MACTAV0028aTavolaparietaleGauss Type post Author Casey Luskin Date July 8, 2026 CategoriesEvolutionNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , ancestors, anthropologists, braincase, brains, Christof Koch, evolution, evolutionary biology, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, hominids, Homo (genus), human brain, humanity, humans, Katerina Harvati, Mark Hubbe, Michael Marshall, MIT Press, natural selection, Nature Communications, neuroscience, neuroscientists, neutral evolution, New Scientist, phenotypes, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, Phys.org, random mutations, skulls, universe Science Journal: Humanity’s Big Brains Evolved “For No Particular Reason” Casey Luskin July 8, 2026 Evolution, Neuroscience & Mind 5 This is tantamount to saying the human brain, chief marvel in the cosmos as far as we can tell, evolved because, well, why the heck not? Read More ›