THIN BONE VAULT, THE:THE ORIGIN OF HUMAN INTELLIGENCE

细骨拱顶:人类智力的起源

发育生物学,古生物学

原   价:
751.25
售   价:
601.00
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平台大促 低至8折优惠
发货周期:预计3-5周发货
作      者
出  版 社
出版时间
2009年02月13日
装      帧
精装
ISBN
9781848163362
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页      码
312
语      种
英文
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库存 30 本
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图书简介
This book delves into one of the greatest riddles perplexing modern science: “Why are humans so smart?” In a format understandable even by the non-expert, the author investigates the origins of human intelligence, starting with classical Darwinian concepts. Thus, the strengths and beauty of natural selection are presented with many examples taken from natural history. Common criticisms of Darwin, from scientists and non-scientists alike, are confronted and shown to be either inconclusive or outright false. The author then launches into a discussion of human intelligence, the most important feature of human evolution, and how it cannot be fully explained by mutational selection. Modern humans are smarter than what is demanded by our evolutionary experience as hunter-gatherers. The difficulty lies in the inability of natural selection to answer the following question: how can a complex set of genes, controlling expensive traits with little immediate benefit, come into permanent existence within a short time period in every member of a small population (which was dispersed and geographically isolated over a huge planet) which had a low reproductive output and a low mutation rate? The book concludes with a speculative epigenetic theory of intelligence that does not require DNA mutations as a source of evolution. Although the book is comprehensible by anyone with a college education, this last section in particular should intrigue both layman and expert alike. Key Features  A particularly lucid description of the strengths and weaknesses of Darwinian evolution, written in an enjoyable style palatable to anyone interested in biology  Ample citations of natural phenomena to stimulate general interest in the reader  A novel discussion of human intelligence that has no counterpart in current books  An “epigenetic” theory of evolution in the final pages of the book that complements the natural selection concept
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