Poster Session I
Project Type
Poster
Faculty Mentor’s Full Name
Mark Heirigs
Faculty Mentor’s Department
Sociology and Criminology
Additional Mentor
Kylie Mathews; kylie.mathews@mso.umt.edu
Abstract / Artist's Statement
The debate over whether children should be introduced to hunting is centered on ethical concerns regarding desensitized aggression. However, using the Hunter-Gatherer neurotype associated with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, this paper argues that early-onset hunting has significant neurocognitive benefits when conducted with proper education and a mentored framework.
Drawing on evolutionary psychiatry and neurobiology, this theoretical analysis first reviews relevant literature in both fields and then distinguishes between affective aggression (rage-based violence) and predatory aggression (a goal-oriented, cold-blooded cognitive state). I suggest that traits condemned as maladaptive in the four walls of the modern classroom (i.e. distractibility and hyperfocus) are actually the precise evolutionary weaponry of the Hunter-Gather neurotype and are perfectly suited for the context of the hunt. Furthermore, the current analysis explores how the mentorship aspect in hunting education provides a foundation for emotional regulation and prefrontal cortex development. By awakening primal neural circuits designed for survival, regulated hunting acts as a neuro-developmental catalyst, rewiring behavioral deficits into cognitive assets. This process acts as a powerful intervention for attention allocation and impulse control. Now, while critics link early exposure to animal killing with future antisocial pathology, this analysis demonstrates that the structural and social context of regulated hunting actually prevents desensitization. Ultimately, the paper demonstrates that hunting education does not foster violence but rather enhances executive function and resilience by aligning adolescent neurology with its evolutionary purpose.
Category
Social Sciences
The Predatory Paradox: Evolutionary Neurobiology, ADHD, and the Developmental Impact of Early Hunting Education
UC South Ballroom
The debate over whether children should be introduced to hunting is centered on ethical concerns regarding desensitized aggression. However, using the Hunter-Gatherer neurotype associated with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, this paper argues that early-onset hunting has significant neurocognitive benefits when conducted with proper education and a mentored framework.
Drawing on evolutionary psychiatry and neurobiology, this theoretical analysis first reviews relevant literature in both fields and then distinguishes between affective aggression (rage-based violence) and predatory aggression (a goal-oriented, cold-blooded cognitive state). I suggest that traits condemned as maladaptive in the four walls of the modern classroom (i.e. distractibility and hyperfocus) are actually the precise evolutionary weaponry of the Hunter-Gather neurotype and are perfectly suited for the context of the hunt. Furthermore, the current analysis explores how the mentorship aspect in hunting education provides a foundation for emotional regulation and prefrontal cortex development. By awakening primal neural circuits designed for survival, regulated hunting acts as a neuro-developmental catalyst, rewiring behavioral deficits into cognitive assets. This process acts as a powerful intervention for attention allocation and impulse control. Now, while critics link early exposure to animal killing with future antisocial pathology, this analysis demonstrates that the structural and social context of regulated hunting actually prevents desensitization. Ultimately, the paper demonstrates that hunting education does not foster violence but rather enhances executive function and resilience by aligning adolescent neurology with its evolutionary purpose.