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  1. Evolutionary psychology, the study of behaviour, thought, and feeling as viewed through the lens of evolutionary biology. Evolutionary psychologists presume all human behaviours reflect the influence of physical and psychological predispositions that helped human ancestors survive and reproduce.

  2. The purpose of Evolutionary Psychology is to discover and explain these cognitive mechanisms that guide current human behavior because they have been selected for as solutions to the recurrent adaptive problems prevalent in the evolutionary environment of our ancestors.

  3. Dec 16, 2020 · Evolutionary psychology is more than one subject. It is a meta-theory, encompassing and building on success in cognitive science, psychology, anthropology, genetics, and evolutionary biology to understand human psychology (Balish, Eys, & Schulte-Hostedde, 2013).

  4. Overview. Editors: Todd K. Shackelford, Viviana A. Weekes-Shackelford. Incorporates insights from a range of disciplines related to evolutionary psychology. Explores both historical theory and cutting edge research. Covers theories, key terms, useful definitions and important individuals in the field.

  5. Jan 13, 2021 · Evolutionary psychology (EP) is an approach to the study of the mind that is founded on Darwins theory of evolution by natural selection. It assumes that our cognitive abilities, emotions, and preferences are specifically adapted for solving problems of survival and reproduction in the Paleolithic environment in which humanity evolved.

  6. PART IFOUNDATIONS OF EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY David M. Buss 1Conceptual Foundations of Evolutionary Psychology 5 John Tooby and Leda Cosmides 2Life History Theory and Evolutionary Psychology 68 Hillard S. Kaplan and Steven W. Gangestad 3Domain Specificity and Intuitive Ontology 96 Pascal Boyer and H. Clark Barrett 4Methods of Evolutionary ...

  7. Apr 24, 2018 · Evolutionary psychology is a discipline of psychology that examines psychological mechanisms from an evolutionary perspective. Some authors do not consider it to be a distinct branch of psychology, but rather a “theoretical lens that is currently informing all branches of psychology” (Buss 1998 ).

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