Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the author
OK
A Natural History of Human Thinking Hardcover – February 17, 2014
Purchase options and add-ons
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.
- Print length192 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarvard University Press
- Publication dateFebruary 17, 2014
- Dimensions6.25 x 0.75 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-100674724771
- ISBN-13978-0674724778
Frequently bought together

Customers who bought this item also bought
Becoming Human: A Theory of OntogenyHardcover$14.18 shippingGet it as soon as Monday, Jul 22Only 1 left in stock - order soon.
What Babies Know: Core Knowledge and Composition Volume 1 (Oxford Cognitive Development)Hardcover$15.65 shippingOnly 19 left in stock (more on the way).
The Goodness Paradox: The Strange Relationship Between Virtue and Violence in Human EvolutionRichard WranghamHardcover$13.97 shippingGet it as soon as Friday, Jul 19Only 1 left in stock - order soon.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Tomasello has spent a lifetime conducting…tests on both great apes such as chimpanzees and on humans of different ages, in order to pin down exactly where our capacities differ. In this difficult but rewarding book, he attempts to place these results into a grand theory of how and why these differences evolved… Tomasello’s account of how co-operation drove the development of our distinctive intellect is controversial… It is also highly speculative: a trait such as co-operation leaves few traces in the fossil record. But it is speculation by a thinker at the top of his field, based on the latest research, and as such is likely to be the definitive statement of human uniqueness for some time to come.”―Stephen Cave, Financial Times
“Tomasello argues that human thinking is unique because it is cooperative. He posits that environmental upheavals forced early humans to channel their thinking towards collective aims through two evolutionary innovations: collaboration while foraging, and the rise of culture as population and competition burgeoned. Tomasello convincingly sets out how ‘shared intentionality,’ in which social complexity spawned conceptual complexities, sets us apart.”―Nature
“Compelling reading… In a reassessment of his earlier work, Tomasello argues that apes are cognitively much closer to humans than had been thought only a decade ago… The book’s great virtue is its conceptual analysis of the cumulative steps in cognition required to get us from ape to human… Highly stimulating.”―Stephen Levinson, Science
“What is it that differentiates humans from other animals? It’s the question that keeps evolutionary anthropologists like Michael Tomasello up nights. But after 20-plus years wrestling with the thorny subject, he puts forward his ‘shared intentionality hypothesis,’ designed to account for how early humans learned to coordinate their actions and communicate their thoughts with collaborators.”―New Scientist
“Human thought, in Tomasello’s conception, is different from that of all other organisms because humans alone have the capacity to think about the thoughts of others, and do so collectively. Tomasello’s greatest strength is his insistence on relying on data to support his hypotheses, particularly the fascinating studies he summarizes comparing pre-linguistic children to our great ape relatives.”―Publishers Weekly
“What makes human thinking unique? Michael Tomasello’s clear and elegant new book demonstrates once more his ability to draw on his experimental work with apes and children to offer major new insights into the evolutionary origins of human cognition.”―Dan Sperber, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris
Review
-- David P. Barash Wall Street Journal
Tomasello has spent a lifetime conducting…tests on both great apes such as chimpanzees and on humans of different ages, in order to pin down exactly where our capacities differ. In this difficult but rewarding book, he attempts to place these results into a grand theory of how and why these differences evolved… Tomasello’s account of how co-operation drove the development of our distinctive intellect is controversial… It is also highly speculative: a trait such as co-operation leaves few traces in the fossil record. But it is speculation by a thinker at the top of his field, based on the latest research, and as such is likely to be the definitive statement of human uniqueness for some time to come.
-- Stephen Cave Financial Times
Tomasello argues that human thinking is unique because it is cooperative. He posits that environmental upheavals forced early humans to channel their thinking towards collective aims through two evolutionary innovations: collaboration while foraging, and the rise of culture as population and competition burgeoned. Tomasello convincingly sets out how ‘shared intentionality,’ in which social complexity spawned conceptual complexities, sets us apart.
-- Nature
Compelling reading… In a reassessment of his earlier work, Tomasello argues that apes are cognitively much closer to humans than had been thought only a decade ago… The book’s great virtue is its conceptual analysis of the cumulative steps in cognition required to get us from ape to human… Highly stimulating.
-- Stephen Levinson Science
What is it that differentiates humans from other animals? It’s the question that keeps evolutionary anthropologists like Michael Tomasello up nights. But after 20-plus years wrestling with the thorny subject, he puts forward his ‘shared intentionality hypothesis,’ designed to account for how early humans learned to coordinate their actions and communicate their thoughts with collaborators.
-- New Scientist
Human thought, in Tomasello’s conception, is different from that of all other organisms because humans alone have the capacity to think about the thoughts of others, and do so collectively. Tomasello’s greatest strength is his insistence on relying on data to support his hypotheses, particularly the fascinating studies he summarizes comparing pre-linguistic children to our great ape relatives.
-- Publishers Weekly
What makes human thinking unique? Michael Tomasello’s clear and elegant new book demonstrates once more his ability to draw on his experimental work with apes and children to offer major new insights into the evolutionary origins of human cognition.
-- Dan Sperber, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Harvard University Press; 1st edition (February 17, 2014)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 192 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0674724771
- ISBN-13 : 978-0674724778
- Item Weight : 15.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 0.75 x 9.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,552,093 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #636 in Evolutionary Psychology (Books)
- #947 in Medical Developmental Psychology
- #5,442 in Cognitive Psychology (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Tomasello derives his conclusions from careful and close study in the laboratory of differences in behavior of adult and child humans on the one hand, and non-human primates, especially the great apes, on the other. He shows that there are three types of human cognition, only one of which, individual rationality (“me-thinking”) is shared with the great apes (and a fortiori with other animal species).
Individual rationality is exemplified by the economist’s utility maximizer. Individual rationality can be purely selfish, in which individuals are sociopaths who care about others only as objects that may help satisfy their personal needs, but can also include elements of empathy in which individuals care about the suffering of others, and also elements of negative hostility in which individuals gain pleasure from hurting and punishing others who have displeased them..
A second kind of human cognition is what Tomasello calls “collective intentionality,” Tomasello writes: “Modern humans became cultural beings…by creating…cultural conventions, norms, and institutions built not on personal but on cultural common ground. They thus became thoroughly group-minded individuals.” (p. 80) This sort of human cognition is extremely well-known, as developed in sociology by Emile Durkheim, George Herbert Mead, Talcott Parsons and many others. Tomasello offers the reader an informative overview of this aspect of human cognition. He stresses that humans obey social norms altruistically when they are considered legitimate, even at personal cost, and humans spontaneously punish others who are observed violating social norms for selfish gain (for a more expansive treatment, see my paper with sociologist Dirk Helbing, “Homo Socialis” available from my web site). He adds to the standard repertoire of arguments the contention that this sort of cognition is absent even in the great apes. He writes: “Although great apes retaliate for harm done to them, they do not punish other individual for acts toward third parties. In contrast, three-year-old children enforce social norms on others even when they are not personally involved…” (p. 87)
Tomasello’s unique and quite stunning contribution is his analysis of what he calls “joint intentionality.” The idea here is that two or more humans can “collaborate” in accomplishing a goal. Collaboration is more complex than cooperation, which merely involves all participants in a task carrying out their part the process of achieving some end. For instance, chimpanzees cooperate in catching monkeys, but they do not collaborate. Each chimpanzee wants to catch the monkey and eat as much as he can before the other swarm him demanding a share. Each chimpanzee does better in catching monkeys when surrounded by other chimpanzees equally intent on catching the monkey because when a number of hunters chase their prey at the same time, there are fewer avenues of escape for the monkey. But this form of cooperative hunting is pure “mutualism:” the chimps are each out form himself, and each chimp is oblivious to what is going on in other chimps’ minds and does not modulate his activity strategically by anticipating what the other chimps are about to do. Such cooperative hunting is pure individual rationality me-thinking “parallel play,” as is observed in very young children in a sandbox.
Collaboration goes way beyond cooperation by linking the minds of the collaborators together in a form of networked minds with consciousness and intentionality distributed across the minds of the participants. Joint intentionality is “we-thinking,” a form of cognition that even children understand, and is quite unavailable to other animals. Tomasello’s analysis of we-thinking is, to my mind, completely convincing, and quite new in the literature on human cooperation.
The notion of joint intentionality can be dramatically illustrated by reference to a very simple example from game theory (Tomasello does not use this example). Consider a game in which Bob and Alice each receive 100 when both say “Up,” and 1 when they both say “Down.” If they say different things, they both get 0. The joint intentionality solution is that both say “Up.” However, pure individual rationality cannot predict what Bob and Alice will do. The game has two Nash equilibria in pure strategies, and either player will choose “Down” if he or she believes that is what the other will do. It take social rationality for Bob to reason as follows: “Alice is socially rational and therefore she understands what a collaborative effort is. Alice will see that we are involved in a collaborative effort in which we have a common payoff and by considering the rationality involved in joint intentionality, Alice will know that I expect her to choose Up, and therefore she will choose Up. Therefore my best play is Up.” Alice will analyze the situation in the same way, and both will choose the high-payoff strategy Up.
Note that in this example, both Bob and Alice have perfectly selfish preferences and their behavior is completely amoral. All they share is a common social rationality that allows them to predict what each other is thinking, and therefore what each other will do.
I first came across the notion of collective intentionality in the works of such philosophers as John Searle, Michael Bacharach, Margaret Gilbert, Raimo Tuomela and Nathalie Gold, and the economist Robert Sugden. However, I was quite unpersuaded by their arguments.
Consider John Searle’s contribution “Collective Intentions and Actions,” in a volume entitled Intentions in Communication. Searle argues (a) collective intentionality obviously exists, and (b) it cannot be explained as an aggregation of individual intentionalities, but rather "is a primitive phenomenon." His argument for (a) is that "It seems obvious that there really is a collective intentional behavior as distinct from individual intentional behavior. You can see this by watching a football team execute a pass play or hear it by listening to an orchestra." (p. 401) However, this is not only not obvious, it is plainly wrong. What is experienced in this and similar cases is highly coordinated cooperative behavior. In both cases, the role of each participant has been carefully marked out by a single agent, whom I will call the "choreographer," or perhaps a few interacting agents using a collective decision process to adjudicate differences among them in the content of the choreography, and conveyed to the members of the "team." A "pass play" in football is diagrammed, memorized by the players, and carried out on precise cue under objectively given conditions. A similar analysis holds for the interpretation of a musical score and its execution by the musicians.
Searle argues that we can see the collective intentionality in the idea that there is a collective goal to the group---winning the football match, and producing beautiful music. However, individual group members may place some value on this "goal," but are unlikely to be motivated thereby unless they are properly rewarded in other, usually more material, ways. Moreover, some group members may actually have the intention of out-performing other members, thereby gaining personally at the expense of the "collective intention" of the group. Similarly, group members may be performing solely for the pay, or for the chance to get a better job, or even to get a date with another group member. Perhaps Searle can introspect and discover that he has performed in a group with "collective intentional" behavior, but I have not. I am certain that I am not alone. Therefore, even should some people like Searle exist, it would be a miracle if they more than rarely constituted any real collectively interacting cooperative group.
Tomasello’s contribution is the reposition the concept of joint intentionality from the realm of collective behavior to that of social epistemology. Although Tomasello calls this form of cognition “joint intentionality,” it is really a high level cognitive representation in each participant of the mind of the other participants that can be used to predict their behavior in the face of the various contingencies involved in carrying out their collaboration. This way of thinking about the cognitive basis of collaboration might better be called “joint representation” of a task, which is an aspect of a larger capacity of social cognition in humans, who have evolved in groups as networked minds with cognition distributed over this network. It is this aspect of the human mind that permits the forms of collaboration that has rendered our species so successful.
I have only one quibble with Tomasello’s analysis: his attempt at a game-theoretic formulation of joint intentionality. A game has payoffs, strategies and information structure (see my book Game Theory Evolving, Princeton University Press, 2009). Game theory is based on pure individual rationality, although it can be extended to collective rationality by drawing upon other-regarding preferences and treating social norms as correlated equilibria (see my book, The Bounds of Reason, Princeton University Press, 2009, and with Samuel Bowles, A Cooperative Species, Princeton University Press 2011). Collaboration, by contrast, is a non-strategic coordination process closer to engineering that to strategic interaction. Tomasello tries to conceptualize joint intentionality in terms of the famous Stag Hunt game, in which hunters can gain a small reward by hunting hares individuals, but a large reward by hunting stag collectively. But this is a poor formulation. Collaboration is an instance of returns to scale through a complex division of labor, as first outlines by Adam Smith in his famous book The Wealth of Nations. It has little to do with the Stag Hunt Game.
Indeed, the most serious task facing collaborating individuals is that of dealing with “free riders” who shirk in cooperating, but still demand a share of the product of collaboration. There is a huge literature on how this problem is handled, and it is quite unpersuasive to argue that the Stag Hunt scenario is an alternative, to this analysis, which is traditionally, and correctly, I believe, rooted in the analysis of social dilemmas, of which the Public Goods Game is the most well known example.
What makes this book special is not the simple plan above (though I think it's correct except as below) but the insights into moral philosophy that come with it. Too many theorists on the evolution of human morals think that "science" blows away "mere philosophy." Tomasello is far above that level. His book is superbly informed by the thought of Hume, Adam Smith, Kant, and others, including the modern Kantian Christine Korsgaard (I thought I was the only person in this trade that was a Korsgaard fan, but, not so--Tomasello really knows and uses her work). This makes his insights into the different stages of moral evolution really important to moral thinking in general. Another huge benefit in this book is Tomasello's highly sensitive and knowledgeable portrayal of young children and their moral development. Far from being little ids (as Freud thought), they become highly sensitive and caring very early, and three-year-olds could teach most adults a bit. Tomasello carefully considers how much "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" and finds much of value there.
There are some problems. Tomasello has anticipated the really bad one: “many people will think that what we have painted here is an unrealistically rosy picture of human cooperation and morality…because human immorality is on display for all to see all day every day n the world press" (p. 161). Yep. He postulates a world of people who really do follow their cultural norms, which are relatively simple and straightforward. In the real world, cultures offer many alternative patterns, from "rules for breaking rules" (think: what do you do when a stop light is broken?) to the equally salient morality of "help your neighbor" and "kill your neighbor for dishonoring you" that we see in hundreds of cultures round the world, including much of the USA. Cultures provide viciously cruel and hateful moralities as alternatives to decent ones, and some cultures foreground these cruel rules at the expense of cooperation, family, and co-foraging. A full theory of moral evolution must come to terms with this. In a later publication (Scientific American, 2018) Tomasello has done so to some extent, admitting that group warfare and conflict must have had a lot to do with human evolution, including morality.
The other criticisms are more technical and minor. First, Tomasello takes the chimpanzee as a model for our ancestral ape. Nope. Our subhuman ancestors were small, frail creatures with tiny teeth. They were not the powerful, fierce, dominance-striving killers that Tomasello postulates. The bonobo (which he barely mentions) and gorilla (which he does not even mention), milder and less prone to fight for dominance, probably make better models. We would also benefit from understanding more highly social animals, like wolves and meerkats, that do co-hunt and co-forage and may be good models for his second stage. (Incidentally, meerkats are savage little things, but let that pass.) Second, Tomasello seems to believe that the second stage arose from hunting in dyads--just two people. This is unlikely; all social hunter animals hunt in packs, and all human forager groups hunt, gather, and forage in small groups or singles more often than as pairs. It does not matter to his argument; I simply take it that the second stage, of second-person responsibility, was a small-group thing, and "dyad" stands for "two or a few."
These criticisms do not damage the book's main conclusions. The book should be read by anyone interested in the background and development of the human capacity for morality.
Top reviews from other countries
Objectivity, normativity, and self-reflection : following Tomasello's main hypothesis, these major features of human thinking are species-typical, tied to, and flowing from, cooperative engagement, in a two-step developmental sequence (face-to-face interactions in Joint intentionality, then global, group-minded convention-building and -enforcing or Collective intentionality). Both steps emerge around a common conceptual ground, acting as meaning-endowing.
Detailed experiments show subject's ability, or lack of, to individualize roles and perspectives under a common intent, to catch up with the relevance of signs and signals, to read the intention of others, to re-engage a departing collaborative partner, to work until other participant gets his reward too, etc. Skills of this sort arise in human only, and at a fairly low age, allowing no prior internalization of parental-cultural enticement to account satisfactorily for them.
The work done is far-ranging. I have read comments from practitioners of different fields, rejoicing Tomasello's contributions to psychotherapy, economics, management, social sciences' philosophy and the like. The taking down of the Language Idol (which dates at least from the Old Testament) is one way in which Tomasello can shed new and powerful lights on our common sense, and on the handling of collective concepts, among other things.
Common interpersonal and cultural basis mediates our way to relate to ourself, to other and to the world : this count among anthropologists' and sociologists' basic, and dearest, claims, and yet, claims for which supports could have been lacking (if no longer today, then at least back in Durkheim' or even Franz Boas' time).
Together with a overall clear writing, sense of modesty, and openness, a dense and rich empirical set of evidences help make Tomasello's book great and admirable. Not many scientist can rival him on this ground.
I have kept track of Tomasello from The Cultural Origins of Human Cognition up to now, only to see my conviction growing stronger : he should be set next to Rousseau, Adam Smith and René Descartes among the most significant Western intellectual achievements.



