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This Element builds on the mainstream theory of attachment and contemporary understanding of the environment of evolutionary adaptedness to address the origin and nature of infant-maternal bond formation. Sections 2 and 3 propose that attachment behaviors for protesting against separation and usurpation were compelled by infants' needs for close and undivided access to a source of breast milk, usually mothers, for three years to counter threats of undernutrition and disease that were the leading causes of infant mortality. Since these attachment behaviors would not have been presented unless they were compelled by maternal resistance, their arising is also attributed to parent-offspring conflict. Section 4 theorizes that the affectional nature of infant-maternal attachment originated within contexts of breastfeeding. Uniform and universal features of exclusive versus complementary breastfeeding, that could entail diverse experiences among multiple caregivers, may have shaped adaptations so that love relationships with mothers differ from those with nonmaternal caregivers.
This chapter focuses on existing perspectives to arrive at an integrated approach to understanding environment across time. It describes the structural components of the environment, and focuses on the core issue of conceptualizing environment across time. There is more opportunity to identify more varied components of the environmental structure, and to examine interactions among the different ecological components. When integrating the elements, the conceptual task is essentially to overlay the structure of time on the structure of environments, with particular emphasis on their human ecological importance. The chapter addresses issues of environments that varied with respect to time duration and degree of stability and change, and discusses the nonlinear time structures. Similar to the nonlinear time structures, there are numerous well-established transitions in developmental context. These differ from the prior set in that they are not repeating, but instead are generally one-time occurrences that occur regularly across most individuals.