Excavation_site_at_Melka_Kunture_Prehistoric_Site,_roughly_800,000_years_before_the_present_(5)_(28838893510) Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date April 1, 2025 CategoriesHuman Origins and AnthropologyPaleontologyTechnology Tagged , abstract reasoning, behavior, Ethiopia, evolution, geology, hominins, human evolution, human history, human mind, human origins, Moon, Olduvai Gorge, stones, ZME Science How Evolutionary Theory Confuses the Study of Human History: Case of the Stone Spheres Denyse O’Leary April 1, 2025 Human Origins and Anthropology, Paleontology, Technology 4 Any state of affairs that dates to eons ago can be referred to as “evolution” even when, as in this case, the facts imply the opposite. Read More ›
Horn_and_bone_implements_of_the_New_York_Indians_(1902)_(14780005032) Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date March 24, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionHuman Origins and AnthropologyPaleontologyTechnology Tagged , abstract reasoning, ancestors, bones, elephants, hippos, hominins, human mind, paleontology Abstract Reasoning in Our Ancestors Earlier than Thought? Denyse O’Leary March 24, 2025 Evolution, Human Origins and Anthropology, Paleontology, Technology 5 Researchers say, bone tools were being mass produced 1.5 million years ago in the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania. Read More ›
Type post Author Michael Egnor Date July 9, 2016 CategoriesPhilosophyScience Tagged , __edited, __tedited, abstract concepts, abstract reasoning, abstract thought, animal intelligence, animal languages, causality, human exceptionalism, human mind, human nature, language, logic, Nature Genetics, universals Is Your Cat Logical? Michael Egnor July 9, 2016 Philosophy, Science 6 Goodness gracious, this stuff never stops. Read More ›
white-faced-capuchin-stockpack-adobe-stock-1323539303-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date January 15, 2016 CategoriesAnatomyNeuroscience & MindZoology Tagged , __nedited, abstract reasoning, analogy, anatomy, Animal Minds (series), anthropomorphism, concepts, Continuing Series, convergence, equality, evolutionary ethics, learning, metabolism, mind, natural selection, philosophy of mind, presuppositions, self-awareness, social status, Thomas Nagel, Tree of Life Animal Minds: In Search of the Minimal Self Denyse O’Leary January 15, 2016 Anatomy, Neuroscience & Mind, Zoology 9 Can evolution explain how minds work? Probably not. Read More ›