The history of evolutionary psychology began with Charles Darwin, who argued that all the most human of human capacitiesâÂÂthe human intellect, rationality, human sexual behaviour, emotional expressions, moral behaviour, language, culture, and conscienceâÂÂhad evolutionary foundations, highlighting in particular those which had originated due to the unusual ways natural selection operates in social animals, that is, by different kinds of group selection, including kin selection and reciprocal altruism. Darwin's work inspired many later psychologists such as Wilhelm Wundt, James Mark Baldwin, William James, Sigmund Freud, George Herbert Mead, Konrad Lorenz and Niko Tinbergen but, in the early 1900s, American psychologists widely rejected Darwin's style of naturalistic observation in favour of laboratory experimentation. Henceforth, 20th century psychologists focused more on behaviorism and proximate explanations for human behavior.
Then, in 1975, E. O. Wilson's landmark book, ', synthesized recent theoretical advances in evolutionary theory to explain social behavior in animals, including humans. Jerome Barkow, Leda Cosmides and John Tooby popularized the term "evolutionary psychology" in their 1992 book The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and The Generation of Culture. Like sociobiology before it, evolutionary psychology has been embroiled in controversy, but evolutionary psychologists see their field as gaining increased acceptance overall.
After his seminal work in developing theories of natural selection, Charles Darwin devoted much of his final years to studying the evolutionary foundations of what he regarded as the most distinctive human qualities, including aesthetic sensibility, morality, language, intellect, and culture. He wrote two books:The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex in 1871 and The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals in 1872, which addressed topics in evolutionary psychology. He also published pathbreaking evolutionary monographs on insect and invertebrate behaviour, andâÂÂbelieving that infant behaviour gives us privileged access to humans' evolutionary endowmentâÂÂa seminal case-study of his baby son William's behaviour, containing many observations confirmed by recent research, including those on: infant-adult communication and meta-communication; infant emotional expressions; early reasoning; the experimental study of infant jealousy; and the origins of self-knowledge.
Darwin introduced the concept of sexual selection to explain the presence of animal and human characteristics that seemed unrelated to survival, such as humans' lack of body hair and the peacock's tail. He argued in terms of parental investment to explain contrasting male and female roles surrounding reproduction. He introduced theories concerning group selection, reciprocal altruism, and kin selection to explain self-sacrifice. Darwin pondered why humans and animals were often generous to their group members. Darwin felt that acts of generosity decreased the fitness of generous individuals. This fact contradicts natural selection, which favored the fittest individual. Darwin concluded that while generosity decreased individual fitness, it would increase group fitness. In this case, altruism arose due to competition between groups. The following quote, from Darwin's Origin of Species, is often interpreted by evolutionary psychologists as an indication of his foreshadowing the emergence of the field:
Darwin's theory inspired William James's functionalist approach to psychology. At the core of his theory was a system of "instincts." James wrote that humans had many instincts, even more than other animals. These instincts, he said, could be overridden by experience and by each other, as many of the instincts were actually in conflict with each other.
In their Evolutionary Psychology Primer, Tooby and Cosmides make note of James' perspective, and also quote him:
According to Noam Chomsky, perhaps Anarchist thinker Peter Kropotkin could be credited as having founded evolutionary psychology, when in his 1902 book he argued that the human instinct for cooperation and mutual aid could be seen as stemming from evolutionary adaptation.
William McDougall made a reference to "evolutionary psychology" in his 1919 book An Introduction to Social Psychology: "It is only a comparative and evolutionary psychology that can provide the needed basis (for psychology); and this could not be created before the work of Darwin had convinced men of the continuity of human with animal evolution as regards all bodily characters, and had prepared the way for the quickly following recognition of the similar continuity of man's mental evolution with that of the animal world." (p. 16)
While Darwin's theories on natural selection gained acceptance in the early 20th century, his theories on evolutionary psychology were largely ignored. Only after Second World War, in the 1950s, did interest in the systematic study of animal behavior increase. It was during this period that the modern field of ethology emerged. Konrad Lorenz and Nikolaas Tinbergen were pioneers in developing the theoretical framework of ethology, for which they received the Nobel prize in 1973.
Desmond Morris's book The Naked Ape sought to frame human behavior in evolutionary terms, but his explanations failed to convince academics because they were grounded in a teleological (goal-oriented) understanding of evolution. For example, he said that the pair bond evolved so that men who were out hunting could trust that their mates back home were not having sex with other males.
In 1975, E. O. Wilson built upon the works of Lorenz and Tinbergen by combining studies of animal behavior, social behavior, and evolutionary theory in his book . Wilson included a chapter on human behavior. Wilson's application of evolutionary analysis to human behavior caused bitter debate.
With the publication of Sociobiology, evolutionary thinking for the first time had a recognizable presence in psychology. E. O. Wilson argues that the field of evolutionary psychology is essentially the same as "human sociobiology".
Edward H. Hagen writes in The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology that sociobiology is, despite public controversy regarding the applications to humans, "one of the scientific triumphs of the twentieth century." "Sociobiology is now part of the core research and curriculum of virtually all biology departments, and it is a foundation of the work of almost all field biologists" Sociobiological research on nonhuman organisms has increased dramatically and appears continuously in the world's top scientific journals such as Nature and Science.The more general term behavioral ecology is commonly used as a substitute for sociobiology in order to avoid public controversy.
The term evolutionary psychology was used by American biologist Michael Ghiselin in a 1973 article published in the journal Science. Jerome Barkow, Leda Cosmides and John Tooby popularized the term "evolutionary psychology" in their 1992 book The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and The Generation of Culture. The term is sometimes abbreviated "EvoPsych" or "evo-psych" or similar.
In contrast to sociobiology and behavioral ecology, evolutionary psychology emphasizes that organisms are "adaptation executors" rather than "fitness maximizers." In other words, organisms have emotional, motivational, and cognitive adaptations that generally increased inclusive fitness in the past but may not do so in the present. This distinction may explain some maladaptive behaviors that are the result of "fitness lags" between ancestral and modern environments. For example, our ancestrally developed desires for fat, sugar, and salt often lead to health problems in modern environments where these are readily available in large quantities.
Also, in contrast to sociobiology and behavioral ecology (which mostly study non-human animal behavior), rather than focus primarily on overt behavior, EP attempts to identify underlying psychological adaptations (including emotional, motivational, and cognitive mechanisms), and how these mechanisms interact with the developmental and current environmental influences to produce behavior.
Before 1990, introductory psychology textbooks scarcely mentioned Darwin. In the 1990s, evolutionary psychology was treated as a fringe theory, and evolutionary psychologists depicted themselves as an embattled minority. Coverage in psychology textbooks was largely hostile. According to evolutionary psychologists, current coverage in psychology textbooks is usually neutral or balanced.
The presence of evolutionary theory in psychology has been steadily increasing. According to its proponents, evolutionary psychology now occupies a central place in psychological science.