Very detailed analysis and refutation in Scientific American of 4 key arguments use in evolutionary psychology. Conclusion:
"Among darwin's lasting legacies is our knowledge that the human mind
evolved by some adaptive process. After all, the human brain is even
more costly to run than an internal-combustion engine these days,
consuming 18 percent of the body's energy intake while constituting
merely 2 percent of its weight. We wouldn't have such an organ if it
hadn't performed some important adaptive functions in our evolutionary
past.
"The challenge for evolutionary psychology is to move from this
general fact to some evidentially well-supported specifics about the
adaptive processes that shaped the mind. Yet, as we have seen, the
evidence needed to substantiate accounts of adaptation in our lineage
during the past couple of million years is scarce. And this isn't the
kind of evidence that is likely to materialize; such evidence is lost to
us, probably forever. It may be a cold, hard fact that there are many
things about the evolution of the human mind that we will never know and
about which we can only idly speculate.
"Of course, some speculations are worse than others. Those of Pop EP
are deeply flawed. We are unlikely ever to learn much about our
evolutionary past by slicing our Pleistocene history into discrete
adaptive problems, supposing the mind to be partitioned into discrete
solutions to those problems, and then supporting those suppositions with
pencil-and-paper data. The field of evolutionary psychology will have
to do better. Even its very best, however, may never provide us
knowledge of why all our complex human psychological characteristics
evolved."
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