ANTH 102: Humans are cultural animals


Winter quarter


Jim Moore jjmoore@ucsd.edu

TA: Aaron Gidding agidding@ucsd.edu

Welcome to the website for ANTH 102
(This course is normally taught every year, in winter quarter)


STUDY GUIDE

STUDY GUIDE: This was created interactively by Aaron & review session (I got there late). Some entries are a bit telegraphic; this is meant to highlight topics to look at rather than elaborate on them.


NOTE: This website is intended for the use of students in this course; please to not misuse copyrighted materials.

Syllabus

Lectures

(available for at least 1 week following the day given; note that the video clips are not included in online lectures.)

Lect 1

Lect 2

Lect 3

Lect 4

Lect 5

Lect 6

7 MLK Holiday

Lect 8

Lect 9

10 Midterm

Lect 11

Lect 12

Lect 13

Lect 14

Lect 15

Lect 16

Lect 17

Lect. 18:
Discussion
Lect. 19:
Holiday

Lect. 20

Lect 21

Lect 22

Lect 23

Lect 24

Lect 25

Lect 26

Lect 27

Lect 28

Lect 29

Lect 30


Readings

NOTE: Please keep in mind that the chapter assignments for textbooks are on the syllabus, NOT here; no entry for a lecture means consult syllabus!.

Assigned:

Lect 2
Hrdlicka (1918)
Lewis (1998)

Lect 3
Platt 1964

Lect 4
Wiens (2002)
Handout on dating methods
Nature "Gems of evolution"

Lect 5
Weston (1998)

Lect 6

Lect 7

MLK DAY

Lect 8

Lect 9

Lect 10

Midterm #1

Lect 11
Allometry handout Assigned
Nerves & hormones handout Optional (if you need to ground the hormone stuff better.)

Lect 12

Lect 13

Lect 14

Lect 15

Lect 16
Lee-Thorp & Sponheimer

Lect 17

AAPA Statement on Biological Aspects of Race
Understandingrace.org (not assigned)

Lect 18

Lect 19
Presidents Day (?midterm)

Lect 20
Hrdy (2005)

Lect 21
Wrangham/Peterson
Sussman

Lect 22

Lect 23
Chisholm & Burbank (2001)

Lect 24
Dar-Nimrod & Heines (2006)
The science of gender and science (debate between Steven Pinker and Elizabeth Spelke)

Lect 25
Hrdy (1997)

Lect 26

Lect 27
Daly & Wilson (1999)

Lect 28
Insel & Young (2001)
Young, neuroscience of human love (2009) Addition - JUST published

Lect 29

Lect 30

Only if you're interested:

The journal Nature has an ongoing set of essays on "Being Human" in which you might be interested:
Why do we behave in the way that we do? This series of Essays reveals how the latest research is altering our understanding of what it is to be human. Whether in relation to religion or to our collective behaviour in cities, experts explore the potential impact on society, now and in the future, of discoveries in psychology, anthropology, genetics, neuroscience, game theory and network engineering.

Martin Daly and Margo Wilson have written extensively on evolutionary psychology, especially as it relates to violence. For a list of their publications, click here.

The 12 January 2006 issue of Nature has a review of a recent book that examines the relationship among free will, neurobiology, epigenesis, and the law. The review is only a page long and gives you the idea... pdf here.

Steve Pinker has written eloquently (and perhaps correctly) on the role of natural selection shaping "brain modules" such as the "language organ" that Noam Chomsky advocates. In this New York Times Magazine article he talks about our instinctive morality. I'm not at all sure I buy it, but it is interesting & state of the art in an important modern debate.... Pinker 2008 pdf (3mb)


Another take on natural selection

CONTACT [SETI etc.]