How Children Invented Humanity: The Role of Development in Human Evolution

How Children Invented Humanity: The Role of Development in Human Evolution
ISBN-10
0190066873
ISBN-13
9780190066871
Category
Psychology
Pages
288
Language
English
Published
2020-10-30
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Author
David F. Bjorklund

Description

Infants and children are the often-ignored heroes when it comes to understanding human evolution. Evolutionary pressures acted upon the young of our ancestors more powerfully than on adults, and changes over the course of development in our ancestors were primarily responsible for the species and the people we have become. This book takes an evolutionary developmental perspective, emphasizing that developmental plasticity--the ability to change our physical and psychological selves early in life--is the creative force in evolution, with natural selection serving as a filter, eliminating novel developmental outcomes that did not benefit survival. This book is about becoming--of becoming human and of becoming mature adults. Bjorklund asks, "How can an understanding of human development help us better understand human evolution?" Then, turning the relation between evolution and development on its head, Bjorklund demonstrates how an understanding of our species' evolution can help us better understand current development and how to better rear successful and emotionally healthy children.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Children′s Thinking - International Student Edition: Cognitive Development and Individual Differences
    By David F. Bjorklund

    Children′s Thinking: Cognitive Development and Individual Differences, Seventh Edition by David Bjorklund presents current, thorough research studies and data to show the effects of biology, and both physical and social environments on ...

  • Children′s Thinking: Cognitive Development and Individual Differences
    By David F. Bjorklund

    Children′s Thinking: Cognitive Development and Individual Differences, Seventh Edition by David Bjorklund presents current, thorough research studies and data to show the effects of biology, and both physical and social environments on ...

  • The Invention of Humanity
    By Siep Stuurman

    Drawing on global thinkers, Siep Stuurman traces ideas of equality and difference across continents and civilizations, from antiquity to present-day debates about human rights and the “clash of civilizations.”

  • How Language Began: The Story of Humanity's Greatest Invention
    By Daniel L. Everett

    Woven with anecdotes of his nearly forty years of fi eldwork amongst Amazonian hunter- gatherers, this is a “completely enthralling” (Spectator) exploration of our humanity and a landmark study of what makes us human. “[An] ambitious ...

  • Our Final Invention: Artificial Intelligence and the End of the Human Era
    By James Barrat

    In the computer market the effect is described by Moore's law, another economic theory disguised as a technology theory, first observed in 1965 by Intel's cofounder Gordon Moore. Moore's law states that the number of transistors that ...

  • An Intimate History of Humanity
    By Theodore Zeldin

    'The book that changed my life... a constant companion' Bill Bailey 'Extraordinary and beautiful...the most exciting and ambitious work of non-fiction I have read in more than a decade' The Daily Telegraph This extraordinarily wide-ranging ...

  • The Invention of Yesterday: A 50,000-Year History of Human Culture, Conflict, and Connection
    By Tamim Ansary

    From language to culture to cultural collision: the story of how humans invented history, from the Stone Age to the Virtual Age Traveling across millennia, weaving the experiences and world...

  • Humans: A Brief History of How We F*cked It All Up
    By Tom Phillips

    *NOW AN INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER* A Toronto Star Bestselling Book of the Year “Witty and entertaining.”—Sarah Knight “Laugh-out-loud.”—Steve Brusatte AN EXHILARATING JOURNEY THROUGH THE MOST CREATIVE AND CATASTROPHIC F*CK-UPS OF ...

  • The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity
    By David Graeber, David Wengrow

    Claude Lévi-Strauss is one of the few mid-twentieth-century anthropologists to take seriously the idea that early humans were our intellectual equals; hence his famous argument in The Savage Mind that mythological thought, ...

  • Invented Worlds: The Psychology of the Arts
    By Ellen Winner

    Creation , he insisted , is nothing more than conscious , calculated , clever craft : " Most writers — poets in especial — prefer having it understood that they compose by a species of fine frenzy — an ecstatic intuition—and would ...