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12 - Evolutionary psychopathology and Darwinian medicine

Lance Workman
Affiliation:
Bath Spa University
Will Reader
Affiliation:
Sheffield Hallam University
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Summary

Key concepts evolutionary psychopathology, Darwinian medicine, pathogen, etiology, pathogenesis, trait variation, immune system, smoke detector principle, affective disorders, social competition hypothesis, schizophrenia, personality disorders

Life on Earth has existed in some form for well over three billion years. Given this lengthy period of evolutionary change, why is it that modern-day humans still suffer from colds, fever, morning sickness, personality disorders, anxiety and depression, and the most serious of psychiatric illnesses – schizophrenia? Surely natural selection has had time to rid us of such problems? One of the major contributions that evolutionary psychologists have made in the last decade lies in reconsidering the symptoms of mental and physical illnesses in one of three ways based on a knowledge of evolutionary theory. They suggest that symptoms may be adaptations, they may be due to constraints on evolutionary processes or they may be due to a mismatch between our evolutionary heritage and our current environment. Our susceptibility to infectious diseases, for example, is now seen as a pathogen/host arms race that, due to the vast asymmetry in life-cycle time and in sheer numbers, humans can never win. Darwinian medicine leads to the counterintuitive conclusion that perhaps sometimes unpleasant symptoms should be left to continue because they are good for you. It is in the field of psychiatry, however, that evolutionary psychology may have its greatest impact as, for the first time, psychologists are beginning to ask why the propensity for mental illness is so widespread in our species.

Type
Chapter
Information
Evolutionary Psychology
An Introduction
, pp. 307 - 341
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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References

Martin, P. (1997). The Sickening Mind: Brain, Behaviour, Immunity and Disease. London: HarperCollins. Accessible account of the relationship between the brain and the immune system, frequently drawing on Darwinian principles
McGuire, M. and Troisi, A. (1998). Darwinian Psychiatry. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Develops the arguments that evolutionary theory should serve as the foundation stone for psychiatry
Nesse, R. M. and Williams, G. C. (1995). Evolution and Healing: The New Science of Darwinian Medicine. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. The clarion cry for the application of the evolutionary approach to illness both mental and physical from two of its main proponents
Stevens, A. and Price, J. (1996). Evolutionary Psychiatry. London: Routledge. An examination of the relationship between evolutionary psychology and psychiatric disorders

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