Subject:
Re: [evol-psych] The Trouble With Self-Esteem
Date:
Wed, 6 Feb 2002 15:40:51 EST
From:
"Lynn O'Connor"
In a message dated 2/6/02 12:04:11 AM, [email protected] writes:
<< Throughout the evolutionary
history of man and primate, social status was a reproductive
advantage to males, but often required risky aggressive behavior
and violent retaliation to maintain it - the social status competition
is not a positive-sum game, so maintaining status means being
able to defeat or deter challenges to it. "High self-esteem" is a
high opinion of oneself, leading to risk-taking and aggressive
behavior because of confidence in one's abilities to succeed in the
face of adversity. >>
I'm not so sure of these absolute statements, in regard to great apes
including man. I believe Paul Gilbert and others have discussed the
importance of attraction, social attractiveness, rather than overt "I'm ready
to fight" aggression as a road to high status.
<< One would expect high self-esteem to be correlated with higher
social status, and/or with the pursuit of a "risk-taking" social
strategy independent of one's status. One would thus expect it to
be tied into aggression, and into retaliation against perceived
threats to one's status - these are the bread and water of a "high-
status male" approach to life. >>
Again, this seems to be based on the competitive (as opposed to cooperative)
perspective on life, and therefore may miss the "whole" picture for ours
along with other highly social species. The ability to attract others, to
create or maintain a cooperative environment may be central in the
maintenance of high status. de Waal will certainly be able to speak with
authority on this issue in regards to chimpanzees and bonobos, (i.e. I would
like to know what he thinks here). I can say that in my interviews with
zookeepers very familiar with their chimpanzee groups, I have heard on
several occassions of the alpha male maintaining his alpha position only
through the support of high ranking females. In one instance I heard about
the alpha "I don't think he even really knows how to fight, that's not what
he does.." Now I know this is very anecdotal so perhaps not worth much. But
it makes me wonder. In addition, I believe I read McGuire speak to this
issue, of high status in males being acheived and maintained by female
support, in some species of monkey. And I don't think in general that female
support is acheived through frequent expression of aggression.
In our species, the aggressive high risk-taking personality is by no means
necessarily the high status person. Perhaps we shouldn't assume that "high
status" and "high self-esteem", particularly as Baumeister seems to view
self-esteem, are equivalent. perhaps we have two categories of people who
would measure high on the Rosenberg and the Coopersmith, one group acheiving
high status and the other not.
Just some questions here.
Lynn
Lynn O'Connor, Ph.D.
The Wright Institute
2728 Durant Avenue
Berkeley CA 94704
phone: (510) 841-9230
(415) 821-4760
E mail: [email protected]