Evolutionary Psychology: The Adapted Mind, Its Critics, and the Battle Over Human Nature delivers a comprehensive and intellectually honest examination of evolutionary psychology as both a scientific paradigm and a site of intense cultural debate. The book traces the field's development from sociobiology to contemporary research on massive modularity, mate preferences, kinship psychology, and gene-culture coevolution. It profiles the foundational contributions of Tooby and Cosmides, David Buss, Steven Pinker, and others while carefully engaging major criticisms, including concerns about adaptationist reasoning, replication, WEIRD sampling, and ideological resistance.
Written in a clear, accessible style suitable for advanced undergraduates and graduate students, the text includes learning objectives, case studies, research spotlights, discussion questions, and interdisciplinary connections to anthropology, behavioral genetics, political psychology, and ethics. It positions evolutionary psychology not as an isolated or dogmatic framework, but as a maturing research program that can contribute to a broader, multi-level science of human nature when integrated thoughtfully with cultural and genetic perspectives.
This volume serves as both a standalone textbook and a natural companion to the author's earlier works in the Tabula Rasa series and Nature vs. Nurture 2.0.