Evolution explains why women like shopping
Blackberry-picking aside, urban humanity does little gathering from the wild these days, so Dr New decided to look at what seemed to him to be the nearest equivalent—shopping at a farmers' market. There is a fair amount of evidence that men are better than women at solving certain sorts of spatial problems, such as remembering the locations of topographical landmarks. Many researchers suggest such skills may have been important in the past for man-the-hunter, who needed to be able to find his way round the landscape. If that is the case, then woman-the-gatherer might have been expected to develop complementary skills not shown by males. And that, as he writes in this week's Proceedings of the Royal Society, is what Dr New found. . . . .
Labels: Economics
1 Comments:
If modern man's physiology is stuck in hunters- gatherers mode, it is hardly evidence for the naturalistic explanations of evolution.
It proves, on the contrary, that man could "create" a new environment and adapt to it by mastering the laws of nature, not by remaining their passive plaything.
As a matter of fact, all wealth is "created", and that is evidence enough to refute all purely naturalistic explanations of evolution.
For "evolution" means nothing else than "history", and the "productive forces" which Marx described as "driving history" are not "material", but those of man's mind.
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