Robin Dunbar

The Science of Love

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  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    rather challenging option is the ability to produce large-brained offspring who are then capable, as adults, of fine-tuning their behaviour more effectively to the particular circumstances in which they later find themselves.
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    One of the benefits of this
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    potential rivals rather than causing you to be so besotted with the object of your love that you just forget to be interested in anyone else.
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    In other words, being romantically involved actually seems to turn you off from po‍
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    When people are in love, they spend much less time looking at attractive members of the opposite sex,
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    The third hypothesis – checking for members of the opposite sex who might offer opportunities of new romantic relationships – won hands down.
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    of being attracted to someone else, whereas the second does not.
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    In effect, the first implies a psychological mechanism that actively inhibits your likelihood
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    (the deflection hypothesis) or to you just becoming so wrapped up in your new love that you don’t have time to attend to anyone else (the attention hypothesis)
  • juanangelramirez1has quoted4 years ago
    My interest will lie in trying to bridge the gap between these more obviously biological bases of our behaviour and the psychological, social, historical and evolutionary contexts that help to mould that behaviour.
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