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The Domestication of Evolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Raymond P. Coppinger
Affiliation:
Professor of Biology, Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts 01002, USA
Charles Kay Smith
Affiliation:
Associate Professor of English, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, USA.

Extract

A coming ‘Age of Interdependent Forms’ seems destined to mark the success of what could be called ‘despecialized/interspecific fitness’ among neotenic strains (perpetuating juvenile traits) of species such as humans and domestic animals. Humans as well as the first domesticants underwent a neotenic evolution in the wild during the repeated interglacial periods which, acting on a number of mammalian forms, selected against adult species-specific ancestral adaptations to a stable environment. Neotenic species continue to look and behave more like ancestral youths than adults—even after sexual maturity and throughout their life-history. As they retain lifelong youthful dependency motivations, they can easily, under suitable conditions, become interdependent forms. By the time of melting of the last Pleistocene glacier, all the domestic partners had already become more dependency-prone than formerly, and were behaviourally despecialized enough to form the alliance that is now changing the order of Nature.

Information

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1983

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