Human inbreeding avoidance: Culture in nature
- 1 March 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Behavioral and Brain Sciences
- Vol. 6 (1) , 91-102
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0140525x00014850
Abstract
Much clinical and ethnographic evidence suggests that humans, like many other organisms, are selected to avoid close inbreeding because of the fitness costs of inbreeding depression. The proximate mechanism of human inbreeding avoidance seems to be precultural, and to involve the interaction of genetic predispositions and environmental conditions. As first suggested by E. Westermarck, and supported by evidence from Israeli kibbutzim, Chinese sim-pua marriage, and much convergent ethnographic and clinical evidence, humans negatively imprint on intimate associates during a critical period of early childhood (between ages 2 and 6).There is also much evidence that, like other social animals, humans do not seek to maximize outbreeding, but rather to maintain an optimal balance between outbreeding and inbreeding.Closeinbreeding reduces fitness through inbreeding depression, butsomeinbreeding brings the benefits of nepotism. For simple, stateless, horticultural societies, the optimal balance seems to be achieved by a combination of precultural inbreeding avoidance of relatives with anr≤·25 and cultural rules of preferential marriage with kin withr≥·25. Adjustment of the coefficient of inbreeding to other ecological settings seems to be largely cultural. An interactive model of “culture in nature” is presented, in which culture is seen as coevolving with genes to produce the maxiniization of individual inclusive fitness.Keywords
This publication has 80 references indexed in Scilit:
- Avoiding inbreeding: at what cost?Published by Elsevier ,2004
- Trends in human reproductive wastage in relation to long‐term practice of inbreedingAnnals of Human Genetics, 1979
- Inbreeding effects on human reproduction in Tamil Nadu of South IndiaAnnals of Human Genetics, 1977
- A model of kin selection not invoking coefficients of relationshipJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1975
- The Evolution of Reciprocal AltruismThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1971
- Adopt a Daughter‐in‐Law, Marry a Sister: A Chinese Solution to the Problem of the Incest TabooAmerican Anthropologist, 1968
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964
- Demographic variability and preferential marriage patternsAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1963
- Sibling IncestBritish Journal of Sociology, 1962
- World Ethnographic SampleAmerican Anthropologist, 1957