Medical Hypotheses, an Elsevier publication, has announced the winner of the 2006 David Horrobin Prize for medical theory. Written by Judith Rich-Harris, author of The Nurture Assumption and No Two Alike, the article, "Parental selection: a third selection process in the evolution of human hairlessness and skin color" was judged to best embody the spirit of the journal. The £1,000 prize, launched in 2004, is awarded annually and named in honour of Dr. David Horrobin, the renowned researcher, biotechnology expert and founder of Medical Hypotheses (http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/623059/description#description), who died in 2003.
Harris' paper describes Stone Age societies in which the mother of a newborn had to decide whether she had the resources to nurture her baby. The newborn's appearance probably influenced whether the mother kept or abandoned it. An attractive baby was more likely to be kept and reared.
Harris' theory is that this kind of parental selection may have been an important force in evolution. If Stone Age people believed that hairless babies were more attractive than hairy ones, this could explain why humans are the only apes lacking a coat of fur. Harris suggests that Neanderthals must have been furry in order to survive the Ice Age. Our species would have seen them as "animals" and potential prey. Harris’ hypothesis continues that Neanderthals went extinct because human ancestors ate them.
This year's prize judge was Professor Jonathan Rees FMedSci of Edinburgh University, Scotland – co-discoverer of the 'red hair gene'. Professor Rees said: "This paper is an excellent example of the kind of bold thinking and theorizing which David Horrobin intended to encourage when he began Medical Hypotheses. I hope that Judith Rich Harris' idea provokes debate and further investigation of this topic." Source : Elsevier
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Wow, this is one of the best April Fool's Day stories... wait, it's not April 1st... this is SERIOUS? A guy makes up a story about early human moms deciding to let their babies starve because they were too hairy, and that's why we are so un-furry? Okay, fine, something to think about... but to give a reward (with a considerable financial component) for such a "just so" story?
Looks like a job for the little boy who cried, "The emperor has no clothes!" Where's the medical application? Where's a shred of evidence or any means of testing? I should think any "bold thinking" in science should have at least a bit of that sort of thing.
Unboxed Thinker asked:
> Where's a shred of evidence or any means of testing? I should think
> any "bold thinking" in science should have at least a bit of that sort of thing.
I should think that any critic of a new hypothesis would at least check out the journal paper first, rather than relying on an abbreviated press release. That's where one would look for shreds of evidence or means of testing (both of which are not easy to come by for specific evolutionary hypotheses). The full text is here:
http://xchar.home.att.net/n2a/medhyp.htm
Bearing in mind that we are the only unfurry primates, what evidence and means of testing are there for other explanations?
Note, by the way, that the main point of the paper is not just fur, but the proposal of a third influence on evolution in addition to Darwin's two (adaptation and sexual selection): parental selection. Is that implausible, given what we know about scarcity of resources, prevalence of infanticide, and the skewed male/female ratio in places like China and India.
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