1st Edition

Comparing Behavior Studying Man Studying Animals

Edited By D. W. Rajecki Copyright 1983
    302 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    First published in 1983. The aim of this book was to get a sense of how scientists viewed their own comparative domain. Using references from a variety of fields including anthropology, ethology, genetics, philosophy, psychology, and zoology. It includes a diversity of approaches for discussion on how to compare behavior.

    Preface, Reader's guide to Section 1, ISSUES AND ESSAYS: POINTS TO VIEW IN A COMPARATIVE APPROACH, 1. Overcoming Our Resistance to Animal Research: Man in Comparative Perspective, 2. Comparison of Human Behaviors, 3. The Comparative Approach in Human Ethology, 4. Successful Comparative Psychology: Four Case Histories, Reader's guide to Section 2, THEORETICAL CONCERNS: OPPORTUNITIES AND CONSTRAINTS IN A COMPARATIVE APPROACH, 5. Mentalism and Behaviorism in Comparative Psychology, 6. The Ideas of Change, Progress, and Continuity in the Comparative Psychology of Learning, 7. Hybrid Models: Modifications in Models of Social Behavior That Are Borrowed Across Species and Up Evolutionary Grades, 8. On the Process and Product of Cross-Species Generalization, Reader's guide to Section 3, BEHAVIOR AND BIOLOGY: GENETIC CONSIDERATIONS IN A COMPARATIVE APPROACH, 9. Disentangling Genetic and Cultural Influences on Human Behavior: Problems and Prospects, 10. Homology, Genetics, and Behavior: Homology From a Behavior-Genetic Perspective, Author Index, Subject Index

    Biography

    D.W. Rajecki, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis