Why do human beings think, feel, and behave as they do? Decoding Human Nature approaches this question by treating the human mind as an evolutionary product rather than a modern creation. Human psychology was shaped long before civilisation, in environments defined by danger, scarcity, social competition, and dependence on others. Emotions, instincts, moral intuitions, and cognitive biases are not accidental flaws or cultural inventions. They are adaptive systems that once solved recurring problems of survival and social life. Drawing on evolutionary psychology, this book examines fear, attraction, parenting, cooperation, aggression, morality, religion, intelligence, emotion, self-deception, jealousy, and status. Each chapter asks not only how these traits function, but why they exist at all. Many behaviours that appear irrational or destructive in modern life become intelligible when viewed through their evolutionary origins. The book also considers the tension between ancient psychological mechanisms and contemporary society, where instincts shaped for small groups and immediate threats operate in complex, abstract environments. Decoding Human Nature offers explanation rather than prescription. By understanding the evolutionary foundations of thought and behaviour, it provides a clearer view of the human condition and the forces that continue to shape it.
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