性、地位和犯罪:一种理论联系。

Lee Ellis
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引用次数: 19

摘要

本文从进化的角度对社会地位与严重持续犯罪的关系进行了理论解释。该理论的中心前提是,自然选择使女性在择偶时倾向于追求地位的男性。这种偏见导致男性投入更多的时间和精力来争取地位(相对于女性)。为了解释为什么几乎所有的“受害”形式的犯罪行为在男性中比在女性中更常见,该理论断言,地位争夺存在于竞争/受害行为的连续体中。这个连续体的一端是社会通常不鼓励甚至惩罚的粗鲁(犯罪)行为的缩影。另一端是社会容忍甚至鼓励的复杂(商业)形式。根据这一理论,大多数男性在青春期开始时开始表现出非游戏性的竞争/伤害行为,因为他们开始了自己的生殖生涯。学习能力最强的青春期男性会迅速从原始的竞争/伤害行为转变为更复杂的行为,而学习能力最强的男性则会转变得更慢。该理论的一个主要推论是,y染色体上的基因一定会以促进追求地位行为的方式影响大脑。这个推论需要实证检验,尽管它与以下证据是一致的:(a) y染色体将原本的卵巢转变为睾丸,后者是产生睾酮的专门器官;(b)睾酮改变大脑功能的方式有助于地位争夺和犯罪。
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Sex, status, and criminality: a theoretical nexus.

This article offers a theoretical explanation for relationships between social status and involvement in serious and persistent criminal behavior from an evolutionary perspective. The theory's central premise is that natural selection has produced females who bias their mating choices toward males who strive for status. This bias has resulted in males devoting greater time and energy to status striving (relative to females). To account for why nearly all "victimizing" forms of criminality are more common among males than among females, the theory asserts that status striving exists along a continuum of competitive/victimizing behavior. One end of this continuum is epitomized by crude (criminal) forms of the behavior that societies generally discourage and even punish. The other end consists of sophisticated (commercial) forms that societies tolerate and even encourage. According to the theory, most males begin to exhibit non-playful forms of competitive/victimizing behavior around the onset of puberty as they start their reproductive careers. Adolescent males with the greatest abilities to learn will transition quickly from crude forms of competitive/victimizing behavior to more sophisticated forms, while males who have the greatest difficulties learning will transition more slowly. A major deduction from the theory is that genes on the Y-chromosome must be affecting the brain in ways that promote status-striving behavior. This deduction needs empirical scrutiny, although it is consistent with evidence (a) that the Y-chromosome transforms would-be ovaries into testes, the latter being specialized organs for the production of testosterone, and (b) that testosterone alters brain functioning in ways that contribute to both status striving and criminality.

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