NOTES

CHAPTER 1

  1. Groopman, 1998.

  2. Rousseau, [1762] 1987.

  3. Lawrence and Vlachoutsicos, 1990.

  4. See Cohen, Schwartz, and Zysmen, 1998. Also see Gray, 1998, and Puffer, McCarthy, and Naumov, 2000.

  5. This criterion suggests reductionism to sociologists. We would agree that abrupt and reckless reductionism needs to be avoided, but we aspire to a careful, one-step-at-a-time reductionism that we argue is essential to building more complete explanations.

  6. Consistent with biological usage, we will refer to the contemporary form of Homo sapiens as modern, as distinct from the prior variety known as archaic.

  7. MacKinnon (1958), Dawkins (1989), and Wrangham and Peterson (1996).

  8. Wilson, 1998, p. 66.

CHAPTER 2

  1. See Mayr, 1997. ...

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