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This volume is the result of a research project entitled
"Evolutionary Continuity - Human Specifics - The Possibility of
Objective Knowledge" that was carried out by representatives of six
academic disciplines (evolutionary biology, evolutionary
anthropology, brain research, cognitive neuroscience, cognitive
psychology and philosophy) over a period of three and a half years.
The starting point for the project was the newly emerging riddle of
human uniqueness: though the uniqueness of human beings is
undisputable, all explanations for this fact have successively been
discarded or refuted in recent decades. There is no special factor
that could explain the particularities of human existence. Rather,
all human skills derive from a continuous relation to pre-human
skills, that is to say, to elements that were developed earlier in
the phylogeny and were later inherited. But starting from abilities
that are anything but special, how could the particularity of human
beings have evolved? This was the guiding question of the project.
In this work we try to answer it by addressing the following
problems: How strong is evolutionary continuity in human beings?
How can we understand that it gave way to cultural discontinuity?
Which aspect of cultural existence is really unique to humans? Can
the possibility of objective knowledge be seen as a (admittedly
extreme) case in point? - The answers are meant to help clarify the
central issue of contemporary scientific anthropology.
This volume is the result of a research project entitled
"Evolutionary Continuity - Human Specifics - The Possibility of
Objective Knowledge" that was carried out by representatives of six
academic disciplines (evolutionary biology, evolutionary
anthropology, brain research, cognitive neuroscience, cognitive
psychology and philosophy) over a period of three and a half years.
The starting point for the project was the newly emerging riddle of
human uniqueness: though the uniqueness of human beings is
undisputable, all explanations for this fact have successively been
discarded or refuted in recent decades. There is no special factor
that could explain the particularities of human existence. Rather,
all human skills derive from a continuous relation to pre-human
skills, that is to say, to elements that were developed earlier in
the phylogeny and were later inherited. But starting from abilities
that are anything but special, how could the particularity of human
beings have evolved? This was the guiding question of the project.
In this work we try to answer it by addressing the following
problems: How strong is evolutionary continuity in human beings?
How can we understand that it gave way to cultural discontinuity?
Which aspect of cultural existence is really unique to humans? Can
the possibility of objective knowledge be seen as a (admittedly
extreme) case in point? - The answers are meant to help clarify the
central issue of contemporary scientific anthropology.
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