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Parenting

Q&A with "People Watcher" and behaviour expert Desmond Morris: please post your questions here

58 replies

HelenMumsnet · 01/11/2010 13:44

We're delighted to welcome zoologist and ethologist Desmond Morris to Mumsnet for a Q&A session.

Desmond is the author of many bestselling books on human and animal behaviour, including People Watching, Naked Ape and Babywatching.

In a recent interview with The Guardian, Desmond caused some controversy by saying he thinks TV is as good for toddlers as books.

Desmond's latest book, Child: How Children think, learn and grow in the early years explores the world of children from the ages of two to five, as they emerge from toddlerdom and start out on the long road to independence. Age-by-stage profiles describe growth patterns, social and emotional behavior, physical and cognitive skills.  

Please post your questions to Desmond on this thread before the end of Friday 5th November, and we'll post up his answers the following week.

OP posts:
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TrillianAstra · 01/11/2010 13:56

My question: tell us of a time when the beliefs/assumptions that you grew up with were really dramatically challenged or changed. Did this make you question other beliefs that you had previously taken for granted?

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jonicomelately · 01/11/2010 14:59

I don't know whether this is off-topic but I'd love Desmond to explain competitive mothers to me. What makes perfectly ordinary women go mental develop such traits once they have children?

Thank you.

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LeninGhoul · 01/11/2010 15:53

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asdx2 · 01/11/2010 17:12

Do you have any explanations for autistic behaviours such as lack of eye contact, flapping and spinning?
Are these behaviours displayed in the animal world and what are the consequences?

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longgrasswhispers · 01/11/2010 17:51

I'd just like to know how to foster confidence and self-belief in a child, no matter what his/her ability and circumstances. How to give them the tools to stand up for themselves as adults and to minimise the possibility of them have any crippling self-esteem issues.....

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jonicomelately · 01/11/2010 19:52

Great question longgrasswhispers. I'll be interested in the answer to that one.

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edam · 01/11/2010 20:01

What's your take on evolutionary biology and claims that male and female characteristics and roles are pre-ordained and innate rather than a social construct?

(E.g. that daft study that said girls like pink because in hunter-gatherer days they would have searched for red berries - researchers didn't bother to check whether 'pink is for girls' held true over time, which it doesn't.)

What do you think of Elaine Morgan and The Descent of Woman? Do you agree that evolutionary theorists had missed a trick by not thinking about evolution and the female of the species?

Also interested in your take on How Babies Think - a book that I really enjoyed because it's not written in that terrible patronising expert-talking-down-to-mothers manner.

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Octaviapink · 01/11/2010 20:25

I'd be interested in the divide between evolutionary psychologists and neuroscientists that seems to be growing, and the neuroscience claim that new theories about neuroplasticity are turning evolutionary psychologists into dinosaurs.

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LeninGuy · 01/11/2010 20:42

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LeninGuy · 01/11/2010 20:50

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wannabeglam · 01/11/2010 21:11

How do you deal with 7, 8, 9 year olds. Not much info out there about them, loads about babies and toddlers.

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edam · 01/11/2010 22:17

Hey Lenin, sorry was off doing stuff. Glad you found more info on Elaine. I came across her book on my mother's shelves when I was a teenager (mother's degree is in zoology) and it was a blinding flash of realisation that everything I'd read about evolution was from a male point of view - women were only mentioned as extras and our evolution only mentioned in terms of developing characteristics that appealed to men.

No idea whether the aquatic ape theory is correct or not, don't know enough about evolutionary theory to judge. But thought it would be interesting to ask Desmond.

And whether or not she's right about the aquatic ape, she is damn right that evolutionary theorists at the point when she wrote her first book had forgotten that the human race is not entirely male. It's that old problem of people - men but women too - assuming that the default human is a male.

Sadly evolutionary biology seems to have swung back and become even more gendered in the past couple of decades, certainly from whatever parts of it make it into mainstream discourse in the lay press.

She's also a very fine screenwriter. Her series on Lloyd George was especially moving (And explained why my Dad sang 'my mother knew Lloyd George occasionally in the bath', being Welsh and all. Although I'm sure my Granny didn't. Grin).

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LeninGuido · 01/11/2010 22:20

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DeborahDeborah · 01/11/2010 22:27

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TheCrackFox · 01/11/2010 22:40

Edam, have you read "Can any Mother Help Me"?. Is Elaine one of the women featured in it, it seems to ring a bell but I have given my copy away so can't refer.

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edam · 01/11/2010 22:43

No, I haven't, but wouldn't that be too early for Elaine Morgan anyway? (Have a vague idea it's 1950s or earlier but could be wrong about that.)

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Al1son · 01/11/2010 22:46

Are we right to put our children in playground situations for at least an hour of each school day and leave them largely unsupervised and vulnerable to barbaric behaviour which includes turning on and abusing the weakest member of the group?

Are the survival skills these children are expected to learn in this unnatural situation really going to be of the great benefit in later life we are led to believe or are we just herding children into potentially damaging situations for our own convenience?

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TheCrackFox · 01/11/2010 22:53

Edam, I have just googled her and she was born in 1920 and I am absolutely convinced it is her. I loved that book, I found her incredibly inspiring, I might just treat myself to an early Christmas present and buy "The Descent of Woman".

{sorry for hi-jack folks]

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LeninGuido · 01/11/2010 22:55

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edam · 01/11/2010 23:06

Ooh, that's interesting, CrackFox. Haven't read Can Any Mother but have wanted to, thanks for reminding me and giving me an extra reason.

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Al1son · 02/11/2010 08:36

LeninGuido I definitely see benefit of the social environment to children's learning (there's masses of theory to back it up) but not in the context of the playground where so many children of the same age are herded together and left to torment each other. Like you say the mixed social environments of the past or in other countries seem me to be more natural and supportive of children's well-being.

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Miggsie · 02/11/2010 10:35

I'd love to know if Desmond sees very large schools as unnatural environments for young people to grow up in? Are large schools good or bad for emotional development?

We see a lot of comments on MN about the smaller class sizes...is it natural to herd great groups of people about simply becuase they are the same age?

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lucysnowe · 02/11/2010 15:47

Desmond, do you really think that men become gay because of something stunting their hormones at puberty - as this link suggests?

www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-501005/What-makes-people-gay-straight-Desmond-Morris.html

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BoffinMum · 02/11/2010 18:14

Two questions that have been bugging me for years:

Why do toddlers stand so near the telly when they are watching it?

Is smacking a normal mammalian behaviour?

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LeninGuido · 02/11/2010 18:34

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