IHO NY 2023-Ian Tattersall

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  • Опубликовано: 7 дек 2023
  • The ASU Institute of Human Origins presents Ian Tattersall, Curator Emeritus of Human Origins, American Museum of Natural History, speaking about "The Origins of Modern Human Cognition."
    Modern human beings process information symbolically, rearranging mental symbols according to rules to envision multiple potential realities. They also express the ideas thus formed using structured articulate language. No other living creature does either of these things, reflecting a qualitative cognitive gulf between modern Homo sapiens and every other species in the Great Tree of Life on the planet. Yet it is evident that we are descended from an ancestor that was both nonsymbolic and nonlinguistic. How did the astonishing transformation to modern cognition occur? Was it simply a passive result of the increase in brain size that typified multiple lineages of the genus Homo over the Pleistocene? Dr. Tattersall presents what the scrutiny of the fossil and archaeological records reveals to answer these fascinating questions in our evolutionary history.
    The ASU Institute of Human Origins is one of the preeminent research organizations in the world for the study of human origins across the broadest range of transdisciplinary research to create novel approaches to the solution of pressing and newly emerging scientific questions relevant to our society-from the emergence of modern humans in Africa, and human behavioral and genetic adaptations to a changing planet, to what understanding the behavioral ecology of nonhuman primates informs us about how we developed culture and cooperation.

Комментарии • 12

  • @robertlevy2420
    @robertlevy2420 14 часов назад

    Possibly the critical change in Homo Sapiens was the ability to verbally share ideas rather than having to visually try to demonstrate the idea!! The incredible sudden ability to store and spread ideas became like a match to paper!!!!!

  • @josegarciavelazquez4399
    @josegarciavelazquez4399 4 месяца назад +1

    felicidades al mr. Ian Tattersall por su trabajo, exposición y trayectoria profesional.

  • @howardleekilby7390
    @howardleekilby7390 4 месяца назад +2

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
    Thank you Professor. You
    have given me a new and improved name for our species. Homo Sapiens
    seems a bit egotistical.
    Using your term CLEVER
    HANDS translated into
    Latin seems much more
    satisfying:
    Homo Manus callidae.
    ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @robertlevy2420
    @robertlevy2420 15 часов назад

    Donald Johanson' s tech comment is profoundly evoked/captured by that bone toss/space ship cut in 2001 A Space Odyssey!!

  • @davidviner5783
    @davidviner5783 5 дней назад

    Jebel Irfoud, 300000 years ago has been reported as the earliest evidence of H. sapiens.

  • @paulquirk3783
    @paulquirk3783 14 часов назад

    He should have defined symbolic cognition and illustrated what counts as evidence for it.

  • @GeeThevenin
    @GeeThevenin 2 месяца назад

    How did they process the audio? Impressive.

  • @oldernu1250
    @oldernu1250 Месяц назад

    Distinctively different? How? Most people today are as incapable of constructing a hand ax as a motherboard. Symbolic bollocks, I fear.

  • @DivyenduKashyap
    @DivyenduKashyap 7 месяцев назад +3

    Absence of consistent display of symbolic behaviour by neanderthals? There are quite a few pre-sapien rock art sites in Europe

    • @togodamnus
      @togodamnus 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, the evidence is both inconsistent and sparse. Its foolish to attribute alleged art works to H neanderthalensis via approximate dating; it's not at all resolved in regards to first or earliest presence of H sapiens in
      Eurasia or Asia.

  • @taharqaheru145
    @taharqaheru145 Месяц назад

    Am sorry Jesus and Allah but the game is over😂

    • @gooddaysahead1
      @gooddaysahead1 Месяц назад +1

      For the sake of argument, let's just say that their stories are mythological. They are 100% stories created to tell and convey wisdom about the business of living. Some of the mythology is helpful and some of it is crazy. That's where we come in and decide which part is crazy and try to avoid it.