Monday, April 18, 2011

Bonding vital in primates for evolutional survival

Almost certainly hundreds of kilometres of books have been written about the development of human interaction and it would similarly require a miserable lifetime to read them all.
However as far as infant bonding is concerned, some important mores, however simplified, must emerge in that will take less space and be easier to read.
 Allowing there is no contention that, differences withstanding, we are just from a line of apes, and that the stanzas between the recognised primate groups may concern some, what blindingly connects them all, and more or less seamlessly is how they bond with their young. And since the substance of this blog is to promote bonding it is not unreasonable to look at, and learn from that earlier primate behaviour.
Adulthood biologically starts when the animal can successfully reproduce and care for their offspring. In primates this period, as a fraction of lifespan, increases with intelligence across the various groups.
This blog contends, not to interdict, but be a reminder of what is already intuitively done and  known by some, and for some what is not known or done.
It all is common sense, especially if you put yourself in the  place of the infant, where ‘you’ have just come from, and what the world is confronting ‘you’ with.         

No comments:

Post a Comment