Promethean Fire

promethean fire

more information about Promethean Fire

Promethean Fire

Editorial Reviews
Book Description
There is a missing link in human evolution about which few facts are known and surprisingly little has been written. It is not any one of the intermediate forms connecting modern man to his apelike ancestors. It is something much more challenging—the early human mind. How did it come into existence? And why?

In Promethean Fire Charles J. Lumsden and Edward O. Wilson take us down the twisting corridors through which our species traveled in the two-million-year odyssey from Homo Habilis to modern man. They ask why, out of the millions of species that have emerged and gone extinct, human beings alone took the last, abrupt journey to high intelligence and advanced culture. Lumsden and Wilson attribute the sudden emergence of the human mind to the activation of a mechanism both obedient to physical law and unique to man. This "Promethean fire" is geneculture coevolution, a mutually acting change in the genes and culture that carried man beyond the pervious limits of biology—yet restrains his nature on an elastic, unbreakable leash.

The authors' argument builds impressively from across the entire range of biological and social sciences, but their presentation is essentially lyrical. They share with the reader their reconstruction—both stunning line drawings and colorful vignettes—of how the primitive mind may have functioned in exercising cultural choice with genetic bias. Step by step, they guide us through the diverse categories of evidence, including recent studies of incest avoidance, color vocabulary, infant gaze patterns, taste discriminations, and phobias, which led them toward the theory of cultural transmission based on the importance of genetic filters in individual mental development. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Promethean Fire,Charles J. Lumsden,Harvard Univ Pr,0674714466,Brain,Evolution,Genetic psychology,Science,Science/Mathematics,Social evolution,Sociobiology,Sociology - General

Books Review:

  1. Science, Evolution, And Immortality
  2. Science in the Making : Volume Three, 1900-1950
  3. Science in the Making : Volume Two, 1850-1900
  4. Structure and Function of Biofilms
  5. Surfactants in Polymers, Coatings, Inks, and Adhesives (Sheffield Annual Surfactants Review)
  6. Symbiosis of Plants and Microbes
  7. Technologies for Detection of DNA Damage and Mutations
  8. The Changing Wildlife of Britain and Ireland : Unity, Diversity and Evolution
  9. The Child: A Study In The Evolution Of Man
  10. The Correspondence of Charles Darwin: Volume 12, 1864 (The Correspondence of Charles Darwin)

Books Review

Books Review

Recommended Books

  1. On and by Frank Lloyd Wright : A Primer of Architectural Principles
  2. Tangible Strategies for Intangible Assets
  3. Learn Microsoft Visual Basic .NET In a Weekend
  4. Mind and Heart of the Negotiator, The
  5. Federal Information Sources in Health and Medicine : A Selected Annotated Bibliography
  6. Flow Cytometry Applications in Cell Culture
  7. Engineering Formulas Interactive
  8. Growing Up in the South : An Anthology of Modern Southern Literature
  9. Gto: Great Teacher Onizuka, Vol 18
  10. From Amish to Mennonite Kitchens
  11. Fiberarts Design Book 7
  12. Half a Childhood: Quality Programs for Out-Of-School Hours
  13. Gypsies : An Interdisciplinary Reader
  14. Handbook of Ecotoxicology
  15. Footprint India Handbook 2003