On the Evolution of Sport

Sports have received little attention from evolutionary biologists. I argue that sport began as a way for men to develop the skills needed in primitive hunting and warfare, then developed to act primarily as a lek where athletes display and male spectators evaluate the qualities of potential allies...

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Main Author: Michael P. Lombardo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-01-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000101
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author Michael P. Lombardo
author_facet Michael P. Lombardo
author_sort Michael P. Lombardo
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description Sports have received little attention from evolutionary biologists. I argue that sport began as a way for men to develop the skills needed in primitive hunting and warfare, then developed to act primarily as a lek where athletes display and male spectators evaluate the qualities of potential allies and rivals. This hypothesis predicts that (1) the most popular modern male sports require the skills needed for success in male-male physical competition and primitive hunting and warfare; (2) champion male athletes obtain high status and thereby reproductive opportunities in ways that parallel those gained by successful primitive hunters and warriors; (3) men pay closer attention than do women to male sports so they can evaluate potential allies and rivals; and (4) male sports became culturally more important when opportunities to evaluate potential allies and rivals declined as both the survival importance of hunting and the proportion of men who experience combat decreased. The characteristics of primitive and modern sports are more consistent with these predictions than those generated by intersexual sexual selection theories of sport.
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spelling doaj.art-ad52201252fc4036a2a7fd087175fb9b2024-02-18T16:06:00ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492012-01-011010.1177/14747049120100010110.1177_147470491201000101On the Evolution of SportMichael P. LombardoSports have received little attention from evolutionary biologists. I argue that sport began as a way for men to develop the skills needed in primitive hunting and warfare, then developed to act primarily as a lek where athletes display and male spectators evaluate the qualities of potential allies and rivals. This hypothesis predicts that (1) the most popular modern male sports require the skills needed for success in male-male physical competition and primitive hunting and warfare; (2) champion male athletes obtain high status and thereby reproductive opportunities in ways that parallel those gained by successful primitive hunters and warriors; (3) men pay closer attention than do women to male sports so they can evaluate potential allies and rivals; and (4) male sports became culturally more important when opportunities to evaluate potential allies and rivals declined as both the survival importance of hunting and the proportion of men who experience combat decreased. The characteristics of primitive and modern sports are more consistent with these predictions than those generated by intersexual sexual selection theories of sport.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000101
spellingShingle Michael P. Lombardo
On the Evolution of Sport
Evolutionary Psychology
title On the Evolution of Sport
title_full On the Evolution of Sport
title_fullStr On the Evolution of Sport
title_full_unstemmed On the Evolution of Sport
title_short On the Evolution of Sport
title_sort on the evolution of sport
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000101
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelplombardo ontheevolutionofsport