Behavioral modernity

Anthropologists, archeologists and sociologist use the term behavioral modernity to refer to a list of traits that distinguish present day humans and their recent ancestors both from living primates and from other extinct hominid lineages.[1] While it remains an influential idea in paleoanthropological contexts, John J. Shea has recently characterised the concept as "qualitative, essentialist, and a historical artifact of the European origins of Paleolithic research."[2]

The poetry of reality
Science
We must know.
We will know.
A view from the
shoulders of giants.
v - t - e

Paleoanthropology

In paleoanthropology, the idea of behavioral modernity is associated with the belief that there are significant differences between the oldest Homo sapiens and populations younger than 50 kya.[2] It is often defined as the point at which Homo sapiens began to demonstrate a reliance on symbolic thought and to express cultural creativity.[1][3] The idea has recently come under siege and J. Shea writes: "The strongest reason for discarding 'behavioral modernity' and 'modern human behavior' is that they lack analytical precision."[citation needed] In the paper, he proposes that the concept be entirely replaced by the more quantitative measurement of behavioral variability.[2] Behavioral modernity is also sometimes called the "Upper Paleolithic Revolution". In reference to this, revisionists Sally McBrearty and Alison Brooks referred to it as "the revolution that wasn't," pushing back the origins of modern behavior to the Middle Stone Age.[4]

The difference between behaviorally modern and anatomically modern humans, or even species like Homo erectus and the Neanderthals, is a subtle one, since even 300kya modern humans in Africa were conducting trade and using pigments.[5] The earliest known example of doodling comes from an engraving scratched onto a shell over 500kya by an unknown Homo erectus individual,[6] and some people think that erectus invented the earliest boats and rafts.[7]

gollark: I have a thing to obfuscate python which produces output like this:```pythonimport zlib,base64,marshal;exec(marshal.loads(zlib.decompress(base64.b85decode("c${5PO>fjN5Vf6T<8HegI8ekXNF3Nh;}%p=P*owS!ilOBAu3-gZ#;Cf<O|zrx6u|ME%*L~?UBEff52bhgq>2UG|{{nKacaCCkeXq_%>eK&_66lByol~?lR$|%O3Y^CYhfHJithL(*KEg4?-EtF-FjnJsHl4twKpVCXh>W%qe)2r9~g;71k2G#j>lqe#^<_Rn(pF7Atba@e+ST!@+OoX@7{@K1?f7$XbI+$Q{3Z8@tZ)js=4zctK|93SU0GAjX?viRa|<{)K1!MKB{X@5<_YMw{pZIz&geDv7Kj*>B0&XxM9ewaT(|#6tz&YS4y<mMAMITED}d9@i$#_;ONK=U>tc%F$%#bI*3QzFTvuKv!j<ZB^Fh*m1v*3a!UKbXyyh7AHF`mE~EHl|l~O1>9{Ac|_Eb&CP?oDI`{;IEfBanSiVnM4NH5J~pP(uNZ^8p2kVSPC@C^DzUAtk$4F&1l!%+%j=`HBr)+ssAj-SUa|OQ`Q%_MG(;OwQsz|#2IA-qoTNq3Np*YA;wJje;;c+W#`IVyU`gWim^)J&P;9+<d}E{%+Q29+V!O$dIAe$JH=cib_f|BNX(N=Wt7df~PDQk4^`rmX3<vz)^{nH6qgI~1y$UR}q|`htbzBKER@l*QGHp=V=^0L?FydIIs`Xt%+k<JUjc#c!zJjH-{Y&T8S>8?k7Et#Qx}BG@&S1yM>4z35aqo&xDJA{u+U9%YFJ<1>Xa"))))```but I think the output only works on the same version/platform.
gollark: I've heard that you can't actually unambiguously parse perl.
gollark: I see.
gollark: You can probably obfuscate JS pretty well just by using a bunch of modern JS libraries and a bundler.
gollark: It's technically not *necessary*, but that doesn't make it *not useful*.

References

  1. See the Wikipedia article on Behavioral modernity.
  2. Shea, J. J. (2011) Homo sapiens is as Homo sapiens was
  3. See the Wikipedia article on thought.
  4. Sally McBrearty and Alison S. Brooks. (2000) The Revolution That Wasn't: A New Interpretation of the Origin Modern Human Behavior. Journal of Human Evolution, vol. 39, pp. 453–563
  5. "Long-distance stone transport and pigment use in the earliest Middle Stone Age". Science 360 (6384): 90–94. 2018. PMID 29545508.
  6. "Homo erectus made world's oldest doodle 500,000 years ago" - Nature News
  7. Bednarik, R. G. (1998). "An experiment in Pleistocene seafaring". The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 27 (2): 139–149.
This article is a stub.
You can help RationalWiki by expanding it.
This article is issued from Rationalwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.