Dear all,

A kind reminder that Heidi Colleran (Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse) 
will be speaking today at 2pm in Seminar Room 1 and tomorrow at 2pm in the 
Board Room, Department of History and Philosophy of Science.

All welcome!

Sam

> Subject: Upcoming talks on 3 and 4 May: Heidi Colleran on 'Reproductive 
> decision-making' and 'Natural fertility'
> 
> Dear all,
> 
> You are warmly invited to two special seminars put on by the Nature and 
> Culture group. Heidi Colleran (Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse) will 
> be speaking at 2pm on Tuesday 3rd May in Seminar Room 1, and 2pm on Wednesday 
> 4th May in the Board Room, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, 
> Free School Lane.
> 
> 
> 2pm Tuesday 3rd May
> Decisions, decisions: models of reproductive decision-making in evolutionary 
> anthropology
> 
> Evolution relies on reproduction. And yet, as I’ll argue in this talk, 
> evolutionary anthropology doesn’t have a comprehensive theory of reproductive 
> decision-making. Such a theory should be general enough to explain how 
> reproduction ‘functions’ in both high and low fertility contexts, and 
> specific enough to delineate causal hypotheses that can deal with changing 
> reproductive patterns. Evolutionary anthropology has been successful in 
> accounting for aspects of reproductive decision-making in small-scale and 
> so-called ‘natural fertility’ contexts, but it is struggling to make sense of 
> the demographic transition to low fertility that characterizes most of the 
> contemporary world. Reconciling alternative modeling approaches, in 
> particular, bringing in insights from cultural evolution theory, may help in 
> developing an overarching framework. But different subfields tend to consider 
> their own view the more general one so there has been little integration. 
> Conceptual overlaps make competing alternative hypotheses difficult to 
> delineate, and there are many empirical and interpretive issues to be 
> grappled with in the process. Using demographic transitions to low fertility 
> as a focal point, I will highlight some of these problems, and try to sketch 
> a way forward. 
> 
> 
> 2pm Wednesday 4th May
> Contraceptive use and the meaning of ‘natural fertility’
> 
> The idea of ‘natural fertility’ permeates evolutionary anthropology and 
> demography. In this talk I’ll provide an overview and a critique of this 
> approach to human reproduction, from an anthropological and evolutionary 
> perspective. I’ll argue that, quite apart from the ethical issues of 
> consigning some populations to be ‘natural’ and others ‘modern’, natural 
> fertility creates unnecessary theoretical and conceptual problems for 
> evolutionary researchers. Focusing on contraceptive behavior cross-culturally 
> and in my own work in rural Poland, I will argue that if we take a 
> behavior-based rather than a method-based approach to contraceptive use, 
> there can be no such thing as natural fertility. 
> 
> 
> http://www.humannature.hps.cam.ac.uk// 
> <http://www.humannature.hps.cam.ac.uk//>
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