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What We Are: The Evolutionary Roots of Our Future (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2022)
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What We Are: The Evolutionary Roots of Our Future (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2022)
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Other animals are driven to spend essentially their whole lives
just trying to get fed, stay alive, and get laid. That's about it.
The same was true for our proto-human ancestors. And modern humans
of course also require a Survival Drive and a Sex Drive in order to
leave descendants. But today we spend most of our lives mainly just
trying to convince ourselves that our existence is not absurd. In
What We Are, Queen's University biologist, Lonnie Aarssen, traces
how our biocultural evolution has shaped Homo sapiens into the only
creature that refuses to be what it is - the only creature
preoccupied with a deeply ingrained, and absurd sentiment: I have a
distinct 'mental life'-an 'inner self'-that exists separately and
apart from 'material life', and so, unlike the latter, need not
come to an end. This delusion conceivably gave our distant
ancestors some wishful thinking for finding some measure of relief
from the terrifying, uniquely human knowledge of the eventual loss
of corporeal survival. But this came with an impulsive, nagging
doubt - an obsessive underlying uncertainty: 'self-impermanence
anxiety'. Biocultural evolution, however, was not finished. It also
gave us two additional, uniquely human, primal drives, both serving
to help quell the burden of this anxiety. Legacy Drive generates
delusional cultural domains for 'extension' of self; and Leisure
Drive generates pleasurable cultural domains for distraction -
'escape' - from self. Legacy Drive and Leisure Drive, Aarssen
argues, represent two of the most profound consequences of human
cognitive and cultural evolution. What We Are advances propositions
regarding how a visceral susceptibility to self-impermanence
anxiety has - paradoxically - played a pivotal role in rewarding
the reproductive success of our ancestors, and has thus been a
driving force in shaping fundamental motivations and cultural norms
of modern humans. More than any other milestone in the evolution of
human minds, self-impermanence anxiety, and its mitigating Drives
for Legacy and Leisure, account for not just the advance of
civilization over the past many thousands of years, but also now,
its impending collapse. Effective management of this crisis,
Aarssen insists, will require a deeper and more broadly public
understanding of its Darwinian evolutionary roots - as laid out in
What We Are.
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