Blood is not always thicker than water: The limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional Chinese family

To examine the importance of kin selection in shaping human societies, this study analyzed the kinship system practiced in traditional China for two millennia and teased apart its underlying genetic and other, presumably cultural, components. The results demonstrate that, in the traditional patrilin...

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Main Author: Lixing Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2010-04-01
Series:Current Zoology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.currentzoology.org/paperdetail.asp?id=11466
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spelling doaj-8b8371dda37943519db711524f69e0e82020-11-25T01:03:53ZengOxford University PressCurrent Zoology1674-55072010-04-01562182189Blood is not always thicker than water: The limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional Chinese familyLixing SunTo examine the importance of kin selection in shaping human societies, this study analyzed the kinship system practiced in traditional China for two millennia and teased apart its underlying genetic and other, presumably cultural, components. The results demonstrate that, in the traditional patrilineal Chinese family, both genetic relatedness and the cultural factor of generation were important in determining kinship status for male agnates (genetically related relatives). For female agnates, however, only genetic relatedness was important. Another surprising finding was that the influence of gender was not as important as genetic relatedness. The most interesting finding in this study, however, was that kin selection and culture (i.e., seniority in generation and age) played vastly different roles in different lineages in the Chinese family: for collateral (indirect) agnates, genetic relatedness was the most important factor in determining their kinship status, but for lineal (direct) agnates, its importance was overridden by seniority in generation and age, a cultural factor. Several other bio-cultural factors also explained a considerable amount of variance in kinship status. Since kinship profoundly affected, and was often the foundation of, the legal and social systems in dynastic China, kin selection, while its strength may differ remarkably between lineal and collateral relatives, could act as a selective force in Chinese families [Current Zoology 56 (2): 182–189, 2010].http://www.currentzoology.org/paperdetail.asp?id=11466KinshipKin selectionGenetic relatednessChinese familyCulture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lixing Sun
spellingShingle Lixing Sun
Blood is not always thicker than water: The limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional Chinese family
Current Zoology
Kinship
Kin selection
Genetic relatedness
Chinese family
Culture
author_facet Lixing Sun
author_sort Lixing Sun
title Blood is not always thicker than water: The limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional Chinese family
title_short Blood is not always thicker than water: The limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional Chinese family
title_full Blood is not always thicker than water: The limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional Chinese family
title_fullStr Blood is not always thicker than water: The limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional Chinese family
title_full_unstemmed Blood is not always thicker than water: The limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional Chinese family
title_sort blood is not always thicker than water: the limited effect of kin selection on human kinship in the traditional chinese family
publisher Oxford University Press
series Current Zoology
issn 1674-5507
publishDate 2010-04-01
description To examine the importance of kin selection in shaping human societies, this study analyzed the kinship system practiced in traditional China for two millennia and teased apart its underlying genetic and other, presumably cultural, components. The results demonstrate that, in the traditional patrilineal Chinese family, both genetic relatedness and the cultural factor of generation were important in determining kinship status for male agnates (genetically related relatives). For female agnates, however, only genetic relatedness was important. Another surprising finding was that the influence of gender was not as important as genetic relatedness. The most interesting finding in this study, however, was that kin selection and culture (i.e., seniority in generation and age) played vastly different roles in different lineages in the Chinese family: for collateral (indirect) agnates, genetic relatedness was the most important factor in determining their kinship status, but for lineal (direct) agnates, its importance was overridden by seniority in generation and age, a cultural factor. Several other bio-cultural factors also explained a considerable amount of variance in kinship status. Since kinship profoundly affected, and was often the foundation of, the legal and social systems in dynastic China, kin selection, while its strength may differ remarkably between lineal and collateral relatives, could act as a selective force in Chinese families [Current Zoology 56 (2): 182–189, 2010].
topic Kinship
Kin selection
Genetic relatedness
Chinese family
Culture
url http://www.currentzoology.org/paperdetail.asp?id=11466
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