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More than Kin and Less than Kind: The Evolution of Family Conflict
 
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More than Kin and Less than Kind: The Evolution of Family Conflict [Hardcover]

Douglas W. Mock (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 27, 2004

Sibling rivalry and intergenerational conflict are not limited to human beings. Among seals and piglets, storks and burying beetles, in bird nests and beehives, from apples to humans, family conflicts can be deadly serious, determining who will survive and who will perish. When offspring compete for scarce resources, sibling rivalry kicks in automatically. Parents sometime play favorites or even kill their young. In More Than Kin and Less Than Kind, Douglas Mock tells us what scientists have discovered about this disturbing side of family dynamics in the natural world.

Natural selection operates primarily for the benefit of individuals (and their genes). Thus a family member may profit directly, by producing its own offspring, or indirectly, by helping close kin to reproduce. Much of the biology of family behavior rests on a simple mathematical relationship called Hamilton's rule, which links the benefits and costs of seemingly altruistic or selfish behavior to the degree of relatedness between individuals.

Blending natural history and theoretical biology, Mock shows how Hamilton's rule illuminates the study of family strife by throwing a spotlight on the two powerful forces--cooperation and competition--that shape all interaction in the family arena. In More Than Kin and Less Than Kind, he offers a rare perspective on the family as testing ground for the evolutionary limits of selfishness. When budgets are tight, close kin are often deadly rivals.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Mock has a lively and engaging style, and the skill to explain complex ideas from kin selection and related fields intelligibly without being patronizing...Mock has done a superb job in bringing a large area of contemporary behavioural ecology to both a biological and a general audience...It deserves to be read by everyone interested in the evolution of family life. (Charles Godfray Nature )

As Mock shows, storks, pigs, seals, and other creatures give people a run for their money when it comes to competition. Within families at least, people are usually less aggressive and perhaps more shrewd than animals in getting what they want, but all the species Mock examines are competitive when it comes to fulfilling needs and desires...Mock considers...aspects of the family dynamic through a wealth of scientific studies and anecdotal evidence as he redefines the evolutionary limits of selfishness among species. (Science News )

Through the use of splendid examples, from rosewood pollen to penguins to premedical students, this well-written and entertaining book provides an excellent introduction to the evolution of family conflict...[Mock] details the theory and natural history of sibling rivalry across a broad sweep of animals and plants to illustrate ways in which the simple mathematical relationship called Hamilton's rule links the benefits and costs of seemingly altruistic or selfish behavior to the degree of relatedness between individuals. Countless examples display what scientists have learned about family strife in the natural world by documenting how the powerful forces of cooperation and competition shape all interactions in the family arena, and can turn close kin into deadly rivals. (K. A. Campbell Choice )

Douglas Mock's engaging volume assimilates the vast literature on altruism but concentrates on the more traditional analysis of conflict...Mock's monograph demonstrates triumphantly that field studies are still a vibrant part of evolutionary biology. He is equally entertaining about his own field studies and those of others engaged in testing in the field the models of theoretical evolutionary biology...Mock's is one of those soughtafter books in science, a work of popularisation and a thoughtful synthesis of an important discipline. (W. F. Bynum Times Higher Education Supplement )

Review

Siblings and parents do some very strange and dramatic things to one another. In this fine book about a fascinating subject, Doug Mock, one of the top researchers in this field, explains why. These widespread features of the animal kingdom originally puzzled biologists but no longer for reasons that Mock makes clear. (John Alcock, Arizona State Unviersity 20040703)

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Belknap Press (April 27, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674012852
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674012851
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,245,164 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Academically impressive, December 8, 2004
This review is from: More than Kin and Less than Kind: The Evolution of Family Conflict (Hardcover)
Sibling rivalry and conflicts between relatives aren't limited to human beings, as is common perceived: animals and all creatures often experience deadly family conflicts when offspring compete for resources. Douglas Mock is Professor in the Department of Zoology at the University of Oklahoma: his studies in More Than Kin And Less Than Kind: The Evolution Of Family Conflict blend natural history and theoretical biology with social insights to draw some important conclusions on the nature of family strife as it is determined by cooperative and competitive patterns. Academically impressive, More Than Kin And Less Than Kind is a recommended addition to university library Sociology and Social Psychology collections.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars And you thought YOUR family was psychotic!, January 23, 2007
Most of us have at least one or the other horror story to tell about our family: like when your older brother tried to suffocate you while you peacefully and helplessly lay in your crib; or when your mother unjustly punished you for the mess your sister had made in the bedroom; or that time when you almost broke your youngest brother's arm and felt good about it. And, of course, you might remember having wished at least once or twice that you had been an only child or that you had actually been adopted and came originally from much nicer and richer parents. All these instances run counter to the idea that families should be protective, loving nests where we learn the values of cooperation and altruism. Honour your parents, be nice to your siblings, and for God's sake stop whining just because your sister got more chocolate mousse than you for dessert!

Douglas Mock proposes a different approach to the issue of family conflict. His main argument being: what might seem unfair, cruel, even dangerous in a relationship between parents and children or between siblings does not imply that a particular family is dysfunctional. Quite the opposite, this may just indicate how successful -- and therefore functional -- the family is. In order to understand this, our notions of individual and family relationships need a slight rearrangement: we should regard everything from a genetic point of view. The question then being: are certain less appealing attitudes and actions advantageous for the replication of genes in the long run?

Interestingly, what it all comes down to is economics -- and lots of luck. After all, selfish genes are annoyingly calculating instances, only concerned with getting spread as much and as cheaply as possible. All organisms, as vehicles for genes, have therefore been selected throughout the generations to be quite shrewd and self-absorbed reproducers. Even if it means sacrificing an offspring or a sibling.
Throughout the book Mock shows how far this calculating principle can actually go. It involves everything from parents producing more offspring than they can actually feed, mothers culling their young without a flicker of regret, and big bullying siblings pecking or starving their younger weaker siblings to death while the parents watch indifferent (and yawn!). All this is accompanied by photos representing such actions.
The good news being: if an organism is born in a favourable territory and resourceful year (or if its older, nasty sibling(s) happen to die early), it might just survive the hectic nesting period and go on to produce its own bunch of kids. A success story, after all -- one to which billions of individual organisms currently on the planet can attest to. We've made it! The main winners, of course, are the genes, who can go on playing their replication game.

For all its worth, Mock uses a delightfully uncompromising method: he hardly makes any mention of humans at all. The book provides lots of examples of conflict in bird, insect, fish and even fruit families. Not surprisingly, wherever he looks he finds similar behavioural traits. (And every now and then, with charming wit, the author does remind us that we shouldn't think humans are all that different -- as in the following sentence: "From lowly dung beetles to the courts of human royalty, even the simplest families are anything but simple.")

Needless to say, the book might seem a bit discouraging. However, it is in fact not only very entertaining, but also -- for those of us who, like Petrarch, believe that enlightenment is the only true consolation in this world -- an eye opener. Like every good sociobiology book, it shows that, in the words of the author, behavioural traits are above all "subject to the unsentimental shaping powers of natural selection." And for better or for worse, this implies lots of conflict and losses.
All in all, More Than Kin is a valuable contribution to a relatively innovative but already somewhat widespread approach to life on this planet, teaching us to look beyond morality (and moral panics) and concentrate on ultimate (evolutionary) reasons behind many a disturbing factor. The answers might not always be cheery but they certainly makes sense. Which is, in the end, all that any good philosophy book can provide.
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1 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars More than fiction but less than science, February 27, 2005
This review is from: More than Kin and Less than Kind: The Evolution of Family Conflict (Hardcover)
In this popular work on the evolution of siblicide, Mock has posied that bird ususally hatch more than the optimal nuber of offpsrings, as insurance policy in case of an unexpected boom in resource availability that can sustain an abnormallly large brood.

However, Mock also believes that the parents deliberately handicapped the non-core, marginal offspring, which is born smaller than its core siblings, which tend to kill it irrespective of the food availablity. Now it boggles the mind as to WHY would the parents spent all the resources in an egg that it, in most case, believes will be finished off (if the offspring is destined to be executed, why invest in it?), especially in birds with long life histories, and WHY the core offsprings do not eat the marginal one if all thet care about is monopolize the food and take out the competition?

Mock has not cared to research on the fact that may be the evolutionary mechanisms do not work clock-like and that the parents may sometimes give birth to a large brood even in times of deprivation, and that the marginal offspring may be culled due to the risks pathogens/infections (that would explain why the carcass is not eaten!) posed to other offsprings.

All in all, the book is nice story telling, but unfortunately it's not science.
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