The Prehistory of Compassion (original) (raw)

From Hominity to Humanity: Compassion from the Earliest Archaics to Modern Humans

Time and Mind, 2010

We are increasingly aware of the role of emotions and emotional construction in social relationships. However, despite their significance, there are few constructs or theoretical approaches to the evolution of emotions that can be related to the prehistoric archaeological record. Whilst we frequently discuss how archaic humans might have thought, how they felt might seem to be beyond the realm of academic inquiry. In this paper we aim to open up the debate into the construction of emotion in early prehistory by proposing key stages in the emotional motivation to help others; the feeling of compassion, in human evolution. We review existing literature on compassion and highlight what appear to be particularly significant thresholds in the development of compassion for human social relationships and the evolution of the human mind.

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From Hominity to Humanity: Compassion from the Earliest Archaics to Modern Humans Cover Page

From Homininity to Humanity: Compassion from the Earliest Archaics to Modern Humans

We are increasingly aware of the role of emotions and emotional construction in social relationships. However, despite their significance, there are few constructs or theoretical approaches to the evolution of emotions that can be related to the prehistoric archaeological record. Whilst we frequently discuss how archaic humans might have thought, how they felt might seem to be beyond the realm of academic inquiry. In this paper we aim to open up the debate into the construction of emotion in early prehistory by proposing key stages in the emotional motivation to help others; the feeling of compassion, in human evolution. We review existing literature on compassion and highlight what appear to be particularly significant thresholds in the development of compassion for human social relationships and the evolution of the human mind.

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From Homininity to Humanity: Compassion from the Earliest Archaics to Modern Humans Cover Page

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2022 Speth (Archaeology, Ethnohistory, Early Hominins, and Some Cherished Scientific Myths FINAL) Cover Page

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Emotion in Archaeology 1 Cover Page

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Hamilakis, Y. and Overton, N. 2013. A multi-species archaeology. Archaeological Dialogues 20(2): 159-173.  Cover Page

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An aetiology of hominin behaviour Cover Page

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Mind: An Archaeological Perspective Cover Page

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Ancestors: An Introduction to Archaeology and Human Prehistory Cover Page

The Archaeology of Mind: It's Not What You Think

Narratives of human evolution place considerable emphasis upon human cognitive development resulting from the evolution of brain architecture and witnessed by the production of ‘symbolic’ material culture. Recent work has modified the narrative to the extent that cognitive development is treated as the product of humanity’s ability to download certain aspects of brain functionality, such as the storage of information, into external media. This article questions the centrality given to the history of brain architecture as determinate of human cognition by rejecting the widespread assumption that cognition trades in representations, either stored internally in the brain or downloaded externally into cultural media. The alternative, offered here, is that human cognitive development was constructed through the development of joint attention made possible by the anatomical development of hominins and that this sustained a shared empathy between social agents in their practical understanding of the qualities of materiality.

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Archaeology and Animal Persons: Toward a Prehistory of Human-Animal Relations

Environment & Society: Advances in Research, 2013

The discipline of archaeology has long engaged with animals in a utilitarian mode, constructing animals as objects to be hunted, manipulated, domesticated, and consumed. Only recently, in tandem with the rising interest in animals in the humanities and the development of interdisciplinary animal studies research, has archaeology begun to systematically engage with animals as subjects. This article describes some of the ways in which archaeologists are reconstructing human engagements with animals in the past, focusing on relational modes of interaction documented in many hunting and gathering societies. Among the most productive lines of evidence for human-animal relations in the past are animal burials and structured deposits of animal bones. These archaeological features provide material evidence for relational ontologies in which animals, like humans, were vested with sentience and agency.

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