upnorthkyosa said:
On the contrary, we have a wealth of paleobotanical, paleoclimatic, and paleontogic evidence that inform us of past environments.
If you'll note, what I actually said was
"We know some of this stuff, but not anything close to the total picture." I stand by that statement.
We only have the barest knowledge, for example, of the type of sociocultural environment our hominid ancestors lived in, which would have had as significant an impact on their evolutionary development as anything else. There is also still some debate regarding pre-humans' primary means of subsistence (although a general consensus seems to be it was a combination of hunting, gathering, and scavenging --- but to what degree is unknown), as well as other variables.
But, the point remains we don't know if any given adaptation was the result of natural selection or some other evolutionary mechanism (the use of natural selection, for example, to explain cultural evolution is very, very weak), and we certainly have no way of testing or falsifying any of the claims made about them.
upnorthkyosa said:
However, other animal minds, especially simpler ones that use the same physical processes that ours uses can be experimented upon. Comparitive anatomy has a lot to say about how brains develop as the environment changes. For instance, it is well established that planaria develop cup shaped light receptors in order to detect light and that the development of these light receptors caused a reciprocal development of the brain. Why would humans be any different?
Well, there are three problems with that assessment:
1) The generalization of animal psychology to human psychology is ultimately what brought down behaviorism. Evolutionary psychology, in fact, bears many resemblences to behaviorism in regards to its methodology and the claims that it makes regarding how it will "change" psychology.
2) We still don't know if the mechanism by which these structures evolved was natural selection or something else. Assuming
a priori via the paradigm of Universal Darwinism that it "had to have been" is more akin to philosophy than science.
3) You're still just left with a big "maybe" in the end, with a general lack of direct data concerning human beings. This isn't particularly strong scientific foundations.
upnorthkyosa said:
Sure, we are much more complex, but whether we are talking about planaria, fish, or gnats, our brains basically function the same.
It depends which structures you're talking about. All of those organism have a neural system of some kind, so in that sense you are correct.
upnorthkyosa said:
Much of the evidence in evolutionary psychology comes from outside the fields of psychology. Zoology and comparitive anatomy provide mucho insights into the general evolution of brains and these insights are extrapolated to humans.
Sure. But, that still doesn't tell us which of all that was or was not a product of natural selection.
upnorthkyosa said:
The basic assumption is that we are animals and we function similarly. I don't see any reason to doubt this assumption.
You might want to research some of the historical debates between behaviorists and cognitivists. Humans function similarly to other animals up to a point. Language has a big part to do with it.
upnorthkyosa said:
Regarding the replacement of psychologic fields, I think that it will never totally erase people's work.
Unless they start presenting falsifiable claims, they're not going to be taken seriously outside of their own circles, let alone replace anyone's work.
upnorthkyosa said:
It will just be looked at through a new lense as more evidence is presented and people learn to look at fields outside psychology for input.
I'd suggest actually doing a little bit more research concerning psychology.
Depending on the particular sub-discipline, they already rely on fields outside their own for information. Evolutionary psychology is not the first psychological school to look at the neurological structure of the brain. Not by a long shot. Hell, even cognitive psychology relies largely on models from computer programming to explain encoding and memory. Social psychology borrows as much from sociology as it does from psychology.
upnorthkyosa said:
EP has a point and I think that it needs to be blended into our curret understanding of the brain.
Well, it'd help if some more concrete data was accumulated outside of "its a product of natural selection", which itself is debatable.
Personally, I think the closest thing to a solid "unified" psychological theory right now might be Howard Gardner's multiple intelligences theory. He bases his arguments on Piagetian principles, social-learning theory, neurological development structures, and evolutionary historical principles.
upnorthkyosa said:
I don't want to poo-poo all of the arguments against EP, but some of it seems like turf war.
Make no mistake, some of it is.
Laterz. :asian: