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The organization of any social organism automatically evokes a
division of labor among the members of the social group. Among higher
animals the sexes have different roles in reproduction, and the
evolution of behavioral roles in the sexes may have resulted from
differences in the controls of their respective metabolisms. The young
in any social group are different from the mature members, and the young
and the mature members differ again from the old and the very old in the
group. Differences in behavioral activities, whether work or play, arise
from biological differences although they may be accelerated by other
considerations. The problem of childbearing, for instance, is a division
of labor which is prescribed by the differences in sex, but
food-gathering and the consumption of food are biological absolutes. The
problem of survival in hostile surroundings is a fundamental work
activity around which divisions of labor occur for purely biological
reasons. The social groupings of the baboon, for instance, indicate that
certain social behavior is evoked when baboons sense that there may be
trouble in their vicinity. As a matter of fact, baboons are known to
behave cooperatively with elephants against their common enemy the lion.
Increases in efficiency in the social groupings are sufficient reason to
consider the long-term stability of man in groups. Since man's evolution
must involve lower forms, as distinct from hominoids, and since man
shares social organizations and social behavior in a primary biological
social unit, it seems reasonable to think that social groupings are a
biological property not just of man but of most higher animals.
As we have noted, man differs from all other animals in his highly
developed language and technology. Early language was probably born out
of animal communication. The variety of facial expressions, body
postures, hand signals, grunts and noises, and other kinds of signals
that are not truly language but which convey information among the group
form a very important part of group social behavior. The simple acts of
smiling to indicate approval and of frowning to indicate disapproval
have significant effects on behavioral responses. The level of animal
communication man shares with most of the higher animals is a set of
signals, a set of noises, facial expressions, grunts, and postures that
are group-related and that are understood by the group.
Early technology was probably related primarily to food procurement,
i.e., the implements of hunting, gathering and preparing food, skinning
and cutting tools, scrapers and clubs, and similar kinds of primitive
tools. The hunting camp may have been the first technical and
architectural method by which man was adapted to group living. Along
with his new hunting technology, man probably used caves or similar
natural enclaves that could be made habitable and secure with minimum
technical skill. As the group became more skilled at hunting and at
defending itself, thus lessening the need for a secure habitat,
structures such as lean-tos were probably located within easy access of
the food source.
There is evidence that a significant evolutionary step in the
development of man occurred when he moved to the grasslands to hunt.
Under these circumstances he became more vulnerable to the large animals
of prey, but by then he may have developed a technology sufficient to
repel or to kill predators, and this, together with his security of
numbers, would give him a wider choice of location for his hunting camps
and later for his villages. There is some evidence that fire was used by
Homo erectus as a weapon to frighten or kill animals as well as to cook
and prepare meat.
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