Sterelny on the evolution of humans

Some of you might be interested by Kim Sterelny's essay on the evolution of humans and by the commentaries on his essay (C. Driscoll, P.S. Davies, mine, etc.). It's a good summary of Kim's views. The symposium is organized by C. Driscoll on the forum On the Human.

Edouard

 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
  • No trackbacks exist for this post.
Comments

  • 8/16/2010 12:54 PM Tad wrote:
    Thanks for advertising this. I didn't see your commentary on the web-site (though the others were there).
    Reply to this
  • 8/16/2010 4:23 PM Joshua Stern wrote:
    piffle. a more facile setting up and knocking down of strawmen would be hard to imagine, neither the setup or the knockdown supported by more than hand-waving.
    Reply to this
  • 8/17/2010 10:08 AM Edouard Machery wrote:
    Tad,

    Yes, it takes a lot of time for the moderators to publish my commentary. Perhaps one day, they'll put it up!

    Joshua

    I agree that Kim is a bit fighting a strawman in this post (I insist on this in the commentary), but keep in mind that this is just a summary of his much more detailed, forthcoming book (based on his Jean Nicod lectures),

    E
    Reply to this
    1. 8/17/2010 6:25 PM Joshua Stern wrote:
      I found virtually nothing to agree with pro or con. The idea that human evolution is self-driven, I'm sure I could take issue with in detail if it were presented in detail. What could such a claim possibly mean, and how could it possibly be true? The idea that human cognitive competencies "have a high information load" sounds tautological, but the real fault with it is likely that it is false. You want information load, try processing visual information the way an eagle does, or even a fruit fly does. That John can guess that Jane wants new shoes doesn't actually have much content at all.
      Reply to this
Leave a comment

Submitted comments are subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.