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External Lecture | Dietrich Stout | The Evolution of Technology

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Content provided by Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture, Emory College, Emory Center for Mind, and Culture (CMBC). All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture, Emory College, Emory Center for Mind, and Culture (CMBC) or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.

Keynote Address | The Evolution of Culture and Technology Mini Symposium | Tel Aviv University

The simple fact of tool-making no longer provides a sharp dividing line between “Man the Tool-Maker” and the rest of the animal world. It is now clear that many other species make and use tools, and that distinctly human technology emerged through a long, multi-lineal, and meandering evolutionary process rather than the crossing of some critical threshold. However, it would be a mistake to underestimate the transformative effects of technology on everything from our hands and brains to our reproductive strategies and social organization. Understanding this complex and contingent evolutionary history will require simultaneous attention to particularistic details and more generalizable processes and relationships. In this lecture, I provide a critical review of evolutionary approaches to technology and, drawing on evidence from my own lab’s experimental neuroarchaeology studies of stone tool making, advance a “Perceptual Motor Hypothesis” proposing that human technological cognition has been evolutionarily and developmentally constructed from ancient primate perceptual-motor systems for body awareness and engagement with the world.

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292 episoade

Artwork
iconDistribuie
 
Manage episode 350410667 series 2538953
Content provided by Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture, Emory College, Emory Center for Mind, and Culture (CMBC). All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture, Emory College, Emory Center for Mind, and Culture (CMBC) or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.

Keynote Address | The Evolution of Culture and Technology Mini Symposium | Tel Aviv University

The simple fact of tool-making no longer provides a sharp dividing line between “Man the Tool-Maker” and the rest of the animal world. It is now clear that many other species make and use tools, and that distinctly human technology emerged through a long, multi-lineal, and meandering evolutionary process rather than the crossing of some critical threshold. However, it would be a mistake to underestimate the transformative effects of technology on everything from our hands and brains to our reproductive strategies and social organization. Understanding this complex and contingent evolutionary history will require simultaneous attention to particularistic details and more generalizable processes and relationships. In this lecture, I provide a critical review of evolutionary approaches to technology and, drawing on evidence from my own lab’s experimental neuroarchaeology studies of stone tool making, advance a “Perceptual Motor Hypothesis” proposing that human technological cognition has been evolutionarily and developmentally constructed from ancient primate perceptual-motor systems for body awareness and engagement with the world.

  continue reading

292 episoade

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