We provide critical comments on a recent paper by Barash (1972) in which he describes the seating preferences and frequencies of looking up by students in a cafeteria. While we do not quarrel with his data, we reject the evolutionary assumptions and ethological identifications which are explicitly introduced throughout Barash's paper.
BarashD. P.Human ethology: Personal space revisited. Environment and Behavior, 1973, 5, 67–72.
3.
JensenD. D.Polythetic operationism and the phylogeny of learning. In CorningW.RatnerS. (Eds.), Chemistry of learning. New York: Plenum Press, 1967. Pp. 43–55.