The Human Story: A new history of mankind’s evolution by Robin Dunbar, Faber & Faber, £12.99, ISBN 0571191339
ROBIN DUNBAR’s new book about human evolution scarcely mentions fossils and stone tools. He concentrates instead on the mental attributes that have made us such a peculiar type of primate, being rightly confident that terms such as “australopithecine” and “Upper Palaeolithic” will already be familiar to his readers.
The Human Story is a relatively short book written with a strong conviction that one mental attribute above all lies behind our capacity for language, “high” culture and religion: a theory of mind that provides at least three “orders of intentionality”. That is, an ability to imagine what someone else is thinking about either your own or a third person’s beliefs. Really smart behaviour arises, Dunbar argues, when four, five or even six orders of intentionality can be achieved. He suggests that the orders of intentionality attained by our ancestors and relatives can be inferred from their brain volumes, so whereas the australopithecines barely surpassed the two orders of intentionality possibly managed by apes today, Homo erectus attains three orders and archaic H. sapiens, Neanderthals and modern humans pass the requisite threshold to enter into the worlds of art and religion. Neanderthal poets and priests? I don’t think so. Dunbar is also unsure and seeks an alternative explanation for their big brains.
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To Dunbar, there appears to be just one other key ingredient of the modern mind: frequent doses of endorphins – “the brain’s own painkillers” – that are self-administered every time we laugh, sing or engage in physical challenges, whether the scourging of religious ritual or marathon running. But the endorphin-thirsty big human brain has to have a body to support it and hence another theme in The Human Story concerns the conflicting demands of bipedal walking, which requires a narrow pelvis, and giving birth to potentially big-brained babies where a wide pelvis is the ideal. The evolutionary solution has been for human babies to be born long before they are properly ready for the world. This creates a whole host of further problems for evolution and culture to resolve, and for Dunbar to explain.
Much of this punchy and provocative book is about monkeys and apes, and the experiments that Dunbar and his students have conducted to understand the human mind. The archaeology is a little too sparse, and often too readily dismissed, for my own liking.
But this isn’t a book of facts and figures; it is one of ideas. Dunbar certainly delivers, whether it is about why we have religion, how evolving language went though a musical phase, or how we avoid having sex with people by making them laugh. And I am not going to be the one to tell you that that is a funny story.