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Braindance: New Discoveries about Human Origins and Brain Evolution
 
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Braindance: New Discoveries about Human Origins and Brain Evolution [Paperback]

Dean Falk (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 30, 2004
When first published in 1992, Braindance presented a revolutionary look at the origins of the human brain. Biological anthropologist Dean Falk now brings the discussion into the 21st century. In this revised edition with a new preface and updated information through 2003, she reexamines her groundbreaking research of how the human brain evolved and reveals how this process continues to impact our species.
 
Around two million years ago, our earliest hominin ancestors experienced an explosive brain expansion, at least one million years after they began to walk upright. Rather than linking bipedalism alone with brain expansion, as previously theorized, Falk’s explanation involves climate. She contends that bipedalism allowed our ancestors to wander farther afield in savannah-like regions, where their brains were subjected to solar heating. Falk and her colleagues discovered that one hominin line developed a complicated brain-cooling system to combat the destructive effects of excessive heat. This ability and expanding brain size evolved together, thus producing hominins with a brain capacity three times greater than their ancestors.
 
Falk further discusses the evolution of visual skills, right-handedness, language ability, right-brain/left-brain and male/female differences—and the uniquely human ability to dance. The specifics of how we tapped, toed, and twisted through the prehistoric "brain dance" form the story line of this book. And what did two million years of bigger brains produce? The last chapter summarizes Falk’s ideas on human cognitive and conscious capacities for the future.
 

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Editorial Reviews

Book Description

From reviews of the first edition:
"Falk has taken on the Old Guard, knocked Lucy from her pedestal, and scolded her colleagues for their trend toward 'splitomania.' Her reasoning is intriguing, her courage admirable."--Kirkus
 
"Falk challenges some of her discipline's most sacred cows in this controversial, entertaining account of the hominid brain. . . . She discusses in fascinating detail the evolution of brain lateralization, and she presents her compelling arguments with a sense of adventure and humor."--Library Journal
 
"Falk writes so clearly and interestingly about brain anatomy and evolution that Braindance should be considered a significant contribution to both biological anthropologists and to the general public."--American Journal of Physical Anthropology
 
"You've probably never thought of paleoanthropology as a spectator sport, but the fights these bone-hunters get into rival anything you'll see inside a hockey ring. Falk's lucid and witty book provides an elegant theory, based on sound scientific thinking, and to her credit she prints her critics' views of her theory as well as her refutations."--Bookpage
 
When first published in 1992, Braindance presented a revolutionary look at the origins of the human brain. Biological anthropologist Dean Falk now brings the discussion into the 21st century. In this revised edition with a new preface and updated information through 2003, she reexamines her groundbreaking research of how the human brain evolved and reveals how this process continues to impact our species.
 
Around two million years ago, our earliest hominin ancestors experienced an explosive brain expansion, at least one million years after they began to walk upright. Rather than linking bipedalism alone with brain expansion, as previously theorized, Falk’s explanation involves climate. She contends that bipedalism allowed our ancestors to wander farther afield in savannah-like regions, where their brains were subjected to solar heating. Falk and her colleagues discovered that one hominin line developed a complicated brain-cooling system to combat the destructive effects of excessive heat. This ability and expanding brain size evolved together, thus producing hominins with a brain capacity three times greater than their ancestors.
 
Falk further discusses the evolution of visual skills, right-handedness, language ability, right-brain/left-brain and male/female differences—and the uniquely human ability to dance. The specifics of how we tapped, toed, and twisted through the prehistoric "brain dance" form the story line of this book. And what did two million years of bigger brains produce? The last chapter summarizes Falk’s ideas on human cognitive and conscious capacities for the future.
 
 

About the Author

 
Dean Falk is professor of anthropology at Florida State University and honorary professor of human biology at the University of Vienna. An author of numerous books and articles, she became an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2000.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Florida; 1st edition (June 30, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0813027381
  • ISBN-13: 978-0813027388
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,214,949 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Mildly interesting contentious hypothesis., January 11, 2006
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John Harpur (Trim, Meath, IRELAND) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Braindance: New Discoveries about Human Origins and Brain Evolution (Paperback)
This is a very readable book providing a gentle overview of brain functions and their possible evolutionary roots. A great deal of the book concentrates on the discovery and study a endocasts from a small sample of primates. This leads on to an inconclusive discussion about the bipedal development and its relationship to the evolutionary brain. The human ability to dance, or more precisely the human ability to lay down the motor memories assiociated with dance movements, while notionally the subject of the book receives much less attention than the title suggests. The author's main point is that only humans dance, and this is sufficiently distinctive in evolutionary terms to merit much wider appreciation. The flaw in this argument, as I see it, is that dance itself has evolved across time and society. It is unlikely the waltz could have been developed by head hunters, and equally unlikely that it could have emerged today. The cultural context is critical to appreciating the type of dance that emerged. For instance, humans run differently than primates, we swim and eat differently too. Should all these areas not also receive special attention? I am also aware that young animals often display 'dance like' moves when practising hunting. For example, kittens will often practice stalking and prancing with older cats. The arguments in the book about the special nature of dance, I didn't find convincing. This was not a major downside to the book, simply a hypothesis that I couldn't accept. The downside of the book were the anecdotes that related yet another professional spat between the author and a rival colleague. A sense of friction with other colleagues can be conveyed without the degree of elaboration employed here. The anecdotes interrupted the narrative. Frankly I found them jarring and thought they reflected badly on the book as a whole.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars CSI Meets the Human Cranium, July 19, 2006
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This review is from: Braindance: New Discoveries about Human Origins and Brain Evolution (Paperback)
This is an excellent book, and like all good scientific works the author has her own particular thesis, the "cranial radiator." Standing upright on the hot African savanna reduced the overall heat uptake of our ancestors' bodies by exposing less of them to the sun, and changes in cerebral "plumbing" were also required that may have added redundant capabilities later exapted as human intellect. There is a lightness of touch to "Braindance" evidenced by the author's photo on the back cover, which is actually a monkey, purportedly an "ancestral portrait." There is also an excellent photo of Glen Conroy doing research in Chad, he is holding an M16! These are the Indiana Jones's of anthropology.

The human fossil record is primarily one of skulls and teeth and this expertly written account of past and present brain anatomy is elegant, timely, and significant.
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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Strives to explain what truly distinguishes human beings, November 11, 2004
This review is from: Braindance: New Discoveries about Human Origins and Brain Evolution (Paperback)
Now in a newly revised and expanded edition, Braindance examines what science has to say about the evolution of the human brain and the origins of humanity as a species. Looking at what the most recent discoveries have to say about male brains versus female brains, and the difference - or resemblance - that human brains have with regard to primate brains, and much, much more, Braindance strives to explain what truly distinguishes human beings in terms as accessible to lay readers as it is to field professionals and academic scholarship. Information-packed and highly recommended.

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