Traitorfish
The Tighnahulish Kid
"High level" in the sense of a high level of abstraction. Possibly they are "low-level" in the sense of representing some sort of shared psychological substrate, but the point is that these commonalities wouldn't be visible at a granular level, they'd require pretty abstract comparisons. You wouldn't realistically be able to point to a specific cow behaviour and a specific baboon behaviour and assert that these are identical behaviours, cows and baboons are just too dissimilar, even at the level of something as basically mechanical as eating and shitting! To draw an identification between cow behaviour and baboon behaviour, you'd have to develop a theoretical mechanism that plausibly explains both behaviours, and while I'm wholly prepared to accept that is possible and even useful, it's going to be at such a level of abstraction that it's hard to see how we can then translate that back into some specific insight about human behaviour."low-level", on the contrary, the commonalities comes from common roots and differs in higher-level. And I would agree about the "staggeringly-obvious", because that's the whole point, save for the fact that some people actually deny this obviousness - just see how it's disputed that humans are territorial animals.
For instance, you give the example of territorialism- but cows aren't territorial. They're just... not, either as individuals or as group. So whatever common psychological substrate you might find between a non-territorial animal like cows and a territorial animal like cats isn't going to tell you anything about whether humans are territorial.
(I had to switch from baboons to cats because it turns out baboons aren't really territorial, either.)
I don't think so, no. What makes you say that?Isn't this just repackaged Malthus?