I quoted to you from about 5 different sources. Go back and try again…….
Also, lots of scientific research is contested but the book contains about 7–10 pages of footnotes per chapter, referencing the research of others from a variety of disciplines. Eisler is a systems scientist. Her discipline draws “from a trans-disciplinary database, it applies this approach to a wide-ranging exploration of how humans think, feel, and behave individually and in groups. Its sources include cross-cultural anthropological and sociological surveys,[3] and studies of individual societies[4] as well as writings by historians, analyses of laws, moral codes, art, literature, scholarship from psychology, economics, education, political science, philosophy, religious studies, archaeology, the study of myths and legends; and data from more recent fields such as primatology, neuroscience, chaos theory, systems self-organizing theory, non-linear dynamics, gender studies, women’s studies, and men’s studies.”