Stone Age Present: How Evolution Has Shaped Modern Life -- From Sex, Violence and Language to Emotions, Morals and Communities
by William Allman
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Why do we desire one person rather than another as a mate? How are we able to live together in large groups? Why do we react in anger to infidelity? Why do we love music and art? All of these human characteristics are rooted in the distant past, as William F. Allman informs us in The Stone Age Present. Reporting on cutting-edge ideas from the frontiers of research in such disciplines as anthropology, psychology, linguistics, philosophy, and artificial intelligence - Allman shows how our show more minds evolved in response to challenges faced by our prehistoric ancestors. And he reveals how our brains continue to harbor that long-ago legacy in the present day. Scientists speculate that countless problems of contemporary life, from individuals being overweight to nations waging war, result because our "Stone Age minds" haven't caught up with our overcrowded, technologically sophisticated world. Our emotional responses, sexual preferences, and all other aspects of modern-day behavior are still playing out the evolutionary legacy of our ancient ancestors. But at a time when society is increasingly concerned about values, this book also shows how morality is not the result of arbitrary convention but stems from our need to cooperate, which has been essential to our successful evolution as a species. By a leading proponent of science for the general reader, this illuminating book moves beyond the "nature vs. nurture" debate to provide a challenging and indispensable guide to understanding the ancient origins of our modern psyche. show lessTags
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This was a chance find in a Little Free Library, and holy cow, WHAT A FIND! Why are there not more reviews for this awesome book! It certainly is very insightful, and I got PLENTY of food for thought from various chapters. There were definitely a few 'aha' moments for me as the author explored various aspects of society like sex or religion, as well as earlier evolutionary stages for humans.
Insightful and comprehensive analysis of the evolutionary underpinings of the contemporary human. Basis is that progress has catapulted us into a completely different world, while evolutionary adaptations have not had the opportunity to take place as quickly. Evidence includes tests where people perform identical logical tests differently under different contexts. Brain development includes more instinctive behavior than previously conceded (flight or fight; identification of natural enemies, ability to think probabilistically via intuition vs hard numbers, etc. Social aspect of the brain includes understanding hierarchies, navigating social climbing, forming groups and enemies. Concepts of love include beauty aspects that indicate show more health and strength -- much gender issue can be explained by differences between male and female roles. Language roots are in the brain and independently evolved. show less
The sub-title of the book is "How Evolution has Shaped Modern Life--From Sex, Violence, and Language to Emotions, Morals, and Communities." His goal in this book is to pull together all of the science and simply discover the origins of why we behave in certain way. The hook for me was his statement that "our species' remarkable evolutionary success is due to a trait that most of us take for granted but that is rare among other animals on the planet: We make friends." Our ability to cooperate is what has kept us moving along the evolutionary path, and I found that concept so startlingly simple and so different from what everyone else focuses on. The book is extremely well-researched and very easy to read.
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3 Works 80 Members
William F. Allman is a senior writer at U.S. News and World Report and the author of Apprentices of Wonder and Newton at the Bat. His articles have appeared in Esquire, The Washington Post, Omni, and other magazines. He lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland.
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1994
- People/Characters
- Robert Axelrod; Paul Bloom; John Tooby; Randall White
- Epigraph
- Time present and time past
Are both perhaps present in time future,
And time future contained the past-- T. S. Eliot - Dedication
- To Ryan Elizabeth and John Patrick
- First words
- Preface
In many respects I have been writing this book all my life.
Introduction
STONE AGE MIND
HOW EVOLUTION HAS SHAPED OUR MODERN-DAY BEHAVIOR
It is not for nothing that we have dubbed ourselves Homo sapiens sapiens, or "doubly wise." - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)They survived by inventing the future. Our task is nothing less.
- Blurbers
- Liss, Barbara; Tiger, Lionel
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Statistics
- Members
- 62
- Popularity
- 500,187
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (4.17)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 2


























































