annual Reviews

The challenge of studying human cognitive evolution is identifying unique features of our intelligence while explaining the processes by which they arose.

Survival of the friendliest, with Brian Hare, PhD

Human toddlers can do this, but adult chimpanzees cannot. What does psychology learn from researching this special skill, and what can studying dogs' ...

Survival of the Friendliest: Understanding Our Origins and ...

A powerful new theory of human nature suggests that our secret to success as a species is our unique friendliness.

Why It Actually Might Be 'Survival of the Friendliest' | Nat Geo Explores

... human ancestors, apes, and even our dogs. For that reason, some might say friendliness actually beats out fitness when it comes to survival ...