Fr. 172.00

Humans in the Making - In the Beginning was Technique

English · Hardback

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The human specificity can be described by verticality/bipedalism, technique use, articulated language, high cognitive capacities, complex society at three levels: body, mind, social. In this book, is proposed an evolutionary process that make better understand how such humanity could have emerged in the long time (more than 6 million years). The process is based on a very early necessity to use technic for surviving correlated with neoteny which impulsed a darwinian evolutionary process, with four distinguished punctuation described as neotenizations.

List of contents

Introduction ix
 
Part 1. Phylogenetics of the Emergence of Humans 1
 
Chapter 1. The Long and Slow Emergence of Humans 3
 
1.1. The difficulty of thinking about the beginning of the human being 3
 
1.2. The current challenge of human construction 7
 
Chapter 2. Technique and Becoming Human 9
 
2.1. A general definition of technique 9
 
2.2. Awareness and use of techniques 13
 
2.3. Technical posture in human phylogenesis 14
 
Chapter 3. Ethology: Technique and the Frog 17
 
3.1. The Goliath frog: a technician frog 17
 
3.2. Causes for the Goliath frog's gigantic size 18
 
Chapter 4. Neoteny: From Concept to Grand Narrative 19
 
4.1. Sources of the concept of neoteny in biology 19
 
4.2. Applying the concept of neoteny to the human being 20
 
4.3. Appropriation of the concept of neo-neoteny by the humanities 22
 
4.4. Neotenization: a "grand narrative" of the emergence of the human being 24
 
Chapter 5. Issues of Neoteny and Technique 27
 
5.1. A very old conception of human "disabilities" 27
 
5.2. The equipped human and neotenic human: two unrelated concepts 28
 
5.3. The philosophy of technique: a recent discipline 30
 
Chapter 6. Neoteny and Fetal Consciousness 33
 
6.1. Humans before birth 33
 
6.2. Humanity of the baby at birth 35
 
6.3. Ancient protection of the human baby at birth 36
 
Chapter 7. Inversion of the Analysis: The Lamarckian Bias 39
 
7.1. The ambiguous concept of adaptation 39
 
7.2. The uselessness of adaptation with the concept of natural selection 41
 
7.3. The use of a tool: a selective system 43
 
7.4. From tool-based technique to body-based technique 44
 
7.5. New evolutionary narratives 46
 
Chapter 8. Animal Behavior: Hermit Crabs and Their Shells 51
 
8.1. The hermit crab: a strange crustacean 51
 
8.2. The hermit crab: an oblivious technician? 52
 
Chapter 9. Prejudice About the Priority of Values 55
 
9.1. The human sense of morality: an exception? 55
 
9.2. Prioritizing cognitive ability in human characteristics 56
 
9.3. Role of technique in the emergence of language 58
 
Chapter 10. The First Phase of the Hominization Process 61
 
10.1. The conditions of access to humans through technique 61
 
10.2. Verticality as the first pre-human technical experience 66
 
10.3. The consequences of verticality 78
 
Chapter 11. Towards the Verticalization of the Genus Homo 83
 
11.1. Aging of technical achievements 83
 
11.2. Phylogenesis of characteristics and lineages 88
 
11.3. From Australopithecus to the genus Homo: the selection of technicality 94
 
Chapter 12. Technical Evolution and Neoteny of the Genus Homo 101
 
12.1. Homo habilis: a new bushy development? 101
 
12.2. Homo erectus, the advent of a technical humanity 106
 
12.3. Homo sapiens, the advent of inner life and the imaginary 113
 
Part 2. Technique and Human Ontology 127
 
Chapter 13. Technique as the Foundation of the Human Being 129
 
13.1. A look back at stone-knapping: the contribution of neuroscience 129
 
13.2. Explaining humans through technique: a conceptual error 132
 
13.3. Mental exaptation as a norm of human development 136
 
13.4. The relationship between bodily technique and tool technique 139
 
13.5. Variability of technical capabilities 145
 
Chapter 14. The Domestication of the Wolf: A Decisive Advantage? 149
 
14.1. The oldest domestication 149
 
14.2. The co-evolution of humans and

About the author










Michel J. F. Dubois: Referent expert in agriculture sciences in UniLaSalle polytechnic institute; associate scientist at LIED, Paris Diderot (Paris VII); President of Ingenium, french net of scientists in human sciences affiliated in higher engineer training institutions.

Summary

The human specificity can be described by verticality/bipedalism, technique use, articulated language, high cognitive capacities, complex society at three levels: body, mind, social. In this book, is proposed an evolutionary process that make better understand how such humanity could have emerged in the long time (more than 6 million years). The process is based on a very early necessity to use technic for surviving correlated with neoteny which impulsed a darwinian evolutionary process, with four distinguished punctuation described as neotenizations.

Product details

Authors Michael J. F. Dubois, Michel Dubois, Michel J F DuBois, Michel J. F. Dubois
Publisher Wiley & Sons
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 14.02.2021
 
EAN 9781786305848
ISBN 978-1-78630-584-8
No. of pages 272
Dimensions 165 mm x 23 mm x 236 mm
Weight 552 g
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > General, dictionaries

Psychologie, Kognitionswissenschaft, Evolution, Life Sciences, Psychology, Biowissenschaften, evolution des menschen, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Science, Kognitionsentwicklung, Human Evolution

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