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E-raamat: Human Evolutionary Transition: From Animal Intelligence to Culture

  • Formaat: 296 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2023
  • Kirjastus: Princeton University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780691240763
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 38,67 €*
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  • Formaat: 296 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2023
  • Kirjastus: Princeton University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780691240763

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A major new theory of why human intelligence has not evolved in other species

The Human Evolutionary Transition offers a unified view of the evolution of intelligence, presenting a bold and provocative new account of how animals and humans have followed two powerful yet very different evolutionary paths to intelligence. This incisive book shows how animals rely on robust associative mechanisms that are guided by genetic information, which enable animals to sidestep complex problems in learning and decision making but ultimately limit what they can learn. Humans embody an evolutionary transition to a different kind of intelligence, one that relies on behavioral and mental flexibility. The book argues that flexibility is useless to most animals because they lack sufficient opportunities to learn new behavioral and mental skills. Humans find these opportunities in lengthy childhoods and through culture.

Blending the latest findings in fields ranging from psychology to evolutionary anthropology, The Human Evolutionary Transition draws on computational analyses of the problems organisms face, extensive overviews of empirical data on animal and human learning, and mathematical modeling and computer simulations of hypotheses about intelligence. This compelling book demonstrates that animal and human intelligence evolved from similar selection pressures while identifying bottlenecks in evolution that may explain why human-like intelligence is so rare.

Arvustused

"A new and compelling evolutionary stance on comparative cognition." * Choice * "The Human Evolutionary Transition is a highly valuable contribution to the field that will reward careful study."---Ronald J. Planer, The British Society for the Philosophy of Science

Acknowledgments vii
1 Challenges to the Evolution of Intelligence
1(11)
2 Seven Hypotheses
12(14)
3 Learning Behavioral Sequences
26(25)
4 Genetic Guidance of Learning
51(9)
5 Sources of Information
60(13)
6 Social Learning
73(13)
7 Can Animals Think?
86(27)
8 The Nature of Animal Intelligence
113(11)
9 Uniquely Human
124(17)
10 The Transition
141(8)
11 How and Why Does Thinking Work?
149(18)
12 Acquisition and Transmission of Sequential Information
167(10)
13 Social Transmission of Mental Skills
177(14)
14 Cooperation
191(7)
15 The Power of Cultural Evolution
198(11)
16 Why Only Humans?
209(18)
References 227(48)
Index 275
Magnus Enquist is professor of ethology and director of the Centre for Cultural Evolution at Stockholm University. Stefano Ghirlanda is professor of psychology at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York. Johan Lind is associate professor of ethology and deputy director of the Centre for Cultural Evolution at Stockholm University.