QuoteFor this reason only women were used as subjects, Dr Wright said.
Supplements were given to elevate their testosterone levels temporarily and the women conducted a series of tests to measure levels of co-operation.
This isn't a particularly considered response, but when I read that, I had to think for a moment if that was acceptable.
But it does raise some interesting issues.
On the one hand, it suggests that humans are innately co-operative and it's only the evolutionary adaptation, giving some men excess testerone, that makes some men behave the way they do.
But on the other hand, perhaps more validly, men are as much part of humanity as women. Testerone, along with it's effects are as human as any other factor.
But it does raise an interesting question of how significant the presence of excess testerone is on human behaviour generally.
Could be a rather daunting prospect if some authorities try to modify the testerone levels in populations generally, to control violence.