Noted: To be ostracized from your tribe was a death sentence, says Charles Raison, a psychiatrist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who did not work on the study. “Literally they would die. There was no human way to live in isolation,” he says.
Noted: To be ostracized from your tribe was a death sentence, says Charles Raison, a psychiatrist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who did not work on the study. “Literally they would die. There was no human way to live in isolation,” he says.