The Bridge to Humanity: How Affect Hunger Trumps the Selfish Gene is an ideal supplementary text for any course
that explores the relationship of biology and culture in the evolution of human behavior. Building upon several
of the theoretical issues he first addressed in Man's Way, renowned anthropologist Walter Goldschmidt presents
a unique look at how human culture functions through biological mechanisms that have evolved from our distant past.
"Affect hunger"--the need for affective expressions from others--underlies nurturance and mutuality.
Goldschmidt contends that affect hunger--in combination with other factors unique to the human species--in effect
"trumps" the selfish gene and is therefore the essential missing key to understanding human behavior.
Employing discussions of primate behavior, ethnographies, cognitive studies, psychological research, and hormonal
and neurological studies, he demonstrates how affect hunger not only provides a reward system for learning language
and other cultural information, but also remains a motive for social behavior throughout life. Transforming the
debate on nature versus culture to one on nature and culture, The Bridge to Humanity provides a fresh perspective
on the ways that biology and culture fit together. Indeed, in this book Goldschmidt reinterprets anthropological
knowledge, profoundly affecting all students concerned with human behavior and reaching far beyond the discipline's
borders.