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【マイケル・トマセロ著 人間の思考の自然史】

A Natural History of Human Thinking P 192 p. 18

Tomasello, Michael  著

在庫状況 国内在庫有り  僅少 お届け予定日 3~4日 
価格 \4,130(税込)         
発行年月 2018年10月
出版社/提供元
Harvard University Press
出版国 アメリカ合衆国
言語 英語
媒体 冊子
装丁 paper
ページ数/巻数 192 p., 6 line illus.
ジャンル 洋書/人文科学/心理学 /実験心理学
ISBN 9780674986831
商品コード 1027310135
本の性格 学術書
新刊案内掲載月 2018年07月
書評掲載誌 A Wall Street Journal Favorite Read of the Year
商品URLhttps://kw.maruzen.co.jp/ims/itemDetail.html?itmCd=1027310135

内容

Tool-making or culture, language or religious belief: ever since Darwin, thinkers have struggled to identify what fundamentally differentiates human beings from other animals. In this much-anticipated book, Michael Tomasello weaves his twenty years of comparative studies of humans and great apes into a compelling argument that cooperative social interaction is the key to our cognitive uniqueness. Once our ancestors learned to put their heads together with others to pursue shared goals, humankind was on an evolutionary path all its own.

Tomasello argues that our prehuman ancestors, like today's great apes, were social beings who could solve problems by thinking. But they were almost entirely competitive, aiming only at their individual goals. As ecological changes forced them into more cooperative living arrangements, early humans had to coordinate their actions and communicate their thoughts with collaborative partners. Tomasello's "shared intentionality hypothesis" captures how these more socially complex forms of life led to more conceptually complex forms of thinking. In order to survive, humans had to learn to see the world from multiple social perspectives, to draw socially recursive inferences, and to monitor their own thinking via the normative standards of the group. Even language and culture arose from the preexisting need to work together. What differentiates us most from other great apes, Tomasello proposes, are the new forms of thinking engendered by our new forms of collaborative and communicative interaction.

A Natural History of Human Thinking is the most detailed scientific analysis to date of the connection between human sociality and cognition.