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Anthropologist: Mother-Infant Love the Key to Human Evolution
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=10A6359:3919ACA "The Bridge to
Humanity" tries to answer question of how humans overcame the "selfish
gene"





Scientists who study human development have always faced a dilemma. 
The need to procreate and protect our genetic offspring can be
overridden in humans who sometimes act against their biological
interest.  Walter Goldschmidt's new book The Bridge to Humanity tries
to answer the question of how humans overcame what is called the
"selfish gene."

Biologists know that creatures sometimes sacrifice themselves in the
interest of their offspring.  Anthropologist Walter Goldschmidt says
that in the animal world, altruistic behavior seldom goes any
further. 

"Living matter is designed by some strange circumstance to want to
preserve itself," he said.  "And that means it may make sacrificial
acts for its own offspring to have their continuity because their
continuity is more important than the continuity of the person
itself."

But humans can override the biological drive to promote their genetic
heritage, a drive some biologists call the "selfish gene."   People
can devote themselves to pursuits with no apparent genetic payoff,
from religious altruism to the simple pursuit of pleasure.

Mr. Goldschmidt, 92, is an emeritus professor of anthropology and
psychiatry at UCLA.  He says scientists have shed light on evolution,
but have never explained how humans can rise above their biology.

"Humans, who are a product of evolution, the enigma is, how did we
escape this domination?" he asked.

He says nature rewards behavior that promotes the well-being of a
species.  Sexual relations, for example, are pleasurable, and animals
do not need to be coaxed into procreating. 

In the same way, he says a mother gets gratification from nursing her
children.   Children also need the attention of a mother.  He says
with humans and other mammals, physical and psychological sustenance
are essential for the development of the offspring.

"Now these things are not just whimsical wants.  They're universal,
not only wants, but needs," he explained.

The anthropologist says a clue to the human riddle is seen in the
nurturing love of a mother, which is important for all mammals.  A
mother cat licks its kittens, and scientists know this promotes their
neurological development.  Rhesus monkeys raised without mothers are
unable to develop into healthy adults.

Professor Goldschmidt believes that nurturing by mothers, which is
more prolonged in humans than in other species, allows our social
development.  Many psychologists would agree.  But he takes the
argument further, saying the bond between mother and infant sparked a
transformation, promoting the social relations that allowed societies
to emerge.  He says the emergence of culture began with our ancient
predecessor, homo habilis, an early form of man that made crude tools.

"And I argue that over the whole period from when the genus first
began, with homo habilis, there was a constant growth of the brain. 
It enabled it to think logically," he noted.

The author believes that logical thought developed in two directions. 
One was through language, and the other was through tool making.  He
says both skills are the result of the same mental abilities, and they
emerged in the context of ancient communities.  He says both, in turn,
stimulated our development.

He says the process is repeated in families, as a child interacts
with, and learns from, its parents.  Through thousands of generations,
Professor Goldschmidt says, this has led to flexible human cultures
and the dominance of our species, homo sapiens.

"The essence of humanity is the flexibility of behavior that we are
capable of," he said.  "That is to say, if it's a cold climate, we
make igloos, and if it's a hot climate, we make grass huts."

Other species once achieved elementary levels of culture.  But they
were apparently less adaptable and have since died off, their demise
possibly hastened by our ancestors.  Our ancient cousins include
Neanderthals and the pygmies who were recently discovered through
fossil remains on the Indonesian island of Flores. 

But Walter Goldschmidt says evolution is a tale of cooperation as much
as a tale of competition.  In his book The Bridge to Humanity, he says
the role of the nurturing mother is a crucial missing link to
understanding our human development.