| 
 
  
William H. Calvin 
Affiliate 
Professor of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences 
University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 
The Evolution of Human 
Minds: 
The Ice Age 
Emergence of Higher Intellectual Functions 
Monday, February 3, 
2003      Chicago 
The suite of higher 
cognitive functions includes syntax, multi-stage planning, structured music, 
chains of logic, games with arbitrary rules, and our fondness for 
discovering hidden patterns.  It's likely that they share some neural 
machinery.  But the archeological record suggests that they are late-comers - 
that the three-fold enlargement of the ape brain into the human brain was 
complete about 150,000 years ago, but that these "behaviorally modern" aspects 
were seldom seen before about 50,000 years ago.  What happened to 
reorganize the brain, to make it more creative and versatile, back during the 
middle of the most recent ice age? 
 You can read more on the 
subject in my recent book,  
A Brain for All Seasons: 
Human Evolution and Abrupt 
Climate Change 
  
  from the University of 
  Chicago Press 
  (2002), which just won the Phi Beta Kappa book award for science.  
  
For the brain side of 
things, you will find many of the references in my earlier books, 
More generally (the links 
to Amazon include descriptions and reviews): 
  - 
  Helena Cronin, 
  
  The Ant and the Peacock (Cambridge University Press 1992). 
  
 
  - 
  Antonio R. Damasio,
  
  The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in 
  the Making of Consciousness.  (Harcourt 1999).
 
  - 
  Richard Dawkins, 
  
  Climbing Mount Improbable 
  (Norton, 1996). 
 
  - 
  Terry Deacon, 
  
  The Symbolic Species  (W. W. 
  Norton 1997). 
  
 
  - 
  Daniel C. Dennett, 
  
  Darwin’s Dangerous Idea (Simon 
  & Schuster 1995). 
 
  - 
  Daniel C. Dennett, 
  
  Freedom Evolves  (Viking 2003).
 
  - 
  Jared Diamond, 
  
  Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
   (W. W. Norton 1997). 
 
  - 
  Jared Diamond, 
  
  The Third Chimpanzee (HarperCollins 1992).
 
  - 
  Donald Johanson, Blake 
  Edgar, 
  
  From Lucy to Language (Simon & Schuster 1996). 
 
  - 
  Mark Johnson, 
  
  Moral Imagination: Implications of Cognitive Science for Ethics (U. 
  Chicago Press 1993).
 
  - 
  Melvin Konner, 
  
  The Tangled Wing: Biological Constraints on the Human Spirit (W. H. 
  Freeman 2001). 
 
 
  - 
  Ian Tattersall, 
  
  Becoming Human  (Harcourt 
  Brace 1998).  
 
  - 
  Ian Tattersall & Jeffrey 
  Schwartz, 
  
  Extinct Humans (Westview Press 2000). 
 
  - 
  Mark Turner, 
  
  The Literary Mind (Princeton 
  1996).
 
  - 
  Frans de Waal,
  
  Good Natured:  The Origins of Right and Wrong
  (Harvard University Press 1996).  Together with his other books 
  for general readers, such as 
  
  The Ape and the Sushi Master,
  
  Bonobo,
  
  Peacemaking Among Primates, and 
  
  Chimpanzee Politics, you get a good view of what the ape-human 
  transition might have been from. 
 
  - 
  Frans de Waal, 
  editor,
  
  Tree of Origin:  What Primate Behavior 
  Can Tell Us about Human Social Evolution (Harvard University Press 
  2001).  An excellent, readable collection of chapters by nine primatologists.
 
  - 
  Alan Walker and Pat 
  Shipman, 
  
  The Wisdom of the Bones (Knopf 1996). 
 
 
  | 
To order a
    copy of one of my more recent books, click on a cover for the link to amazon.com.  
              
              
  
   
              A Brain for All Seasons 
              2002
    
  
   
 
   
  Lingua ex Machina 
2000
    
   
The Cerebral Code 
1996
  
  
   
   
How Brains Think 
1996
  
    
  
Conversations with 
Neil's Brain 
1994
              
              
              
  
 
              The River That 
Flows Uphill 
1986
              
              
  
 
    
The Throwing Madonna 
1983  |