Description

Book Synopsis

The Wrong Ape for Early Human Origins examines ways in which the chimpanzee referential model has exerted a primary influence on evolutionary theory, dominating portraits of proto- and early human social life, and in the broader sense, of human nature itself. Evidence on which this model is based is revisited, along with new cross-disciplinary findings that point to alternative scenarios for hominin phylogeny, ecology and subsistence, primeval kinship, cognition and language, and the respective roles played by aggression and cooperation as evolutionary drivers. Recent advances in phylogenetics, evolutionary biology, and new additions to the fossil record are rendering linear, monotypic models obsolete. Contemporary theories on species divergence and change over time are shifting attention from ancient genotypes to factors that influence gene expression, and from innate prescriptive behaviors to epigenesis and the capacity for behavioral plasticity. This broader platform has the potential to fundamentally revise current notions about the basic nature, phenotypic traits, and lifeways of ancestral humans. It informs a different profile of our progenitors—one that reflects greater ecological bandwidth, reliance on creative niche construction, and hominin agency in the structuring of ancient reproductive and social groups.



Table of Contents

Introduction: In the Shadow of Pan

Chapter 1The Ghosts of Primates Past

Chapter 2The Hominin Twilight Zone

Chapter 3Kith and Kin

Chapter 4The Hominin Cognitive Niche

Chapter 5Taming the Brute

Conclusion

The Wrong Ape for Early Human Origins: The

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    A Hardback by M. Kay Martin

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      View other formats and editions of The Wrong Ape for Early Human Origins: The by M. Kay Martin

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 21/04/2023
      ISBN13: 9781666923872, 978-1666923872
      ISBN10: 1666923877

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The Wrong Ape for Early Human Origins examines ways in which the chimpanzee referential model has exerted a primary influence on evolutionary theory, dominating portraits of proto- and early human social life, and in the broader sense, of human nature itself. Evidence on which this model is based is revisited, along with new cross-disciplinary findings that point to alternative scenarios for hominin phylogeny, ecology and subsistence, primeval kinship, cognition and language, and the respective roles played by aggression and cooperation as evolutionary drivers. Recent advances in phylogenetics, evolutionary biology, and new additions to the fossil record are rendering linear, monotypic models obsolete. Contemporary theories on species divergence and change over time are shifting attention from ancient genotypes to factors that influence gene expression, and from innate prescriptive behaviors to epigenesis and the capacity for behavioral plasticity. This broader platform has the potential to fundamentally revise current notions about the basic nature, phenotypic traits, and lifeways of ancestral humans. It informs a different profile of our progenitors—one that reflects greater ecological bandwidth, reliance on creative niche construction, and hominin agency in the structuring of ancient reproductive and social groups.



      Table of Contents

      Introduction: In the Shadow of Pan

      Chapter 1The Ghosts of Primates Past

      Chapter 2The Hominin Twilight Zone

      Chapter 3Kith and Kin

      Chapter 4The Hominin Cognitive Niche

      Chapter 5Taming the Brute

      Conclusion

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