Squeezing Minds From Stones
Cognitive Archaeology and the Evolution of the Human Mind
Herausgeber: Overmann
Squeezing Minds From Stones
Cognitive Archaeology and the Evolution of the Human Mind
Herausgeber: Overmann
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Squeezing Minds From Stones is a collection of wide-ranging, contemporary essays on the interdisciplinary field of cognitive archaeology, which offers cognitive and psychological models to explain archaeological artifacts like stone tools, figurines, and art.
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Squeezing Minds From Stones is a collection of wide-ranging, contemporary essays on the interdisciplinary field of cognitive archaeology, which offers cognitive and psychological models to explain archaeological artifacts like stone tools, figurines, and art.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 546
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 160mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 885g
- ISBN-13: 9780190854614
- ISBN-10: 0190854618
- Artikelnr.: 55201136
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 546
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 160mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 885g
- ISBN-13: 9780190854614
- ISBN-10: 0190854618
- Artikelnr.: 55201136
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Karenleigh A. Overmann has a doctorate in archaeology from the University of Oxford, as well as a master's in psychology and bachelor's in anthropology, philosophy, and English from the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs (UCCS). She is a founding member of the faculty of the UCCS Center for Cognitive Archaeology, and in June 2018 she began an MSCA individual fellowship at the University of Bergen, Norway. Her primary research investigates numeracy and literacy as complex cultural systems that emerge through sustained interactions between brains, behaviors, and material forms. Her previous career was in the U.S. Navy, where she performed communications-electronics work as an enlisted Radioman before earning a commission under the Limited Duty Officer program; she retired with 25 years active service in 2003. Professor Frederick L. Coolidge has a PhD from the University of Florida and completed a two-year Postdoctoral Fellowship in Clinical Neuropsychology. He is a three-time Fulbright Fellow recipient and has three teaching awards and two research awards from the University of Colorado. He was appointed Senior Visiting Scholar to Oxford University (Keble College) in 2015 and Visiting Scholar to the Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar from 2014-2018.
* Introduction: Cognitive Archaeology at the Crossroads
* Karenleigh A. Overmann and Frederick L. Coolidge
* 1. A Simian View of the Oldowan: Reconstructing the Evolutionary
Origins of Human Technology
* William C. McGrew, Tiago Falótico, Michael D. Gumert, and Eduardo B.
Ottoni
* 2. Homo artifex: An Extended Evolutionary Perspective on the Origins
of the Human Mind, Brain, and Culture
* Dietrich Stout
* 3. Looking at Rocks Together: Tool Production, Joint Attention, and
Offline Cognition
* Rex Welshon
* 4. Evolution of Cognitive Archaeology through Evolving Cognitive
Systems: A Chapter for Tom Wynn
* Iain Davidson
* 5. Sticks, Stones, and the Origins of Sapience
* Philip J. Barnard
* 6. The Origin of Cumulative Culture: Not a Single-Trait Event But
Multifactorial Processes
* Miriam Noël Haidle
* 7. Hominin Evolution and Stone Tool Scavenging and Reuse in the Lower
Paleolithic
* Adam Brumm, Matt Pope, Mathieu Leroyer, and Kate Emery
* 8. Flake-Making and the "Cognitive Rubicon": Insights from
Stone-Knapping Experiments
* Mark W. Moore
* 9. Stone Tools and Spatial Cognition
* Derek Hodgson
* 10. Testing Models of Handedness in Stone Tools
* Natalie Uomini and Lana Ruck
* 11. Early Convergent Cultural Evolution: Acheulean Giant Core Methods
of Africa
* Gonen Sharon
* 12. Cultural Transmission from the Last Common Ancestor to the
Levallois Reducers: What Can We Infer?
* Stephen J. Lycett
* 13. The Handaxe Aesthetic
* Thomas Wynn and Tony Berlant
* 14. The Stories Stones Tell of Language and Its Evolution
* Shelby S. Putt
* 15. In Three Minds: Extending Cognitive Archaeology with the Social
Brain
* Cory Stade and Clive Gamble
* 16. The Evolution of Social Transmission in the Acheulean
* Ceri Shipton
* 17. Knapping in the Dark: Stone Tools and a Theory of Mind
* James Cole
* 18. A Critical Analysis of the Evidence for Sexual Division of Tasks
in the European Upper Paleolithic
* Sophie A. de Beaune
* 19. The Enhanced Working Memory Model: Its Origin and Development
* Frederick L. Coolidge
* 20. Materiality and the Prehistory of Number
* Karenleigh A. Overmann
* 21. Ensnaring the Mind: Cognitive Implications of Setting Snares and
Traps
* Lyn Wadley
* 22. On the Minds of Bow Hunters
* Marlize Lombard
* 23. Epilogue: Situating the Cognitive in Cognitive Archaeology
* Thomas Wynn
* Index
* Karenleigh A. Overmann and Frederick L. Coolidge
* 1. A Simian View of the Oldowan: Reconstructing the Evolutionary
Origins of Human Technology
* William C. McGrew, Tiago Falótico, Michael D. Gumert, and Eduardo B.
Ottoni
* 2. Homo artifex: An Extended Evolutionary Perspective on the Origins
of the Human Mind, Brain, and Culture
* Dietrich Stout
* 3. Looking at Rocks Together: Tool Production, Joint Attention, and
Offline Cognition
* Rex Welshon
* 4. Evolution of Cognitive Archaeology through Evolving Cognitive
Systems: A Chapter for Tom Wynn
* Iain Davidson
* 5. Sticks, Stones, and the Origins of Sapience
* Philip J. Barnard
* 6. The Origin of Cumulative Culture: Not a Single-Trait Event But
Multifactorial Processes
* Miriam Noël Haidle
* 7. Hominin Evolution and Stone Tool Scavenging and Reuse in the Lower
Paleolithic
* Adam Brumm, Matt Pope, Mathieu Leroyer, and Kate Emery
* 8. Flake-Making and the "Cognitive Rubicon": Insights from
Stone-Knapping Experiments
* Mark W. Moore
* 9. Stone Tools and Spatial Cognition
* Derek Hodgson
* 10. Testing Models of Handedness in Stone Tools
* Natalie Uomini and Lana Ruck
* 11. Early Convergent Cultural Evolution: Acheulean Giant Core Methods
of Africa
* Gonen Sharon
* 12. Cultural Transmission from the Last Common Ancestor to the
Levallois Reducers: What Can We Infer?
* Stephen J. Lycett
* 13. The Handaxe Aesthetic
* Thomas Wynn and Tony Berlant
* 14. The Stories Stones Tell of Language and Its Evolution
* Shelby S. Putt
* 15. In Three Minds: Extending Cognitive Archaeology with the Social
Brain
* Cory Stade and Clive Gamble
* 16. The Evolution of Social Transmission in the Acheulean
* Ceri Shipton
* 17. Knapping in the Dark: Stone Tools and a Theory of Mind
* James Cole
* 18. A Critical Analysis of the Evidence for Sexual Division of Tasks
in the European Upper Paleolithic
* Sophie A. de Beaune
* 19. The Enhanced Working Memory Model: Its Origin and Development
* Frederick L. Coolidge
* 20. Materiality and the Prehistory of Number
* Karenleigh A. Overmann
* 21. Ensnaring the Mind: Cognitive Implications of Setting Snares and
Traps
* Lyn Wadley
* 22. On the Minds of Bow Hunters
* Marlize Lombard
* 23. Epilogue: Situating the Cognitive in Cognitive Archaeology
* Thomas Wynn
* Index
* Introduction: Cognitive Archaeology at the Crossroads
* Karenleigh A. Overmann and Frederick L. Coolidge
* 1. A Simian View of the Oldowan: Reconstructing the Evolutionary
Origins of Human Technology
* William C. McGrew, Tiago Falótico, Michael D. Gumert, and Eduardo B.
Ottoni
* 2. Homo artifex: An Extended Evolutionary Perspective on the Origins
of the Human Mind, Brain, and Culture
* Dietrich Stout
* 3. Looking at Rocks Together: Tool Production, Joint Attention, and
Offline Cognition
* Rex Welshon
* 4. Evolution of Cognitive Archaeology through Evolving Cognitive
Systems: A Chapter for Tom Wynn
* Iain Davidson
* 5. Sticks, Stones, and the Origins of Sapience
* Philip J. Barnard
* 6. The Origin of Cumulative Culture: Not a Single-Trait Event But
Multifactorial Processes
* Miriam Noël Haidle
* 7. Hominin Evolution and Stone Tool Scavenging and Reuse in the Lower
Paleolithic
* Adam Brumm, Matt Pope, Mathieu Leroyer, and Kate Emery
* 8. Flake-Making and the "Cognitive Rubicon": Insights from
Stone-Knapping Experiments
* Mark W. Moore
* 9. Stone Tools and Spatial Cognition
* Derek Hodgson
* 10. Testing Models of Handedness in Stone Tools
* Natalie Uomini and Lana Ruck
* 11. Early Convergent Cultural Evolution: Acheulean Giant Core Methods
of Africa
* Gonen Sharon
* 12. Cultural Transmission from the Last Common Ancestor to the
Levallois Reducers: What Can We Infer?
* Stephen J. Lycett
* 13. The Handaxe Aesthetic
* Thomas Wynn and Tony Berlant
* 14. The Stories Stones Tell of Language and Its Evolution
* Shelby S. Putt
* 15. In Three Minds: Extending Cognitive Archaeology with the Social
Brain
* Cory Stade and Clive Gamble
* 16. The Evolution of Social Transmission in the Acheulean
* Ceri Shipton
* 17. Knapping in the Dark: Stone Tools and a Theory of Mind
* James Cole
* 18. A Critical Analysis of the Evidence for Sexual Division of Tasks
in the European Upper Paleolithic
* Sophie A. de Beaune
* 19. The Enhanced Working Memory Model: Its Origin and Development
* Frederick L. Coolidge
* 20. Materiality and the Prehistory of Number
* Karenleigh A. Overmann
* 21. Ensnaring the Mind: Cognitive Implications of Setting Snares and
Traps
* Lyn Wadley
* 22. On the Minds of Bow Hunters
* Marlize Lombard
* 23. Epilogue: Situating the Cognitive in Cognitive Archaeology
* Thomas Wynn
* Index
* Karenleigh A. Overmann and Frederick L. Coolidge
* 1. A Simian View of the Oldowan: Reconstructing the Evolutionary
Origins of Human Technology
* William C. McGrew, Tiago Falótico, Michael D. Gumert, and Eduardo B.
Ottoni
* 2. Homo artifex: An Extended Evolutionary Perspective on the Origins
of the Human Mind, Brain, and Culture
* Dietrich Stout
* 3. Looking at Rocks Together: Tool Production, Joint Attention, and
Offline Cognition
* Rex Welshon
* 4. Evolution of Cognitive Archaeology through Evolving Cognitive
Systems: A Chapter for Tom Wynn
* Iain Davidson
* 5. Sticks, Stones, and the Origins of Sapience
* Philip J. Barnard
* 6. The Origin of Cumulative Culture: Not a Single-Trait Event But
Multifactorial Processes
* Miriam Noël Haidle
* 7. Hominin Evolution and Stone Tool Scavenging and Reuse in the Lower
Paleolithic
* Adam Brumm, Matt Pope, Mathieu Leroyer, and Kate Emery
* 8. Flake-Making and the "Cognitive Rubicon": Insights from
Stone-Knapping Experiments
* Mark W. Moore
* 9. Stone Tools and Spatial Cognition
* Derek Hodgson
* 10. Testing Models of Handedness in Stone Tools
* Natalie Uomini and Lana Ruck
* 11. Early Convergent Cultural Evolution: Acheulean Giant Core Methods
of Africa
* Gonen Sharon
* 12. Cultural Transmission from the Last Common Ancestor to the
Levallois Reducers: What Can We Infer?
* Stephen J. Lycett
* 13. The Handaxe Aesthetic
* Thomas Wynn and Tony Berlant
* 14. The Stories Stones Tell of Language and Its Evolution
* Shelby S. Putt
* 15. In Three Minds: Extending Cognitive Archaeology with the Social
Brain
* Cory Stade and Clive Gamble
* 16. The Evolution of Social Transmission in the Acheulean
* Ceri Shipton
* 17. Knapping in the Dark: Stone Tools and a Theory of Mind
* James Cole
* 18. A Critical Analysis of the Evidence for Sexual Division of Tasks
in the European Upper Paleolithic
* Sophie A. de Beaune
* 19. The Enhanced Working Memory Model: Its Origin and Development
* Frederick L. Coolidge
* 20. Materiality and the Prehistory of Number
* Karenleigh A. Overmann
* 21. Ensnaring the Mind: Cognitive Implications of Setting Snares and
Traps
* Lyn Wadley
* 22. On the Minds of Bow Hunters
* Marlize Lombard
* 23. Epilogue: Situating the Cognitive in Cognitive Archaeology
* Thomas Wynn
* Index