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Disentangling Human Nature: Environment, Evolution and Our Existential Predicament

Authors
  • Abad Espinoza, Luis Gregorio
Publication Date
Jul 19, 2024
Identifiers
DOI: 10.35534/natanthropol.2024.10014
OAI: oai:HAL:hal-04654038v1
Source
Hal-Diderot
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown
External links

Abstract

Throughout our entire evolutionary history, the physical environment has played a significant role in shaping humans’ subsistence adaptations. As early humans began to colonise novel biomes and construct ecological niches, their behavioural flexibility appeared as an unquestionable fact. During the Late Pleistocene-Holocene transition, the shift from foraging to farming radically altered ecosystem services, resulting in increased exposure to zoonotic pathogens and the emergence of structural inequalities that pervade our current human condition in the Anthropocene epoch. The article seeks to use an anthropological biosocial analysis to explore the diverse evolutionary paths humans have taken, which in turn shape their relationships with the natural world. Given the enigmatic nature of human behavior, it is essential to examine it holistically to understand how different subsistence patterns (e.g., intensive agriculture, foraging, and horticulture) have influenced resilience and adaptation to environmental challenges.

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