Hidden Depths The Origins of Human Connection

In Hidden Depths, Professor Penny Spikins explores how our emotional connections have shaped human ancestry. Focusing on three key transitions in human origins, Professor Spikins explains how the emotional capacities of our early ancestors evolved in response to ecological changes, much like simila...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Spikins, Penny (auth)
Format: Electronic Book Chapter
Language:English
Published: York White Rose University Press 2022
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520 |a In Hidden Depths, Professor Penny Spikins explores how our emotional connections have shaped human ancestry. Focusing on three key transitions in human origins, Professor Spikins explains how the emotional capacities of our early ancestors evolved in response to ecological changes, much like similar changes in other social mammals. For each transition, dedicated chapters examine evolutionary pressures, responses in changes in human emotional capacities and the archaeological evidence for human social behaviours. Starting from our earliest origins, in Part One, Professor Spikins explores how after two million years ago, movement of human ancestors into a new ecological niche drove new types of collaboration, including care for vulnerable members of the group. Emotional adaptations lead to cognitive changes, as new connections based on compassion, generosity, trust and inclusion also changed our relationship to material things. Part Two explores a later key transition in human emotional capacities occurring after 300,000 years ago. At this time changes in social tolerance allowed ancestors of our own species to further reach out beyond their local group and care about distant allies, making human communities resilient to environmental changes. An increasingly close relationship to animals, and even to cherished possessions, appeared at this time, and can be explained through new human vulnerabilities and ways of seeking comfort and belonging. Lastly, Part Three focuses on the contrasts in emotional dispositions arising between ourselves and our close cousins, the Neanderthals. Neanderthals are revealed as equally caring yet emotionally different humans, who might, if things had been different, have been in our place today. This new narrative breaks away from traditional views of human evolution as exceptional or as a linear progression towards a more perfect form. Instead, our evolutionary history is situated within similar processes occurring in other mammals, and explained as one in which emotions, rather than 'intellect', were key to our evolutionary journey. Moreover, changes in emotional capacities and dispositions are seen as part of differing pathways each bringing strengths, weaknesses and compromises. These hidden depths provide an explanation for many of the emotional sensitivities and vulnerabilities which continue to influence our world today. 
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653 |a Dog burial 
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653 |a Symbolism 
653 |a Mobiliary art 
653 |a Attachment fluidity 
653 |a Hypersociability 
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653 |a Dog domestication 
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653 |a Approachability 
653 |a Approach behaviour 
653 |a Avoidance behaviour 
653 |a Androgens 
653 |a Physiological responses 
653 |a Cognitive Archaeology 
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653 |a Acheulian 
653 |a Cultural evolution 
653 |a Skeletal abnormality 
653 |a Injury 
653 |a Illness 
653 |a Interdependence 
653 |a Emotional sensitivity 
653 |a Moral emotions 
653 |a Evolution of Altruism 
653 |a Hominins 
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653 |a Lower Palaeolithic 
653 |a Ecological niche 
653 |a Selective pressure 
653 |a Behavioural ecology 
653 |a Wolves 
653 |a Affective empathy 
653 |a Cognitive empathy 
653 |a Theory of mind 
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653 |a Vulnerability 
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653 |a Origins of healthcare 
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856 4 0 |a www.oapen.org  |u https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/94472  |7 0  |z DOAB: description of the publication