Description
Book SynopsisIn The Insect-Populated Mind, author David Spooner proposes a close connection between aspects of insect evolution and the human intellect. By examining seemingly disparate subjects, such as entomology, language, theory, genetics, astronomy, literature, and music, Spooner proves that synthesis is indeed possible. Once this fusion is achieved, the human species can be seen as connected not just to the great apes, but also via consciousness to metamorphic insects. While considering Richard Dawkins'' and Susan Blackmore''s expositions of memes, Spooner suggests that the concept of memes remains a peripheral understanding of religion and the arts. The book also presents arguments on the roots and nature of the mind in the work of Daniel Dennett and Steven Pinker.
Table of ContentsChapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Part I: Ape, Insect, and Human; The Cosmic Cultural Faculty in Relation to the Meme Machine; Shakespeare and the Nature of Verbal and Musical Language; Schopenhauer, Music and the The Order of Things; From Apuleius to A.R. Wallace: Evolutionary Theo Chapter 3 Part II: From the Big Bang to Life on Earth; Insects and the Mind: The Poetry of Damaso Alonso; A.R. Wallace's Swallowtails: Mimicry and Evolution; Of Cells and Mutation; Ancient and Medieval Cosmology; The Spread of the Fourfold Constant into Ninet Chapter 4 Appendix Chapter 5 Bibliography Chapter 6 Index