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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 29
Issue 4 |
| Aug 01, 2006 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 29 :
Issue 4
Table of Contents
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Towards a unified science of cultural evolution

Alex Mesoudi, Andrew Whiten and Kevin N. Laland
Page 329
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Culture evolves only if there is cultural inheritance

Robert Aunger
Page 347
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Vertical/compatible integration versus analogizing with biology

Jerome H. Barkow
Page 348
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Why we need memetics

Susan Blackmore
Page 349
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Analogies are powerful and dangerous things

Monique Borgerhoff Mulder, Richard McElreath and Kari Britt Schroeder
Page 350
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It is not evolutionary models, but models in general that social science needs

Bruce Bridgeman
Page 351
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Intelligent design in cultural evolution

Lee Cronk
Page 352
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A continuum of mindfulness

Daniel Dennett and Ryan McKay
Page 353
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Evolution is important but it is not simple: Defining cultural traits and incorporating complex evolutionary theory

Agustn Fuentes
Page 354
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The role of psychology in the study of culture

Daniel Kelly, Edouard Machery, Ron Mallon, Kelby Mason and Stephen P. Stich
Page 355
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Evolutionary social science beyond culture

Harold Kincaid
Page 356
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Cultural traits and cultural integration

R. Lee Lyman
Page 357
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A long way to understanding cultural evolution

Werner Mende and Kathleen Wermke
Page 358
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Archaeology and cultural macroevolution

Michael J. OBrien
Page 359
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Darwinian cultural evolution rivals genetic evolution

Mark Pagel
Page 360
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Evo-devo, modularity, and evolvability: Insights for cultural evolution

Simon M. Reader
Page 361
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A unified science of cultural evolution should incorporate choice

Barry Sopher
Page 362
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The uses of ethnography in the science of cultural evolution

Jamshid Tehrani
Page 363
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Generative entrenchment and an evolutionary developmental biology for culture

William C. Wimsatt
Page 364
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A science of culture: Clarifications and extensions

Alex Mesoudi, Andrew Whiten and Kevin N. Laland
Page 366
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Resolving the paradox of common, harmful, heritable mental disorders: Which evolutionary genetic models work best?

Matthew C. Keller and Geoffrey Miller
Page 385
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Praise for a critical perspective

David C. Airey and Richard C. Shelton
Page 405
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The social environment compresses the diversity of genetic aberrations into the uniformity of schizophrenia manifestations

Ralf-Peter Behrendt
Page 406
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Evolutionary psychiatry is deadLong liveth evolutionary psychopathology

Martin Brne
Page 408
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Finlands Galapagos: Founder effect, drift, and isolation in the inheritance of susceptibility alleles

Tom Campbell, Daria Osipova and Seppo Khknen
Page 409
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The natural selection of psychosis

Bernard Crespi
Page 410
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Why the adaptationist perspective must be considered: The example of morbid jealousy

Judith A. Easton, Lucas D. Schipper and Todd K. Shackelford
Page 411
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Mutations, developmental instability, and the Red Queen

Steven W. Gangestad and Ronald A. Yeo
Page 412
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Autism: Common, heritable, but not harmful

Morton Ann Gernsbacher, Michelle Dawson and Laurent Mottron
Page 413
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Heritable mental disorders: You cant choose your relatives, but it is they who may really count

Ester I. Klimkeit and John L. Bradshaw
Page 414
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Are common, harmful, heritable mental disorders common relative to other such non-mental disorders, and does their frequency require a special explanation?

Oliver Mayo and Carolyn Leach
Page 415
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The romance of balancing selection versus the sober alternatives: Let the data rule

John J. McGrath
Page 417
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Mental disorders are not a homogeneous construct

Joseph Polimeni
Page 418
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Mental disorders, evolution, and inclusive fitness

Antonio Preti and Paola Miotto
Page 419
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Behavioural ecology as a basic science for evolutionary psychiatry

John S. Price
Page 420
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Bipolar disorder evolved as an adaptation to severe climate

Julia A. Sherman
Page 421
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Adaptationism and medicalization: The Scylla and Charybdis of Darwinian psychiatry

Alfonso Troisi
Page 422
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Population genetical musings on suicidal behavior as a common, harmful, heritable mental disorder

Martin Voracek
Page 423
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High mental disorder rates are based on invalid measures: Questions about the claimed ubiquity of mutation-induced dysfunction

Jerome C. Wakefield
Page 424
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Multiple timescales of evolution

Jonathan Williams
Page 426
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The evolution of evolutionary epidemiology: A defense of pluralistic epigenetic modes of transmission

Daniel R. Wilson
Page 427
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An evolutionary framework for mental disorders: Integrating adaptationist and evolutionary genetic models

Matthew C. Keller and Geoffrey Miller
Page 429
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