This book supplies the evolutionary and genetic framework that Charles
Murray, towards the end of Coming Apart: The State of White America
1960-2010, predicts will one day explain revolutionary change in
American society. Murray's Coming Apart documents 50 years of changed
college admissions, government incentives, mating and migration patterns
that have wrought national divisions across indexes of marriage,
industriousness, honesty, and religiosity. The framework discussed is
life history evolution, a sub-discipline within evolutionary biology
singly capable of explaining why violent crime, property crime, low
marriage rates, father absence, early birth, low educational
achievement, low income, poverty, lack of religiosity and reduced
achievement striving will reliably co-occur as part of a complex. This
complex augments facultatively, developmentally and evolutionarily in
response to unpredictable and uncontrollable sources of mortality. The
uncertain tenure of life wrought by unpredictable and uncontrollable
mortality selects for a present-oriented use of bioenergetics resources
recognizable as the social ills of Fishtown, Murray's archetypal working
class community. In turn, the thirty years of life history literature
herein reviewed confirms the biological logic of elite intermarriage and
sequestration. The source of life history variation, policy
implications, and demography are discussed.