In what will you “see a relationship between A and C”? On the basis of what will you be calculating the likelihoods?
Ideally, you would have some record. I’m not an expert in evo psych, so I can’t confidently say what sort of evidence they actually rely on. I was hoping more to express how I would interpret a story as a formal hypothesis.
I get the impression that a major technique in evolutionary psychology is making use of the selection effect due to natural selection: if you think that A is heritable, and that different values of A have different levels of reproductive usefulness, then in steady state the distribution of A in the population gives you information about the historic relationship between A and reproductive usefulness, without even measuring relationship between A and C in this generation. So you can ask the question “what’s the chance of seeing the cluster of human anger that we have if there’s not a relationship between A and reproduction?” and get answers that are useful enough to focus most of your attention on the “anger is reproductively useful” hypothesis.
Ideally, you would have some record. I’m not an expert in evo psych, so I can’t confidently say what sort of evidence they actually rely on. I was hoping more to express how I would interpret a story as a formal hypothesis.
I get the impression that a major technique in evolutionary psychology is making use of the selection effect due to natural selection: if you think that A is heritable, and that different values of A have different levels of reproductive usefulness, then in steady state the distribution of A in the population gives you information about the historic relationship between A and reproductive usefulness, without even measuring relationship between A and C in this generation. So you can ask the question “what’s the chance of seeing the cluster of human anger that we have if there’s not a relationship between A and reproduction?” and get answers that are useful enough to focus most of your attention on the “anger is reproductively useful” hypothesis.