The Evolutionary Psychology Of Human Friendship - Robin Dunbar | Modern Wisdom Podcast 604

Robin Dunbar is an anthropologist, evolutionary psychologist, head of the Social and Evolutionary Neuroscience Research Group at the University of Oxford and an author. Most animals need friends to survive. But no other animal has as layered and complex a social life as humans. The last 2 million years from trees to plains to apartments has caused huge changes to the setup of our social groups, and it’s a fascinating story. Expect to learn why any group size over 90 ends up with more people being killed than being born, why men don’t have a best friend forever but women do, the link between human brain size and social groups, how male and female friendships differ, why the modern world has the most loneliness ever, what the single largest impact on your health is and much more... Sponsors: Get 10% discount on all Gymshark’s products at (use code: MW10) Get $100 discount on the best water filter on earth from AquaTru at (discount automatically applied) Get 20% discount on all Keto Brainz products at (use code: MW20) and follow them on Instagram at Extra Stuff: Buy The Social Brain - Get my free Reading List of 100 books to read before you die → To support me on Patreon (thank you): #evolution #friends #psychology - 00:00 Intro 00:18 Why Humans, Monkeys & Apes Have Huge Brains 05:18 How Human Social Groups Evolved 13:39 How Group Dynamics Impact Fertility 28:30 Why Living in a Big City is an Evolutionary Mismatch 45:08 How Did We Get From Small Tribes to Larger Settlements? 52:58 The Evolutionary Struggles of Growing Groups 1:02:01 Differences Between Male & Female Friendships 1:17:41 Why Men Think Women Are Attracted to Them 1:22:47 Where to Find Robin - Get access to every episode 10 hours before YouTube by subscribing for free on Spotify - or Apple Podcasts - Get my free Reading List of 100 life-changing books here - - Get in touch in the comments below or head to... Instagram: Twitter: Email:
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