Linked bibliography for the SEP article "Evolutionary Psychology" by Stephen M. Downes
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If everything goes well, this page should display the bibliography of the aforementioned article as it appears in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, but with links added to PhilPapers records and Google Scholar for your convenience. Some bibliographies are not going to be represented correctly or fully up to date. In general, bibliographies of recent works are going to be much better linked than bibliographies of primary literature and older works. Entries with PhilPapers records have links on their titles. A green link indicates that the item is available online at least partially.
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- Arp, R., 2006, “The environments of our hominid ancestors, tool-usage and scenario visualization”, Biology and Philosophy, 21: 95–117. (Scholar)
- Barker, G., 2015, Beyond Biofatalism: Human Nature for an Evolving World, New York: Columbia University Press. (Scholar)
- Barrett, H.C., 2015, The Shape of Thought: How mental adaptations evolve, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2012, “Evolutionary Psychology”, in Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Science, W. Frankish and W.M. Ramsey (eds.), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 257–274. (Scholar)
- Barrett, H.C. and R. Kurzban, 2006, “Modularity in Cognition: Framing the debate”, Psychological Review, 113: 628–647. (Scholar)
- Bateson, P. P. G. and P. Martin, 1999, Design for a Life: How behavior and personality develop, London: Jonathan Cape. (Scholar)
- Bjorklund, D. F. and C. Hernandez Blasi, 2005, “Evolutionary Developmental Psychology”, in The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, D. Buss (ed.), Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, pp. 828–850. (Scholar)
- Booth, A., 2004, An Evaluation of the Tracking Argument, MA Thesis, University of Utah. (Scholar)
- Brown, G.R., Dickins, T.E., Sear, R. & Laland, K.N., 2011, Evolutionary accounts of human behavioural diversity, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B, 366: 313–324. (Scholar)
- Buller, D., 2005, Adapting Minds: Evolutionary Psychology and the Persistent Quest for Human Nature, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Scholar)
- Buss, D., 1990, “International preferences in selecting mates: A study of 37 cultures”, Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology, 21: 5–47. (Scholar)
- –––, 2007, Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind, Boston: Allyn and Bacon. (Scholar)
- Buss, D. (ed.), 2005, The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, Hoboken, NJ. (Scholar)
- Buss, D. M., M. G. Hasleton, et al., 1998, “Adaptations, Exaptations and Spandrels”, American Psychologist, 53: 533–548. (Scholar)
- Cashdan, E., 2013, “What is a human universal? Human behavioral ecology and human nature”, in S.M. Downes and E. Machery (eds.), Arguing About Human Nature, New York: Routledge, pp. 71–80. (Scholar)
- Carruthers, P., 2006, The Architecture of the Mind, Oxford: Clarendon Press. (Scholar)
- Cosmides, L., 1989, “The Logic of Social Exchange: Has natural selection shaped how humans reason? Studies with the Wason Selection Task”, Cognition, 31: 187–276. (Scholar)
- Cosmides, L. and J. Tooby, 2005, “Neurocognitive Adaptations Designed for Social Exchange”, in The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, D. Buss (ed.), Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, pp. 584–627. (Scholar)
- –––, 2008, “Can a General Deontic Logic Capture the Facts of Human Moral Reasoning? How the Mind Interprets Social Exchange Rules and Detects Cheaters”, in W. Sinnott-Armstrong (ed.), Moral Psychology: The Evolution of Morality: Adaptations and Innateness, (Moral Psychology, volume 1), Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 53–119. (Scholar)
- Cowie, F., 1999, What’s Within? Nativism Reconsidered, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Coyne, J. A., 2003, “Of Vice and Men: A Case Study in Evolutionary Psychology,” in Evolution, Gender, and Rape, C. Brown Travis (ed.), Cambridge MA: MIT Press: 171–190. (Scholar)
- Coyne, J. A. and B. Berry, 2000, “Rape as an Adaptation,” Nature, 404: 121–122. (Scholar)
- Dennett, D. C., 1995, Darwin’s Dangerous Idea, New York: Simon and Schuster. (Scholar)
- de Waal, F., 2000, “Survival of the Rapist,” New York Times, Book Review, April 2, 2000, pp. 24–25. (Scholar)
- Doris, J., 2002, Lack of character: Personality and Moral Behavior, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Downes, S. M., 2001, “Some recent developments in evolutionary approaches to the study of human behavior and cognition”, Biology and Philosophy, 16: 575–595. (Scholar)
- –––, 2005, “Integrating the Multiple Biological Causes of Human Behavior”, Biology and Philosophy, 20: 177–190. (Scholar)
- –––, 2009, “The Basic Components of the Human Mind Were Not Solidified During the Pleistocene Epoch”, in Contemporary Debates in Philosophy of Biology, F. Ayala and R. Arp (eds.), Oxford: Wiley Blackwell, pp. 243–252. (Scholar)
- –––, 2013, “Evolutionary psychology is not the only productive evolutionary approach to understanding consumer behavior”, Journal of Consumer Psychology, 23: 400–403. (Scholar)
- –––, 2015, “Evolutionary Psychology, Adaptation and Design”, in Handbook of Evolutionary thinking in the Sciences, T. Heams, P. Huneman, G. Lecointre, M. Silberstein (eds.), Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 659–673. (Scholar)
- –––, 2016, “Confronting Variation in the Social and Behavioral Sciences”, Philosophy of Science, 83: 909–920. (Scholar)
- Downes, S.M. and Machery, E., 2013, Arguing About Human Nature, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- Downes, S.M. and Tabery, J., 2017, “Variability of Aggression”, in T.K. Shackleford and V. Weekes-Shackleford (eds.), Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, New York: Springer. (Scholar)
- Dupre, J., 1998, “Normal People”, Social Research, 65: 221–248. (Scholar)
- –––, 1999, “Review of Steven Pinker, How the Mind Works”, Philosophy of Science, 66: 489–493. (Scholar)
- –––, 2001, Human Nature and the Limits of Science, Oxford: Clarendon Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2012, “Against Maladaptationism: Or, what’s wrong with evolutionary psychology?”, in J. Dupre, Processes of Life: Essays in Philosophy of Biology, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 245–260. (Scholar)
- Ereshefsky, M., 2007, “Psychological Categories as Homologies: Lessons from Ethology”, Biology and Philosophy, 22: 659–674. (Scholar)
- Faucher, L., 2017, “Biophilosophy of Race”, in D. Livingstone Smith (ed.), How Biology Shapes Philosophy: New Foundations for Naturalism, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 247–275. (Scholar)
- Fehr, C., 2012, “Feminist Engagement with Evolutionary Psychology”, Hypatia, 27: 50–72. (Scholar)
- Fodor, J. A., 1983, The Modularity of Mind, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2000, The mind doesn’t work that way: the scope and limits of computational psychology, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2008, “Comment on Cosmides and Tooby”, in W. Sinnott-Armstrong (ed.), Moral Psychology: The Evolution of Morality: Adaptations and Innateness, (Moral Psychology, volume 1), Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 137–141. (Scholar)
- Futuyma, D.J., 1998, Evolutionary Biology, Sunderland, MA: Sinauer. (Scholar)
- Godfrey-Smith, P., 1996, Complexity and the Function of Mind in Nature, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2001, “Three Kinds of Adaptationism”, in S.H. Orzack and E. Sober (eds.) Adaptationism and Optimality, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 335–357. (Scholar)
- Gould, S. J. and R. Lewontin, 1979, “The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian Paradigm: A critique of the adaptationist programme”, Proceedings of the Royal Society London B, 205: 581–598. (Scholar)
- Grantham, T. and S. Nichols, 1999, “Evolutionary Psychology: Ultimate Explanations and Panglossian Predictions”, in V. Hardcastle (ed.), Where Biology Meets Psychology, Cambridge, MA: Mit Press, pp. 47–56. (Scholar)
- Gray, R. D., M. Heaney, et al., 2003, “Evolutionary Psychology and the Challenge of Adaptive Explanation”, in K. Sterelny and J. Fitness (eds.), From Mating to Mentality: Evaluating Evolutionary Psychology, New York: Psychology Press, pp. 247–268. (Scholar)
- Griffiths, P. E., 2011, “Our Plastic Nature”, in S.B. Gissis and E. Jablonka (eds.), Transformations of Lamarckism: From subtle fluids to Molecular Biology, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 319–330. (Scholar)
- –––, 2008, “Ethology, Sociobiology and Evolutionary Psychology”, in S. Sarkar and A. Plutynski (eds.), A Companion to Philosophy of Biology, New York: Blackwell, 393–414. (Scholar)
- –––, 2006, “Evolutionary Psychology: History and Current Status”, in S. Sarkar and J. Pfeifer (eds.), Philosophy of Science: An Encyclopedia, New York: Routledge, Volume 1, pp. 263–268. (Scholar)
- –––, 1996, “The Historical Turn in the Study of Adaptation”, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 47: 511–532. (Scholar)
- –––, 1997, What Emotions Really Are, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (Scholar)
- Hagen, E. H., 2005, “Controversial issues in evolutionary psychology”, in The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, D. Buss (ed.), Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, pp. 145–174. (Scholar)
- Hauser, M., 2006, Moral Minds: How Nature Designed our universal sense of right and wrong, New York: Harper Collins. (Scholar)
- Hawkes, K., 1990, “Why do men hunt? Benefits for risky choices”, in E. Cashdan (ed.), Risk and Uncertainly in Tribal and Peasant Communities, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, pp. 145–166. (Scholar)
- Heyes, C. M., 2014a, “False belief in infancy: a fresh look”, Developmental Science: 647–659. (Scholar)
- –––, 2014b, “Sub–mentalizing: I’m not really reading your mind”, Perspectives on Psychological Science: 131–143. (Scholar)
- Hirshfield, L. A. and S. A. Gelman, 1994, Mapping the mind: Domain specificity in cognition and culture, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Hrdy, S., 1999, Mother Nature: Maternal Instincts and How they Shape the Human Species, New York: Ballantine Books. (Scholar)
- Hull, D.L., 1986, “On Human Nature”, PSA (Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association), 2: 3–13. (Scholar)
- Irons, W., 1998, “Adaptively Relevant Environments Versus the Environment of Evolutionary Adaptedness”, Evolutionary Anthropology, 6: 194–294. (Scholar)
- Jeffares, B. and Sterelny, K., 2012, “Evolutionary Psychology”, in The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Cognitive Science, E. Margolis, R. Samuels and S.P. Stich (eds.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 480–502. (Scholar)
- Jones, O.D., 1997, “Evolutionary Analysis in law: An introduction and application to child abuse”, North Carolina Law Review, 75: 1117–1242. (Scholar)
- –––, 2000, “An evolutionary analysis of rape: Reflections on transitions”, Hastings Women’s Law Journal, 11: 151–178. (Scholar)
- –––, 2005, “Evolutionary Psychology and the Law”, The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, D.M. Buss (ed.), Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, pp. 953–974. (Scholar)
- Kimmel, M., 2003, “An Unnatural History of Rape,” in Evolution, Gender, and Rape, C. Brown Travis (ed.), Cambridge MA, MIT Press: 221–234. (Scholar)
- Kitcher, P., 2017, “Evolution and Ethical Life”, in D. Livingstone Smith (ed.), How Biology Shapes Philosophy: New Foundations for Naturalism, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 184–203. (Scholar)
- Laland, K. N. and G. R. Brown, 2002, Sense and Nonsense: Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Behavior, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Laudan, L., 1977, Progress and Its Problems, Berkeley: University of California Press. (Scholar)
- Leiter, B. and Weisberg, M., 2009, “Why Evolutionary Biology is (so far) Irrelevant to Legal Regulation”, Law and Philosophy, 29: 31–74. (Scholar)
- Lewens, T., 2015, Cultural Evolution, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2009, “Seven Types of Adaptationism”, Biology and Philosophy, 24: 161–182. (Scholar)
- Linquist, S., 2016, “Which evolutionary model best explains the culture of honour?”, Biology and Philosophy, 31: 213–235. (Scholar)
- Lewontin, R., 1998, “The evolution of cognition: Questions we will never answer”, in D. Scarborough and S. Sternberg (eds.), Methods, Models, and Conceptual Issues, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 107–132. (Scholar)
- Little, D., 1991, Varieties of Social Explanation: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Social Science, Boulder, CO: Westview Press. (Scholar)
- Lloyd, E. A., 1999, “Evolutionary Psychology: The Burdens of Proof”, Biology and Philosophy, 14: 211–233. (Scholar)
- –––, 2003, “Violence against Science: Rape and Evolution,” Evolution, Gender, and Rape, C. Brown Travis (ed.), Cambridge MA, MIT Press: 235–262. (Scholar)
- Lloyd, E. A. and M. W. Feldman, 2002, “Evolutionary Psychology: A View from Evolutionary Biology”, Psychological Inquiry, 13: 150–156. (Scholar)
- Machery, E., 2008, “A Plea for Human Nature”, Philosophical Psychology, 21: 321–329. (Scholar)
- –––, 2017, “Human Nature”, in D. Livingstone Smith (ed.) How Biology Shapes Philosophy: New Foundations for Naturalism, Cambridge University Press, pp. 204–226. (Scholar)
- Machery, E. and H. C. Barrett, 2007, “Review of David Buller Adapting Minds: Evolutionary psychology and the persistent quest for human nature”, Philosophy of Science, 73: 232–246. (Scholar)
- Mallon, R., 2008, “Ought we to Abandon a Domain General Treatment of ‘Ought’?” in W. Sinnott-Armstrong (ed.), Moral Psychology: The Evolution of Morality: Adaptations and Innateness, (Moral Psychology, volume 1), Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 121–130. (Scholar)
- Mallon, R. and S. P. Stich, 2000, “The Odd Couple: The compatibility of social construction and evolutionary psychology”, Philosophy of Science, 67: 133–154. (Scholar)
- Marcus, G., 2004, The Birth of the Mind: How a tiny number of genes creates the complexities of human thought, New York: Basic Books. (Scholar)
- Marr, D., 1983, Vision: A Computational Investigation into the Human Representation and Processing of Visual Information, New York: W.H. Freeman. (Scholar)
- Meynell, L., 2012, “Evolutionary Psychology, Ethology, and Essentialism (Because What They Don’t Know Can Hurt Us)”, Hypatia, 27: 3–27. (Scholar)
- Michel, G. F. and C. L. Moore, 1995, Developmental Psychobiology: An interdisciplinary science, Cambridge: MIT Press. (Scholar)
- Mithen, S., 1996, The Prehistory of the Mind: The cognitive origins of art and science, London: Thames and Hudson. (Scholar)
- Nichols, S., 2004, Sentimental Rules: On the natural foundation of moral judgment, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Odenbaugh, J., Forthcoming, “Human Nature and the Problem of Variation”. (Scholar)
- Pinker, S., 1997, How the Mind Works, New York: W.W. Norton. (Scholar)
- Ramsey, G., 2013, “Human nature in a post-essentialist world”, Philosophy of Science, 80: 983–993. (Scholar)
- Rellihan, M., 2012, “Adaptationism and Adaptive Thinking in Evolutionary Psychology”, Philosophical Psychology, 25: 245–277. (Scholar)
- Richardson, R., 1996, “The Prospects for an Evolutionary Psychology: Human Language and Human Reasoning”, Minds and Machines, 6(4): 541–557. (Scholar)
- –––, 2007, Evolutionary Psychology as Maladapted Psychology, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Scholar)
- Richerson, P. J. and R. Boyd, 2005, Not by Genes Alone: How culture transformed human evolution, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (Scholar)
- Saad, G., 2007, The Evolutionary Bases of Consumption, Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. (Scholar)
- Samuels, R., 1998, “Evolutionary Psychology and the Massive Modularity Hypothesis”, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 49: 575–602. (Scholar)
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- Samuels, R., S. Stich, et al., 1999a, “Reason and Rationality”, in I. Niiniluoto, M. Sintonen and J. Wolenski (eds.), Handbook of Epistemology, Dordrecht: Kluwer, pp. 131–179. (Scholar)
- Samuels, R., S. Stich, et al., 1999b, “Rethinking Rationality: From Bleak Implications to Darwinian Modules”, in E. Lepore and Z. Pylyshyn (eds.), What is Cognitive Science? Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 74–120. (Scholar)
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- Shackleford, T.K. and Weekes-Shackleford, V. (eds.), 2017, Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, New York: Springer. (Scholar)
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- Sinnott-Armstrong, W., (ed.), 2008, Moral Psychology: The Evolution of Morality: Adaptations and Innateness, (Moral Psychology, Volume 1), Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. (Scholar)
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- Sterelny, K., 1995, “The Adapted Mind”, Biology and Philosophy, 10: 365–380. (Scholar)
- –––, 2003, Thought in a Hostile World: The Evolution of Human Cognition, Oxford: Blackwell. (Scholar)
- –––, 2012, The Evolved Apprentice: How evolution made humans unique, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Scholar)
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- –––, 1992, “The Psychological Foundations of Culture”, in H. Barkow, L. Cosmides and J. Tooby (eds.), The Adapted Mind, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 19–136. (Scholar)
- –––, 2005, “Conceptual Foundations of Evolutionary Psychology”, in The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, D. Buss (ed.), Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, pp. 5–67. (Scholar)
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