Art and Adaptability: Consciousness and Cognitive Culture: Consciousness, Literature and the Arts, cartea 52
Autor Gregory F. Tagueen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 noi 2017
Din seria Consciousness, Literature and the Arts
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004354524
ISBN-10: 9004354522
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Consciousness, Literature and the Arts
ISBN-10: 9004354522
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Consciousness, Literature and the Arts
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
Simplified Radiations of Select Primate Species
Simplified Radiations of Select Hominin Species
The Long Pleistocene
Introduction: Setting Boundaries
1 Intelligence: Communication and Theory of Mind
Great Ape Intelligence and Communication
Symbolic Communication and Consciousness
Inter-Subjectivity and Evolution
Great Ape Theory of Mind
Human Theory of Mind
Artificial Intelligence
The Anthropocentric Attitude
Chapter One Dovetail
2 Culture: The Adapted Mind
Human Network: Scope and Scale
Symbolic Culture
Culture and the Adapted Mind
Gene/Culture Co-Evolution
Culture and Social Selection
Culture and Epigenetics
Mind Sharing
Chapter Two Dovetail
3 Adaptive Functions: Selection and the Human Psyche
Adaptation and Natural Selection Defined
Phenomenal Consciousness
Adaptive Problems and Questions
Darwin and Natural Selection
Darwin and Sexual Selection
Selection and Tools
Cognition, Cooperation, and Extended Evolution
Making Special
Pleistocene Landscape Preferences
Can We Define Art?
Neanderthals and Art
Cave Painting and Superstition
Art and Altered States of Consciousness
Cave Art and Images
Art and the Human Psyche
Beauty, the Brain, and the Body
Chapter Three Dovetail
4 Objections: Philosophy and Byproducts
Philosophy and Art
Pinker’s Cheesecake for the Mind
An Art Instinct?
Corrective to Art as Sexual Selection
Humanology
Social Selection Over Sexual Selection?
The Biology of Art as Speculative?
Two Hypotheses
Explanatory Dilemma
Chapter Four Dovetail
5 Neurobiology and Cognition: Consciousness and Representation
Artistic Behavior and the Social Brain
The Subject of Aesthetics
Orienting Creative Cognition
Art, Ambiguity, and Making Meaning
Representation and Metarepresentation
Bodily and Cultural Consciousness
Line or Color?
Seeing Reality Abstractly
Knowledge, Beauty, and Neutrality
From Discontinuity to Essence
Brain Sight and Insight
Beauty and Cognitive Emotions
Ritual Art
Chapter Five Dovetail
Conclusion: The Arts and Sciences
Bibliography
Index
Simplified Radiations of Select Primate Species
Simplified Radiations of Select Hominin Species
The Long Pleistocene
Introduction: Setting Boundaries
1 Intelligence: Communication and Theory of Mind
Great Ape Intelligence and Communication
Symbolic Communication and Consciousness
Inter-Subjectivity and Evolution
Great Ape Theory of Mind
Human Theory of Mind
Artificial Intelligence
The Anthropocentric Attitude
Chapter One Dovetail
2 Culture: The Adapted Mind
Human Network: Scope and Scale
Symbolic Culture
Culture and the Adapted Mind
Gene/Culture Co-Evolution
Culture and Social Selection
Culture and Epigenetics
Mind Sharing
Chapter Two Dovetail
3 Adaptive Functions: Selection and the Human Psyche
Adaptation and Natural Selection Defined
Phenomenal Consciousness
Adaptive Problems and Questions
Darwin and Natural Selection
Darwin and Sexual Selection
Selection and Tools
Cognition, Cooperation, and Extended Evolution
Making Special
Pleistocene Landscape Preferences
Can We Define Art?
Neanderthals and Art
Cave Painting and Superstition
Art and Altered States of Consciousness
Cave Art and Images
Art and the Human Psyche
Beauty, the Brain, and the Body
Chapter Three Dovetail
4 Objections: Philosophy and Byproducts
Philosophy and Art
Pinker’s Cheesecake for the Mind
An Art Instinct?
Corrective to Art as Sexual Selection
Humanology
Social Selection Over Sexual Selection?
The Biology of Art as Speculative?
Two Hypotheses
Explanatory Dilemma
Chapter Four Dovetail
5 Neurobiology and Cognition: Consciousness and Representation
Artistic Behavior and the Social Brain
The Subject of Aesthetics
Orienting Creative Cognition
Art, Ambiguity, and Making Meaning
Representation and Metarepresentation
Bodily and Cultural Consciousness
Line or Color?
Seeing Reality Abstractly
Knowledge, Beauty, and Neutrality
From Discontinuity to Essence
Brain Sight and Insight
Beauty and Cognitive Emotions
Ritual Art
Chapter Five Dovetail
Conclusion: The Arts and Sciences
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
“The text is said to offer a novel hypothesis on the evolutionary roots of art, based on theory of mind. In itself, this proposal is compelling...”
– Larissa Mendoza Straffon, Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society
“The general argument of the book is interesting and sound, and is well developed with different layer of explanation.... The manuscript fits within an upcoming and ongoing tendency to study the origins of art from a cognitive perspective that specifically emphasizes theory of mind...doing so from a similarly interdisciplinary point of view. As such, the contents are both innovative and fitting within actual developments in this field.”
– Eveline Seghers, Department of Art, Music and Theatre Studies, Ghent University
“Gregory F. Tague approaches two ancient questions, what is art and what does it do, in a new and intriguing way. Drawing on science, specifically evolution through natural selection, he proposes that art, like other forms of social behavior, is in part genetic, creative or imaginative impulse, and part environmental, social interaction. Support for this proposal comes from primate studies and current studies in neurobiology, cognition, intelligence and communication. He proposes, and I agree, that culture is common among great apes with whom we share social and mental abilities. Modern humans, however, unlike other primates, have a more highly degreed theory of mind. This ability to make predictions based on the perceived mental states of others facilitated our ancestors’ ability to competitively cooperate. Culture, which would include art, was, as he explains, “part of a predictive attempt to affect another’s emotional or cognitive outcome, often in subtle ways.” As influence is a critical part of social behavior, art, which has costs that can be quite high, provides social benefits.
In sum, the road Tague takes to answering the questions – what is art and what does it do, how might it be connected to health, pleasure, play, sociality, and emotions – is complex; however, art is not a simple thing to explain. While he draws on many variables to build and support his argument, he provides the reader with a provocative and enlightening journey. Art and Adaptability is an excellent book – a fabulous search through many fields for an explanation of the curious behavior we call art.” – Kathryn Coe, Ph.D., Professor and Lilly Scholar in the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Indiana University-Purdue University. Author, The Ancestress Hypothesis: Visual Art as Adaptation
– Larissa Mendoza Straffon, Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society
“The general argument of the book is interesting and sound, and is well developed with different layer of explanation.... The manuscript fits within an upcoming and ongoing tendency to study the origins of art from a cognitive perspective that specifically emphasizes theory of mind...doing so from a similarly interdisciplinary point of view. As such, the contents are both innovative and fitting within actual developments in this field.”
– Eveline Seghers, Department of Art, Music and Theatre Studies, Ghent University
“Gregory F. Tague approaches two ancient questions, what is art and what does it do, in a new and intriguing way. Drawing on science, specifically evolution through natural selection, he proposes that art, like other forms of social behavior, is in part genetic, creative or imaginative impulse, and part environmental, social interaction. Support for this proposal comes from primate studies and current studies in neurobiology, cognition, intelligence and communication. He proposes, and I agree, that culture is common among great apes with whom we share social and mental abilities. Modern humans, however, unlike other primates, have a more highly degreed theory of mind. This ability to make predictions based on the perceived mental states of others facilitated our ancestors’ ability to competitively cooperate. Culture, which would include art, was, as he explains, “part of a predictive attempt to affect another’s emotional or cognitive outcome, often in subtle ways.” As influence is a critical part of social behavior, art, which has costs that can be quite high, provides social benefits.
In sum, the road Tague takes to answering the questions – what is art and what does it do, how might it be connected to health, pleasure, play, sociality, and emotions – is complex; however, art is not a simple thing to explain. While he draws on many variables to build and support his argument, he provides the reader with a provocative and enlightening journey. Art and Adaptability is an excellent book – a fabulous search through many fields for an explanation of the curious behavior we call art.” – Kathryn Coe, Ph.D., Professor and Lilly Scholar in the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Indiana University-Purdue University. Author, The Ancestress Hypothesis: Visual Art as Adaptation
Notă biografică
Gregory F. Tague, Ph.D. (1998), New York University, is Professor of English and founder and senior developer of The Evolutionary Studies Collaborative at St. Francis College, N.Y. Recent, relevant books include Evolution and Human Culture (Brill|Rodopi, 2016) and Making Mind: Moral Sense and Consciousness (Rodopi, 2014).