An Ancient Brain in a Modern World.
To solve today’s problems, we need to understand more about who we are and how our brain works every day – what psychologists call “normal” consciousness – and then take a look at what else it might be capable of.
The content of this section, unless indicated, represents Robert Ornstein’s award-winning Psychology of Evolution Trilogy and Multimind. It is reproduced here by kind permission of the Estate of Robert Ornstein.
As we’ve shown on this website, the processes of biological evolution are really slow. To help us appreciate this, we pointed to the work of evolutionary psychologists. For example, Robin Dunbar found out that many characteristics we recognized as human – such as mentalization, sympathy, empathy, and a theory of mind – have been shared by hominid species since at least Homo heidelbergensis (about 700,000 years ago).
Recall that 40,000 years ago we were still sharing the planet with other hominids: Neanderthals, Denisovans, Homo floresiensis and possibly the last remnants of Homo erectus. So at that time the difference between humans and other hominid animals would have been very small. The perceived gap seems large to us now because, for one thing, all the other hominids have gone extinct; and, for another, our view of ourselves as being superior to other animals has been perpetuated by our myths and beliefs, and by our astounding ability to develop and reshape the world outside ourselves.
About 100,000 years ago, sites at the southernmost coast of Africa, such as Klipdrift Shelter and Pinnacle Point, left evidence of our “modern” mind – complex abstract symbols and a developed workshop at Blombos Cave proved that people there had a high level of social organization, collaboration and environmental adaptation.
Early humans were foragers and hunters, travelling in small bands throughout the African continent. As climate changed and sea levels lowered due to the onset of the Ice Age, the possibility of a better life meant that some left Africa never to return. They went west from Arabia eventually reaching Europe, north to Central Asia, and east to India, China, Japan and Australia – all over the old world.
By 35,000 years ago, the capacity for abstract thought and symbolic representation had finally become a stable and universal capacity of the human mind and one of the traits that we share with all other humans. It enabled us to communicate in unprecedented ways and build the world we know today.
We were the same human beings then as we are now.
The brain’s age-old strategies to ensure survival in the short-term still hang on today, among them are:
- What have you done for me lately?
Our consciousness is not a reasoned instrument for looking into the future and planning the best action. We are short-term animals, animals who look for the immediate gain. We are extremely sensitive to recent information. Terrible disasters like an air crash – even famine or war – force our attention and that of the news media on them, for a moment, and then the spotlight goes away. - “Call me when something new happens.”
Our senses are both sensors and censors. Obviously, our senses show us the outside world, but they operate to notice change – the beginnings and endings of events. Loosely speaking, their operation follows the axiom, “call me when anything new happens.” - Get to the point.
Our mental system determines the meaning and importance of any event and its relevance to ourselves based on a relatively small amount of information. In the process, it throws out almost all information that reaches us to “get to the point.”
Thinking Big
How the Evolution of Social Life Shaped the Human Mind
Robin Dunbar, Clive Gamble & John Gowlett
The social brain that drives our behavior and contemporary culture is essentially the same brain that appeared with the earliest humans some 300,000 years ago.
Moral Tribes
Emotion, Reason, and the Gap Between Us and Them
Joshua D. Greene
Our innate moral behavior evolved over millions of years to promote cooperation within our group. Each group has its own moral code, which provides a map for how individuals can live successfully within it. Our other innate tendency, to favor our group over all others, is something we need to understand and mitigate to address the existential challenges of our modern global society.
The Mountain People
Colin Turnbull
The story of the IK tribe of northeastern Uganda is a classic study of how a society’s concept of fairness and justice can quickly devolve when its people are cut off from their accustomed means of livelihood and forced to compete for their very survival.
The Matter with Things
Iain McGilchrist
One of McGilchrist’s central points is that our society is one in which we rely on representations of the world as our way of knowing it. Scientific theories expressed in mathematical form, economic models, photographs – all re-present the reality they purport to describe.
In the series: Our Mind in the Modern World
- Our Unconscious Minds
- Maintaining a Stable World
- The Multiple Nature of Our Mind
- Connecting with Others
- Morality’s Long Evolution
- Unconscious Associations
- The Brain’s Latent Capacities
- God 4.0
- Multimind: A New Way of Looking at Human Behavior
- Thinking Big
- Social
- The Weirdest People in the World
- The Righteous Mind
- New World New Mind
- Moral Tribes
- The Mountain People
- The Matter with Things
- Humanity on a Tightrope
- Beyond Culture