Science & technology | Anthropology

No hard feelings

Reconciliation after competition is more a masculine than a feminine trait

What’s a grand-slam championship between friends?

MEN have a long history of fighting with one another for dominance, but why such duels did not leave tribal unity in tatters and warriors less capable of working together to fend off attacks from predators and hostile clans remains a mystery. One common theory is that men more readily make up after fierce physical conflicts than do women. And an experiment run recently at Harvard University, by Joyce Benenson and Richard Wrangham, and published in Current Biology, suggests this may be true.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “No hard feelings”

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From the August 13th 2016 edition

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