Kurzban R, Leary M R
Economic Science Laboratory, University of Arizona, USA.
Psychol Bull. 2001 Mar;127(2):187-208. doi: 10.1037/0033-2909.127.2.187.
A reconceptualization of stigma is presented that changes the emphasis from the devaluation of an individual's identity to the process by which individuals who satisfy certain criteria come to be excluded from various kinds of social interactions. The authors propose that phenomena currently placed under the general rubric of stigma involve a set of distinct psychological systems designed by natural selection to solve specific problems associated with sociality. In particular, the authors suggest that human beings possess cognitive adaptations designed to cause them to avoid poor social exchange partners, join cooperative groups (for purposes of between-group competition and exploitation), and avoid contact with those who are differentially likely to carry communicable pathogens. The evolutionary view contributes to the current conceptualization of stigma by providing an account of the ultimate function of stigmatization and helping to explain its consensual nature.
本文提出了一种对污名的重新概念化,将重点从个人身份的贬低转变为满足特定标准的个体如何被排除在各种社会互动之外的过程。作者认为,目前归类在污名这一总标题下的现象涉及一组由自然选择设计的独特心理系统,旨在解决与社会性相关的特定问题。具体而言,作者指出人类拥有认知适应性,旨在促使他们避免与糟糕的社会交换伙伴交往、加入合作群体(出于群体间竞争和剥削的目的),以及避免与那些更有可能携带传染性病原体的人接触。这种进化观点通过解释污名化的最终功能并有助于解释其共识性质,为当前污名的概念化做出了贡献。