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In the previous event, we looked at the long story from hominins to humans, tracing some of the major transitions from the Miocene and Pliocene into the Pleistocene, where the human lineage gradually became something recognizably different from other apes.

This discussion event will give us a chance to slow down and think together about the bigger questions behind that story.

What actually changed as hominins became humans? Was it mostly anatomy, tools, fire, language, social life, culture, ecological pressure, or some deeper combination of all of these? At what point does the story begin to feel less like the evolution of another animal lineage, and more like the emergence of a new kind of world-making creature?

We may touch on themes from the previous presentation, including:

  • The split between the human lineage and the lineages leading to chimpanzees and bonobos
  • Major changes in bodies, brains, hands, walking, and ecological niches
  • The rise of stone tools and increasing technological complexity
  • Fire, food, cooperation, and social learning
  • Neanderthals, Denisovans, and early Homo sapiens
  • The transition toward symbolic behavior, language, culture, and eventually the conditions that lead toward agriculture and the Bronze Age

The goal is not to debate one single theory of human origins, but to use the deep-time story as a framework for thinking about what makes humans unusual, what we still share with other animals, and how fragile, contingent, and strange the path to “becoming human” may have been.

Related topics

Culture
Intellectual Discussions
Ancient History
Evolution
Archaeology and Anthropology

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