eccles - evolution of the brain - creation of the self (routledge, 1986)

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eccles - evolution of the brain - creation of the self (routledge, 1986)

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[...]... in specifying the sequence of the five amino acids in this specimen record 2 EVOLUTION OF THE BRAIN: CREATION OF THE SELF For a bacterium the code of each strand has about 1.5 million letters With Homo there are about 3.5 billion letters in each DNA strand, which gives the preliminary information for building all of the cells of a human being Before the cell divides, the two strands of the double helix... present an intelligible story of the essentials of the evolutionary process, it is necessary first to give a muchsimplified account of the genetic material of the cell, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and of the mode of its action via the genetic code The segregation of this essential evolutionary material into the cell nuclei was achieved very early in the evolution of the unicellular eukaryotes that... isolated from all other species because of the fertility criterion Other rather similar species may inhabit the same territory, but despite this sympatric 6 EVOLUTION OF THE BRAIN: CREATION OF THE SELF Figure 1.3 A photograph of a normal complement of chromosomes of a human female enlarged 15,000 times The normal number of chromosomes in the human is 46 (Handler, 1968.) coexistence there is no interbreeding... torus; in Dryopithecus the superior torus was dominant Both of the ridges are developed in Ramapithecus and Australopithecus From ‘Ramapithecus’ by E.L.Simons Copyright © May 1977 by Scientific American Inc., all rights reserved EVOLUTION OF THE BRAIN: CREATION OF THE SELF 17 Figure 2.3 Taung juvenile, the first specimen of Australopithecus to be unearthed, is shown in (a) with a portion of the fossilized... building of an organism Genes operate to give gene products such as the building of proteins in the manner indicated in Figure 1.2b, and these proteins, often enzymes, by the immensely complicated processes of ontogenesis give the characteristic features of the organism Chapter two The general story of human evolution Since the thema of this book is mammalian brain to human brain, I will concentrate on the. .. the coming to be of consciousness and self- consciousness It is recognized that there can be no physicalist explanation of this mysterious emergence of consciousness and self- consciousness in a hitherto mindless world The philosophical consideration of this problem in Chapters 8, 9, and 10 leads in Chapter 10 to a religious concept of the coming-to-be of the self- consciousness that each of us experiences... told It is our story Each of us has to realize that the great success of hominid evolution was the only chance of existence as human beings, if one dares to speak retrospectively Why then is this story not being often told in the essential features of the coming-to-be of human brains, as has been done in this book? It could be that the brain evolution story appears to be empty of facts and good only for... 1.4) The theme of the book goes beyond the materialistic concepts of Darwinism only in the last three chapters, where there is consideration of the most controversial evolutionary happenings First, there was the emergence of consciousness in the higher animals (Chapter 8) and secondly the much more remarkable transcendence when hominids experienced self- consciousness (Chapters 9 and 10) Right at the. .. the advantages and dangers of this terrestrial life, it lapsed into an evolutionary stasis But with its small brain, survival was enough A africanus alone carried on the hominid evolutionary line in all the vicissitudes of the African biosphere Its extinction would have been the end of hominid evolution Survival was enough, and, to wait for the dawn of a genetic revolution, the origin of the large-brained... compared with the endocast from the skull of a modern ape, there appears to be very little difference in the size and form of the brain (Figure 2.7) At the most there has been some slight development of the inferior frontal lobule in the general area of the human Broca speech area, and there may be some increase in the superior parietal lobule (Tobias, 1983; Holloway, 1983) Australopithecus africanus . h0" alt="" Evolution of the Brain: Creation of the Self Evolution of the Brain: Creation of the Self John C .Eccles CH 6646 Contra (TI), Switzerland (all correspondence) Max-Planck-Institut für biophysikalische. to the most important of all the big problems the evolution of the human brain, and of the human mind. The book is a synthesis of comparative anatomy—especially brain anatomy of the evidence of. 179 8.2 Consciousness of non-human animals 180 8.3 The evolution of consciousness 181 8.4 Philosophy of the mind -brain problem 184 8.5 Experimental testing of the mind -brain problem 186 8.6 Neuronal

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Mục lục

  • 1.2 The modern synthesis: phyletic gradualism (Mayr, 1963)

  • 1.4 Genetic mechanisms in hominid evolution (White, 1978)

  • 1.5 General conclusions on the evolutionary origin of species

  • Chapter two The general story of human evolution

    • 2.1 The Hominid Ancestry (Tobias, 1975a; Simons, 1981; Coppens, 1983)

    • 2.6 Homo sapiens sapiens (Facchini, 1984; Smith, 1984)

    • 2.7 Problems of hominid evolution (Facchini, 1984)

    • Chapter three Evolution of hominid brain: bipedality; agility

      • 3.1 The essential structural features

      • 3.2 The functional performance of the brain (Brooks, 1986; Evarts, 1981)

      • 3.3 Erect standing, walking, and reacting

        • 3.3.1 The skeletal evolution (Washburn, 1978)

        • 3.3.2 Bipedal walking and agility

        • 3.4 Neuronal mechanisms evolved for the fine control of movement

        • Chapter four Linguistic communication in hominid evolution

          • 4.1 The levels of language

          • 4.3 The learning of a human language

          • 4.4 The language training of apes

          • 4.5 The anatomy of the cerebral cortex with special reference to the centres for speech

          • 4.6 Auditory pathways (Imig and Morel, 1983)

          • 4.7 The evolution of the brain in relation to the development of speech

          • 4.8 The evolution of speech production

          • 4.9 Language and evolutionary survival

          • 5.3 Pharmacology of limbic system and hypothalamus

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