Skip to main content
  • Articles arrow_drop_down
    • Articles
    • Issues
  • About arrow_drop_down
    • About
    • Editorial Team
    • Become a Reviewer
    • Contact
  • Submissions arrow_drop_down
    • Submissions
    • Author Guidelines
    • Start Submission
  • Editorial Policies arrow_drop_down
    • Journal Policies
    • Publisher Policies
  • Login
  • Register
  • Articles arrow_drop_down
    • Articles
    • Issues
  • About arrow_drop_down
    • About
    • Editorial Team
    • Become a Reviewer
    • Contact
  • Submissions arrow_drop_down
    • Submissions
    • Author Guidelines
    • Start Submission
  • Editorial Policies arrow_drop_down
    • Journal Policies
    • Publisher Policies
  • Login
  • Register
menu
The Myth of Man the Hunter, Man the Killer and the Evolution of Human Morality
Research Articles
The Myth of Man the Hunter, Man the Killer and the Evolution of Human Morality
Research Articles
The Myth of Man the Hunter, Man the Killer and the Evolution of Human Morality

Abstract

Since the discovery of the first man‐ape, many have assumed that the earliest humans were hunters and that this was associated with a “killer instinct.” The myth of “man the hunter” was repeated in the 1960s in anthropology texts and popular literature. In the 1970s it was adopted by sociobiologists to explain human nature. “Man the hunter” is used to explain not only human biology but also human morality. The morals described, however, often reflect ancient beliefs and appear to be new ways of justifying old morality codes. The newest version of this myth is presented in a recent book, Demonic Males. I will discuss various accounts of this myth and the evidence used to justify them, and will specifically critique the arguments presented in Demonic Males.

How to Cite

Sussman, R., (1999) “The Myth of Man the Hunter, Man the Killer and the Evolution of Human Morality”, Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science 34(3), 453–471. doi: https://doi.org/10.1111/0591-2385.00226

Rights

© 2024 The Author(s).

Downloads

Download XML
Download PDF

128

Views

269

Downloads

23

Citations

Share

𝕏

Authors

Robert W. Sussman (Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science)

Downloads

  • Download XML
  • Download PDF

Issue

  • Volume 34 • Issue 3 • September 1999

Publication details

Pages 453–471
Published on 1999-09-02

Licence

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0

Identifiers

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/0591-2385.00226

File Checksums (MD5)

  • XML: 33a640e3566b55a69fad2559fe42b598
  • PDF: 2eade54127144b31e87c8bb10cc39cbf

Table of Contents

Non Specialist Summary

This article has no summary

Close

| ISSN: 1467-9744 | Published by Open Library of Humanities | Privacy Policy |