Livin' on the MDedge

People still want their medical intelligence in human form


 

Hot take: Humans aren’t that special

We humans have always prided ourselves on being different from “the animals” in an exceptional way. News flash! We aren’t. We may be the apex predator, but new research shows that humans, as part of the animal kingdom, just aren’t special.

Happy beautiful family of three walking in park. Happy couple in playful mood outdoors enjoying with their child. jacoblund/iStock/Getty Images

Not special? How can they say that? Are gorillas doing open-heart surgery? Do wolverines tell jokes? At a more basic level, though, the way we operate as mammals in societies is not unique or even new. Elephants are known to mourn their deceased and to have funeral-like practices, ants invented agriculture, and we’re certainly not the only species that has figured out how to use tools.

This new research just demonstrates another way we aren’t exceptional, and that’s in our mating practices and outcomes.

“Humans appear to resemble mammals that live in monogamous partnerships and to some extent, those classified as cooperative breeders, where breeding individuals have to rely on the help of others to raise their offspring,” Monique Borgerhoff Mulder, PhD, professor emerita of anthropology at the University of California, Davis, said in a written statement.

The research team, which consisted of over 100 investigators, looked at 90 human populations based on data from over 80,000 people globally and compared the human data with 49 different nonhuman mammal species. In polygynous societies in which men take several wives, they found, women have more access to resources like food, shelter, and parenting help. Monogamy, on the other hand, “can drive significant inequalities among women,” Dr. Borgerhoff Mulder said, by promoting large differences in the number of children couples produce.

Human day-to-day behavior and child-rearing habits – one parent taking a daughter to ballet class and fixing dinner so the other parent can get to exercise class before picking up the son from soccer practice – may have us thinking that we are part of an evolved society, but really we are not much different than other mammals that hunt, forage for food, and rear and teach their children, the researchers suggested.

So, yes, humans can travel to the moon, create a vaccine for smallpox, and hit other humans with coconuts, but when it comes to simply having offspring or raising them, we’re not all that special. Get over it.

Pages

Recommended Reading

The human-looking robot therapist will coach your well-being now
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
The air up there: Oxygen could be a bit overrated
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
Sweaty treatment for social anxiety could pass the sniff test
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
Lack of food for thought: Starve a bacterium, feed an infection
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
Previously unknown viral families hide in the darnedest places
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
Living the introvert’s dream: Alone for 500 days, but never lonely
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
Drive, chip, and putt your way to osteoarthritis relief
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
Medical-level empathy? Yup, ChatGPT can fake that
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
Boys may carry the weight, or overweight, of adults’ infertility
MDedge Hematology and Oncology
The antimicrobial peptide that even Pharma can love
MDedge Hematology and Oncology