| Keyword search (4,165 papers available) | ![]() |
"Gad Saad" Authored Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sex differences in OCD symptomatology: an evolutionary perspective | Gad Saad | 16828981 JMSB |
| 2 | Suicide triggers as sex-specific threats in domains of evolutionary import: negative correlation between global male-to-female suicide ratios and average per capita gross national income | Gad Saad | 17011714 JMSB |
| 3 | Munchausen by proxy: the dark side of parental investment theory? | Gad Saad | 20627598 JMSB |
| 4 | The consuming instinct. What Darwinian consumption reveals about human nature | Gad Saad | 24047091 JMSB |
| 5 | The Epistemology of Evolutionary Psychology Offers a Rapprochement to Cultural Psychology | Gad Saad | 33224071 JMSB |
| Title: | The consuming instinct. What Darwinian consumption reveals about human nature | ||||
| Authors: | Gad Saad | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24047091/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.2990/32_1_58 | ||||
| Publication: | Politics and the life sciences : the journal of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences | ||||
| Keywords: | |||||
| PMID: | 24047091 | Category: | Date Added: | 2013-09-20 | |
| Dept Affiliation: |
JMSB
1 Research Chair in Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences and Darwinian Consumption, John Molson School of Business, Concordia University, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West, Montreal, Canada H3G 1M8, gadsaad@jmsb.concordia.ca. |
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Description: |
Editor's note: In this engaging talk given last February on a particularly cold and blustery day at Texas Tech University, Professor Gad Saad of Concordia University discusses his work in the area of evolutionary consumption. In making the case for understanding consumerism from a Darwinian perspective, Saad addresses several key tenets from his books The Consuming Instinct (1) and The Evolutionary Bases of Consumption. (2) In particular, Saad argues that: (1) many consumption acts can be mapped onto four key Darwinian modules (survival, mating, kin selection, and reciprocal altruism); and, (2) cultural products such as song lyrics and movie plotlines are fossils of the human mind that highlight a shared, biologically based human nature. In this wide-ranging inquiry, Saad summarizes several of his other empirical works, including the effects of conspicuous consumption on men's testosterone levels (3) and how the ovulatory cycle in the human female influences consumption. (4) Overall, Professor Saad contends that an infusion of evolutionary and biologically based perspectives into the discipline of consumer behavior and related government regulatory policies yields myriad benefits, notably greater consilience, more effective practices, an ethos of interdisciplinarity, and methodological pluralism. |



