Many Minds

Origins of the kiss

Feb 12, 2026
Matilda Brindle, an evolutionary biologist at Oxford who studies the origins of animal behavior, explores why humans kiss. She traces kissing across primates, considers functions like mate assessment, microbiome sharing and pre‑mastication roots. The conversation highlights deep evolutionary roots, cultural variation, and surprising methods used to study this intimate, risky behavior.
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ANECDOTE

Primatologist Nearly Kissed By A Primate

  • Matilda recounts a primate once attempting to kiss her during fieldwork and notes that interspecific attempts aren't counted as kisses.
  • She uses the episode to illustrate why the definition requires intraspecific contact.
INSIGHT

Kissing Goes Back Millions Of Years

  • Brindle's phylogenetic reconstruction shows kissing in nearly all large apes and some monkeys, dating to 16.9–21.5 million years ago.
  • That ancient root implies humans and many primates inherited kissing from a common ancestor.
INSIGHT

Neanderthals Likely Knew How To Kiss

  • The analysis assigns a high probability that Neanderthals kissed and possibly exchanged saliva with Homo sapiens.
  • Combined with interbreeding evidence, this suggests intimate contact, including kissing, occurred between species.
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