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Cargando... Arqueología de la mente : orígenes del arte, de la religión y de la ciencia (1996)por Steven Mithen
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. This book was the great breakthrough of the British archaeologist Steven Mithen (° 1960). He published it in 1996 and it immediately caused a stir in archaeological circles, but also far beyond. Indeed, Mithen was quite ambitious. He puts forward a bold hypothesis about how the human mind very gradually evolved, from about 2.5 million years ago to the great cognitive leap sometime between 100 and 50,000 years ago. Mithen makes extensive use of theories from the psychological sciences, but uses them to create his own view, which he tries to substantiate as much as possible with concrete archaeological findings. Out of necessity, his theory remains highly speculative, but it does offer an interesting, reasonably plausible explanation for the emergence of the "modern mind". And unlike many other developmental psychologists, anthropologists and philosophers, he is at least making an attempt to fit in the empirical material. But it remains a theory of a very speculative nature, and by now, probably outdated. More on that in my History account on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3759206386 Don't take this book too seriously. The author's speculations about the origins of the human mind are so simple that they almost offend the reader's intelligence. He shows us separate boxes in the beginning, then merges them together at the end and voila, the human mind! Readers beware: no evidence exists about the evolution of the mind. It's all imaginative speculation. Or not even imaginative, just simple, as in this book. Author believes that the human mind evolved by developing greater general intelligence, then developing specialized intelligences in technology, social relationships and natural history, then integrating these specialized inteligences into an improved general intelligence. Interesting and worth reading for those who are interested in evolution or theories of mind. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
El exito obtenido por la Historia del tiempo, de Stephen Hawking, propicio la creacion, en 1991, de esta coleccion de divulgacion cientifica que fue dirigida durante largo tiempo por dos personas de formacion humanistica: de ahi ciertas contaminaciones al inicio de la coleccion. Sin embargo, cuando Jose Manuel Sanchez Ron se hizo cargo de ella, dio un aprobado a la gestion anterior. En esta coleccion, quiza la mas ambiciosa de todas las de divulgacion cientifica que se editan en espanol, se han publicado obras de Stephen Jay Gould, Carl Sagan, lan Stewart, Edward O. Wilson, Antonio Damasio, Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza, Ilya Prigogine, John D. Barrow, Rita Levi Montalcini, Richard P. Feynman, Roger Penrose, Steven Weinberg, Rachel Carson, Francisco Garcia Olmedo, Francisco Yndurain o Jose Manuel Sanchez Ron. Como es y como trabaja la mente humana? Steven Mithen nos dice que no podemos comprendernos a nosotros mismos si no averiguamos como ha nacido y como ha evolucionado la inteligencia humana. Partiendo de este principio, el autor usa la arqueologia y la psicologia para contarnos la historia del nacimiento y la evolucion de la mente humana. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)599.938Natural sciences and mathematics Zoology Mammals Humans Genetics, evolution, development EvolutionClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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By the time The Prehistory of the Mind was written (1996) evolutionary psychology was already on its way to becoming a subject in its own right—psychologists drawing on archaeological evidence. Steven Mithen was an archaeologist doing all this the other way around: “Rather than having archaeology play the supporting role, I want it to set the agenda … Indeed, many archaeologists now feel confident that the time is ripe to move beyond asking questions about how these ancestors looked and behaved, to asking what was going on within their minds.”
The book spans the period from the time of our last common ancestor with other apes (about six million years ago or so); then the australopithecines (between six million and two); then the various Homo species: habilis, erectus, neanderthalensis, sapiens. And, broadly speaking, it divides this period into the three main phases Mithen claims the human mind has passed through: first, a generalised intelligence; then something more modular with specialised capabilities (one of those Swiss Army knives is a good way of picturing this); and finally, these modules partly coalescing into something more flexible, more cognitively fluid. On the one hand, some of the reasoning here (but it is only some of it) does have a decided house-of-cards feel to me—minds aren’t themselves fossilised, obviously, so you’re inferring. But on the other hand, what did impress me was just how much you can infer: from the fossilised skeletal remains themselves and footprints in fossilised mud; from ceremonial burials, the detritus of worksites and campfires; from artefacts of all kinds (weapons, implements, ornaments and tools for making other tools); from cave paintings, carvings and dwellings—from all these physical remains you can infer behaviour, and from behaviour to a surprising amount about the minds behind it.
Mithen’s book was an early attempt at this sort of reconstruction, so inevitably has by now become a bit out of date. A really interesting read though all the same. ( )