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Verbs, Bones, and Brains: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Human Nature

✍ Scribed by Agustín Fuentes (editor), Aku Visala (editor)


Publisher
University of Notre Dame Press
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
302
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The last few decades have seen an unprecedented surge of empirical and philosophical research into the evolutionary history of Homo sapiens, the origins of the mind/brain, and human culture. This research and its popular interpretations have sparked heated debates about the nature of human beings and how knowledge about humans from the sciences and humanities should be properly understood. The goal of Verbs, Bones, and Brains: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Human Nature is to engage these themes and present current debates, discussions, and discourse for a range of readers. The contributors bring the discussion to life with key experts outlining major concepts paired with cross-disciplinary commentaries in order to create a novel approach to thinking about, and with, human natures. The intent of the contributors to this volume is not to enter into or adjudicate complex philosophical issues of an epistemological or metaphysical nature. Instead, their common concern is to set aside the rigid distinctions between biology and culture that have made such discussions problematic. First, informing their approach is an acknowledgment of the widespread disagreement about such basic metaphysical and epistemological questions as the existence of God, the nature of scientific knowledge, and the existence of essences, among other topics. Second, they try to identify and explicate the assumptions that enter into their conceptualizations of human nature. Throughout, they emphasize the importance of seeking a convergence in our views on human nature, despite metaphysical disagreements. They caution that if convergence eludes us and a common ground cannot be found, this is itself a relevant result: it would reveal to us how deeply our questions about ourselves are connected to our basic metaphysical assumptions. Instead, their focus is on how the interdisciplinary and possibly transdisciplinary conversation can be enhanced in order to identify and develop a common ground on what constitutes human nature.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
VERBS, BONES, AND BRAINS
Title
Copyright
CONTENTS
Introduction: The Many Faces of Human Nature
CHAPTER 1 Off Human Nature
RESPONSE I On Your Marks ... Get Set, We’re Off Human Nature
RESPONSE II Rethinking Human Nature: Comments on Jonathan Marks’s Anti-Essentialism
RESPONSE III Off Human Nature and On Human Culture: The Importance of the Concept of Culture to Science and Society
CHAPTER 2 β€œTo Human” Is a Verb
RESPONSE I Free and Easy Wandering: Humans, Humane Education, and Designing in Harmony with the Nature of the Way
RESPONSE II On Human Natures: Anthropological and Jewish Musings
RESPONSE III The Humanifying Adventure: A Response to Tim Ingold
RESPONSE IV The Ontogenesis of Human Moral Becoming
CHAPTER 3 Recognizing the Complexity of Personhood: Complex Emergent Developmental Linguistic Relational Neurophysiologicalism
RESPONSE I β€œSelf-Organizing Personhood” and Many Loose Ends
RESPONSE II A Last Hurrah for Dualism?
RESPONSE III Why the Foundational Question about Human Nature Is Open and Empirical
CHAPTER 4 Human Origins and the Emergence of a Distinctively Human Imagination: Theology and the Archaeology of Personhood
RESPONSE I Constructing the Face, Creating the Collective: Neolithic Mediation of Personhood
RESPONSE II Imago Dei and the Glabrous Ape
CHAPTER 5 What Is Human Nature For?
RESPONSE I The Difficulties of Forsaking Normativity
RESPONSE II Some Remarks on Human Nature and Naturalism
Epilogues
Putting Evolutionary Theory to Work in Investigating Human Nature(s)
Moving Us Forward?
List of Contributors
Index


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