He ended by appealing to Americans cultural and social instincts to improve their situation.
2.
Extroversion gives way slowly to introversion, and more definitely social instincts begin to play an increasing role ."
3.
Governments, he claims, are based on both this natural social instinct and on the express or implied consent of the governed.
4.
Like chimpanzees and bonobos, humans have subtle and flexible social instincts, allowing them to form extended families, lifelong friendships, and political alliances.
5.
The concept of " social instincts " proposed by Charles Darwin, the " faculties " of Henri Bergson and the isomorphs of gestalt psychologist Wolfgang Kohler are also arguably related to archetypes.
6.
He suggests that Darwinian biology sustains conservative social thought by showing how the human capacity for spontaneous order arises from social instincts and a moral sense shaped by natural selection in human evolutionary history.
7.
Critics of evolutionary psychology have sometimes challenged its theoretical underpinnings, saying that humans never developed powerful social instincts through natural selection and that the hypotheses of evolutionary psychologists are merely just-so-stories.
8.
Goring went on to argue that one of the three measures in which to combat crime was to " regulate the reproduction of those degrees of constitutional qualities-feeble-minded, inebriety, epilepsy, social instinct, etc ".
9.
Scientific research on other animals that tends to avoid calling on their social instincts, in the name of objectivity, may in fact drive them away and actually induce an avoidance of humans that then is taken to be an objective and independent fact about them.
10.
The aid we feel impelled to give to the helpless is mainly an incidental result of the instinct of sympathy, which was originally acquired as part of the social instincts, but subsequently rendered, in the manner previously indicated, more tender and more widely diffused.