ABSTRACT

The human race spends a disproportionate amount of attention, money, and expertise in solving, trying, and reporting homicides, as compared to other social problems. The public avidly consumes accounts of real-life homicide cases, and murder fiction is more popular still. Nevertheless, we have only the most rudimentary scientific understanding of who is likely to kill whom and why. Martin Daly and Margo Wilson apply contemporary evolutionary theory to analysis of human motives and perceptions of self-interest, considering where and why individual interests conflict, using well-documented murder cases. This book attempts to understand normal social motives in murder as products of the process of evolution by natural selection. They note that the implications for psychology are many and profound, touching on such matters as parental affection and rejection, sibling rivalry, sex differences in interests and inclinations, social comparison and achievement motives, our sense of justice, lifespan developmental changes in attitudes, and the phenomenology of the self. This is the first volume of its kind to analyze homicides in the light of a theory of interpersonal conflict. Before this study, no one had compared an observed distribution of victim-killer relationships to "expected" distribution, nor asked about the patterns of killer-victim age disparities in familial killings. This evolutionary psychological approach affords a deeper view and understanding of homicidal violence.

chapter 1|17 pages

Homicide and Human Nature

chapter 2|19 pages

Killing Kinfolks

chapter 3|24 pages

Killing Children

I. Infanticide in the Ethnographic Record

chapter 4|34 pages

Killing Children

II. Parental Homicide in the Modern West

chapter 5|28 pages

Parricide

Killing Parents

chapter 6|14 pages

Altercations and Honor

chapter 7|26 pages

Why Men and Not Women?

chapter 8|24 pages

The Logic of Same-Sex Conflict

chapter 9|34 pages

Till Death Us Do Part

chapter 10|32 pages

Retaliation and Revenge

chapter 11|22 pages

Calling the Killers to Account

chapter 12|18 pages

On Cultural Variation

chapter |6 pages

Summary and Concluding Comments