Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters: From Dating, Shopping, and Praying to Going to War and Becoming a Billionaire–Two Evolutionary Psychologists Explain Why We Do What We Do (30 page)

BOOK: Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters: From Dating, Shopping, and Praying to Going to War and Becoming a Billionaire–Two Evolutionary Psychologists Explain Why We Do What We Do
4.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2003c. “Why Productivity Fades with Age: The Crime-Genius Connection.”
Journal of Research in Personality
. 37: 257–72.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2004a. “General Intelligence as a Domain-Specific Adaptation.”
Psychological Review
. 111: 512–23.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2004b. “The Savanna Principle.”
Managerial and Decision Economics
. 25: 41–54.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2004c. “Social Sciences Are Branches of Biology.”
SocioEconomic Review
. 2: 371–90.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2005a. “Big and Tall Parents Have More Sons: Further Generalizations of the Trivers-Willard Hypothesis.”
Journal of Theoretical Biology
. 235: 583–90.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2005b. “Is ‘Discrimination' Necessary to Explain the SexGap in Earnings?”
Journal of Economic Psychology
. 26: 269–87.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2006a. “‘First, Kill All the Economists….': The Insufficiency of Microeconomics and the Need for Evolutionary Psychology in the Study of Management.”
Managerial and Decision Economics
. 27: 95–101.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2006b. “Violent Men Have More Sons: Further Evidence for the Generalized Trivers-Willard Hypothesis (gTWH).”
Journal of Theoretical Biology
. 239: 450–59.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2006c. “Where Do Cultures Come From?”
Cross-Cultural Research
. 40: 152–76.

Kanazawa, Satoshi. 2007. “Beautiful Parents Have More Daughters: A Further Implication of the Generalized Trivers-Willard Hypothesis (gTWH).”
Journal of Theoretical Biology
. 244: 133–40.

Kanazawa, Satoshi and Rebecca L. Frerichs. 2001. “Why Single Men Might Abhor Foreign Cultures.”
Social Biology
. 48: 320–7.

Kanazawa, Satoshi and Deanna L. Novak. 2005. “Human Sexual Dimorphism in Size May Be Triggered by Environmental Cues.”
Journal of Biosocial Science
. 37: 657–65.

Kanazawa, Satoshi and Mary C. Still. 1999. “Why Monogamy?”
Social Forces
. 78: 25–50.

Kanazawa, Satoshi and Mary C. Still. 2000a. “Parental Investment as a Game of Chicken.”
Politics and the Life Sciences
. 19: 17–26.

Kanazawa, Satoshi and Mary C. Still. 2000b. “Teaching May Be Hazardous to Your Marriage.”
Evolution and Human Behavior
. 21: 185–90.

Kanazawa, Satoshi and Mary C. Still. 2000c. “Why Men Commit Crimes (and Why They Desist).”
Sociological Theory
. 18: 434–47.

Kanazawa, Satoshi and Mary C. Still. 2001. “The Emergence of Marriage Norms: An Evolutionary Psychological Perspective.” Pp. 274–304 in
Social Norms
, edited by Michael Hechter and Karl-Dieter Opp. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.

Kanazawa, Satoshi and Griet Vandermassen. 2005. “Engineers Have More Sons, Nurses Have More Daughters: An Evolutionary Psychological Extension of Baron-Cohen's Extreme Male Brain Theory of Autism and Its Empirical Implications.”
Journal of Theoretical Biology
. 233: 589–99.

Kaprio, Jaakko, Arja Rimpela, Torsten Winter, Richard J. Viken, Matti Rimpela, and Richard J. Rose. 1995. “Common Genetic Influences on BMI and Age at Menarche.”
Human Biology
. 67: 739–53.

Katzev, Aphra R., Rebecca L. Warner, and Alan C. Acock. 1994. “Girls or Boys? Relationship of Child Gender to Marital Stability.”
Journal of Marriage and the Family
. 56: 89–100.

Keller, Matthew C., Randolph M. Nesse, and Sandra Hofferth. 2001. “The Trivers-Willard Hypothesis of Parental Investment: No Effect in the Contemporary United States.”
Evolution and Human Behavior
. 22: 343–60.

Kenrick, Douglas T. and Richard C. Keefe. 1992. “Age Preferences in Mates Reflect Sex Differences in Reproductive Strategies.”
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
. 15: 75–133.

Ketelaar, Timothy and Bruce J. Ellis. 2000. “Are Evolutionary Explanations Unfalsifiable? Evolutionary Psychology and the Lakatosian Philosophy of Science.”
Psychological Inquiry
. 11: 1–21.

Kirkpatrick, Lee A. 2005.
Attachment, Evolution, and the Psychology of Religion
. New York: Guilford.

Kirkpatrick, Mark. 1987. “Sexual Selection by Female Choice in Polygynous Animals.”
Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics
. 18: 43–70.

Koenig, Laura B., Matt McGue, Robert F. Krueger, and Thomas J. Bouchard, Jr. 2005. “Genetic and Environmental Influences on Religiousness: Findings for Retrospective and Current Religiousness Ratings.”
Journal of Personality
. 73: 471–88.

Kohler, Hans-Peter, Joseph L. Rodgers, and Kaare Christensen. 1999. “Is Fertility Behavior in Our Genes? Findings from a Danish Twin Study.”
Population and Development Review
. 25: 253–88.

Krueger, Alan B. and Jitka Maleckova. 2003. “Education, Poverty and Terrorism: Is There a Causal Connection?”
Journal of Economic Perspectives
. 17: 119–44.

Kurzban, Robert and Martie G. Haselton. 2006. “Making Hay Out of Straw? Real and Imagined Controversies in Evolutionary Psychology.” Pp. 149–61 in
Missing the Revolution: Darwinism for Social Scientists
. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Kurzban, Robert, John Tooby, and Leda Cosmides. 2001. “Can Race Be Erased? Coalitional Computation and Social Categorization.”
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
. 98: 15387–92.

Langlois, Judith H., Lisa Kalakanis, Adam J. Rubenstein, Andrea Larson, Monica Hallam, and Monica Smoot. 2000. “Maxims or Myths of Beauty?: A Meta-Analytic and Theoretical Review.”
Psychological Bulletin
. 126: 390–423.

Langlois, Judith H. and Lori A. Roggman. 1990. “Attractive Faces Are Only Average.”
Psychological Science
. 1: 115–21.

Langlois, Judith H., Lori A. Roggman, Rita J. Casey, Jean M. Ritter, Loretta A. Rieser-Danner, and Vivian Y. Jenkins. 1987. “Infant Preferences for Attractive Faces: Rudiments of a Stereo type?”
Developmental Psychology
. 23: 363–9.

Langlois, Judith H., Lori A. Roggman, and Lisa Musselman, 1994. “What Is Average and What Is Not Average about Attractive Faces?”
Psychological Science
. 5: 214–20.

Langlois, Judith H., Lori A. Roggman, and Loretta A. Rieser-Danner. 1990. “Infants' Differential Social Responses to Attractive and Unattractive Faces.”
Developmental Psychology
. 26: 153–9.

Laub, John H., Daniel S. Nagin, and Robert J. Sampson. 1998. “Trajectories of Change in Criminal Offending: Good Marriages and the Desistance Process.”
American Sociological Review
. 63: 225–38.

Laumann, Edward O., John H. Gagnon, Robert T. Michael, and Stuart Michaels. 1994.
The Social Organization of Sexuality: Sexual Practices in the United States
. University of Chicago Press.

Lemonick, Michael D. 2000. “Teens Before Their Time.”
Time
. 156 (18): 66–74. Lenski, Gerhard E. 1966.
Power and Privilege: A Theory of Social Stratification
. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Leutenegger, Walter and James T. Kelly. 1977. “Relationship of Sexual Dimorphism in Canine Size and Body Size to Social, Behavioral, and Ecological Correlates in Anthropoid Primates.”
Primates
. 18: 117–36.

Liedtke, Michael. 2000. “Smiles More Discerning at Safeway.”
Contra Costa Times
. January 18. Business and Financial News Section.

Liss, Lora. 1987. “Families and the Law.” Pp. 767–93 in
Handbook of Marriage and the Family
, edited by Marvin B. Sussman and Suzanne K. Steinmetz. New York: Plenum.

Little, Anthony C., Ian S. Penton-Voak, D. Michael Burt, and David I. Perrett. 2002. “Evolution and Individual Differences in the Perception of Attractiveness: How Cyclic Hormonal Changes and Self-Perceived Attractiveness Influence Female Preferences for Male Faces.” Pp. 59–90 in
Facial Attractiveness: Evolutionary, Cognitive, and Social Perspectives
, edited by Gillian Rhodes and Leslie A. Zebrowitz. Westport: Ablex.

Low, Bobbi S. 1979. “Sexual Selection and Human Ornamentation.” Pp. 462–87 in
Evolutionary Biology and Human Social Behavior: An Anthropological Perspective
, edited by Napoleon A. Chagnon and William Irons. North Scituate: Duxbury.

Luckmann, Thomas. 1967.
The Invisible Religion
. New York: Macmillan.

Lycett, J. E. and R. I. M. Dunbar. 2000. “Mobile Phones as Lekking Devices Among Human Males.”
Human Nature
. 11: 93–104.

Machalek, Richard and Michael W. Martin. 2004. “Sociology and the Second Darwinian Revolution: A Metatheoretical Analysis.”
Sociological Theory
. 22: 455–76.

Maret, Stephen M. and Craig A. Harling. 1985. “Cross-Cultural Perceptions of Physical Attractiveness: Ratings of Photographs of Whites by Cruzans and Americans.”
Perceptual and Motor Skills
. 60: 163–6.

Marini, Margaret Mooney. 1989. “Sex Differences in Earnings in the United States.”
Annual Review of Sociology
. 15: 343–80.

Marlowe, Frank. 1998. “The Nubility Hypothesis: The Human Breast as an Honest Signal of Residual Reproductive Value.”
Human Nature
. 9: 263–71.

Marsden, Peter V. 1987. “Core Discussion Networks of Americans.”
American Sociological Review
. 52: 122–31.

Martin, David. 1967.
A Sociology of English Religion
. London: SCM Press. Maynard Smith, John. 1997. “Commentary.” Pp. 522–6 in
Feminism and Evolutionary Biology: Boundaries, Intersections, and Frontiers
, edited by Patricia Adair Gowaty. New York: Chapman and Hall.

McCullough, Michael E., William T. Hoyt, David B. Larson, Harold G. Koenig, and Carl Thoresen. 2000. “Religious Involvement and Mortality: A Meta-Analytic Review.”
Health Psychology
. 19: 211–22.

McLain, D. Kelly, Deanna Setters, Michael P. Moulton, and Ann E. Pratt. 2000. “Ascription of Resemblance of Newborns by Parents and Nonrelatives.”
Evolution and Human Behavior
. 21: 11–23.

McNamara, Patrick. 2001. “Religion and the Frontal Lobes.” Pp. 237–56 in
Religion in Mind: Cognitive Perspectives on Religious Belief, Ritual, and Experience
, edited by Jensine Andresen. New York: Cambridge University Press. McWhirter, Norris and Ross McWhirter. 1975.
The Guinness Book of World Records 1976
. New York: Sterling.

Mealey, Linda. 1992. “Alternative Adaptive Models of Rape.”
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
. 15: 397–8.

Mealey, Linda. 2000.
Sex Differences: Development and Evolutionary Strategies
. San Diego: Academic Press.

Mealey, L., R. Bridgstock, and G. C. Townsend. 1999. “Symmetry and Perceived Facial Attractiveness: A Monozygotic Co-Twin Comparison.”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
. 76: 151–8.

Mesko, Norbert and Tamas Bereczkei. 2004. “Hairstyle as an Adaptive Means of Displaying Phenotypic Quality.”
Human Nature
. 15: 251–70.

Miller, Alan S. and John P. Hoffmann. 1995. “Risk and Religion: An Explanation of Gender Differences in Religiosity.”
Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
. 34: 63–75.

Miller, Alan S. and Satoshi Kanazawa. 2000.
Order by Accident: The Origins and Consequences of Conformity in Contemporary Japan
. Boulder: Westview.

Miller, Alan S. and Rodney Stark. 2002. “Gender and Religiousness: Can Socialization Explanations Be Saved?”
American Journal of Sociology
. 107: 1399–423.

Miller, Geoffrey F. 1998. “How Mate Choice Shaped Human Nature: A Review of Sexual Selection and Human Evolution.” Pp. 87–129 in
Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology: Ideas, Issues, and Applications
, edited by C. Crawford and D. L. Krebs. Lawrence Erlbaum.

Miller, Geoffrey F. 1999. “Sexual Selection for Cultural Displays.” Pp. 71–91 in
The Evolution of Culture: An Interdisciplinary View
, edited by Robin Dunbar, Chris Knight, and Camilla Power. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.

Other books

The Take by Mike Dennis
Silent Valley by Malla Nunn
Shift by Jeri Smith-Ready
The Arrival by CM Doporto
Healer's Touch by Kirsten Saell