Renowned evolutionary anthropologist Professor Robin Dunbar explains how the very distant past underpins all of our current behaviours, and how we can best utilise that knowledge.
How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
Also huffduffed as…
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
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How Many Friends Does One Person Need?
Possibly related…
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Robin Dunbar talks with Guardian Science Weekly podcast about his new book “How Many Frinds Does One Person Need”
Robin Dunbar (of the Dunbar Number) chats with Alok Jah of the Guardian (along with others) about friendships and the Dunbar number, which is the theoretical limit of viable stable relationships one person can have.
Dunbuar’s new book, "How Many Friends Does One Person Need" is also out and discussed.
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#352: The Ghost of Bobby Dunbar
In 1912 a four year-old boy named Bobby Dunbar went missing in a swamp in Louisiana. Eight months later, he was found in the hands of a wandering handyman in Mississippi (the picture at left was taken just days later). Reporter Tal McThenia co-authored a book about the Bobby Dunbar story called A Case For Solomon.
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Robin Ince’s Bad Book Club
Robin Ince is a comedian and writer. For the last two years he has been the host of Nine Lessons and Carols for Godless People. His Radio 4 show with Professor Brian Cox, The Infinite Monkey Cage, has just finished it’s second series. Robin has recently written a book, Robin Ince’s Bad Book Club, which casts a critical eye over Don Estelle’s autobiography, tales of giant killer crabs, and romance novels set in the Antarctic.
Tagged with skepticism reading books
