000 02549nam a22003737a 4500
008 220309b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780500050811
037 _cGifted
_nVijayan Kannampilly
041 _aEnglish
082 _a153
_bMIT/PR
100 _aSteven Mithen
245 _aPREHISTORY OF MIND
_b: Search for Origins of Art, Religion and Science
250 _a1
260 _aLondon
_bThames and Hudson
_c1996
300 _g288
500 _aThis is an exhilarating intellectual performance, in the tradition of Roger Penrose's The Emperor's New Mind and Steven Pinker's The Language Instinct. On the way to showing how the world of our ancient ancestors shaped our modern modular mind, Steven Mithen shares one provocative insight after another as he answers a series of fascinating questions: were our brains hard-wired in the Pleistocene era by the needs of hunter-gatherers? When did religious beliefs first emerge? Why were the first paintings made by humankind so technically accomplished and expressive? What can the sexual habits of chimpanzees tell us about the prehistory of the modern mind? This was the first archaeological account to support the new modular concept of the mind. The concept, promulgated by cognitive and evolutionary psychologists, views the mind as a collection of specialized intelligences or 'cognitive domains',somewhat like a Swiss army knife with its specialized blades and tools. Arguing that only archaeology can answer many of the key questions raised by this new concept, Steven Mithen delineates a three-phase sequence for the mind's evolution over six million years - from early Homo in Africa to the ice-age Neanderthals to our modern modular minds. Here is an intriguing and challenging explanation of what it means to be human, a bold theory about the origins and nature of the mind.
650 _aPsychology- Mind Evolution
650 _aCognition and Memory
650 _aPsychology- Mind Evolution
650 _aThought and Thinking
650 _aBrain-Evolution
650 _aGenetic psychology.
650 _aCognition. Brain - Evolution.
650 _aSocial evolution.
650 _a Art, Prehistoric.
650 _aLanguage and languages -Origin.
650 _a Evolution (Biology) Human information processing.
650 _a Human evolution- Reason -Biological Evolution
650 _aHominidae -primate family-Evolution- Zoology
650 _aMental Processes-Cognition -Cultural Evolution
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999 _c186557
_d186557