The Rise of the Modern: Behavioural
and Biological Perspectives on the Evolution of Humanness (Part 1)
Session Organiser: Patrick S. Quinney
(Liverpool University)
During the past 150 years archaeologists
and palaeoanthropologists have been prepared to include artefactual assemblages,
and the hominids that produced them, within the boundary of 'modernity'
or 'modern humanness', whilst excluding synchronic, often sympatric, populations
from this designation. The case of Homo neanderthalensis versus 'anatomically
modern' Homo sapiens is a prime example. All too often the reasons
for this inclusive and exclusive labelling are unclear and poorly defined.
Today it remains a valid question,
that, when viewing the hominid bio-cultural record, just what constitutes
'modernity'? In order for prehistoric populations to qualify for membership
of humanity, should we adopt historical notions of modernity such as the
production of cave art, blade technology, evidence for spoken language,
or 'anatomically modern' morphology? The refined chronostratigraphy of
the Middle and Upper Pleistocene record indicates that these criteria are
not constant through time, often disappearing from the record for tens
of thousands of years. Did humans stop being human as a result?
Or, should we view modernity in a different
light, encompassing criteria such as the use and control of fire, the ability
to plan and structure economic time, the realisation of mortality and of
the self, the construction of physical habitation structures, the ability
to colonise and culturally adapt to a wide range of environments, or the
loss of the australopithecine-like body plan? Should we view modernity
as beginning in the Upper Pleistocene or the Upper Pliocene? Can modernity
be applied to pre-Holocene hominids in a biologically and culturally meaningful
way? Should we view the adoption of modern behaviours as a gradual transformation,
or as a saltation event? Can we, or should we even try to, define what
it is to be 'modern'? This session will address these ideas.
Patrick S Quinney
(Hominid Palaeontology Research Group,
Department of Human Anatomy and Cell Biology, The University of Liverpool,
New Medical School, Ashton Street, Liverpool L69 3GE)
Contingency, Convergence and the Status of
Anatomical Modernity
'Anatomical modernity' is a concept
that has, at least superficially, a specific biological meaning - to be
an anatomically modern is to be a member of the taxon Homo Sapiens.
However, in recent years, both the definition and constitution of the fossil
hypodigm of our species has been shown to be less clear, vis-à-vis
the on-going 'Out-of-Africa' versus 'Multi-regionalism' debate. This
paper discusses the roles of historical contingency and convergent evolutionary
processes in determining the pattern of phylogenetic trajectories and taxonomic
diversity observed in the hominid fossil record during the Middle and Upper
Pleistocene; specifically, how these processes have been undervalued in
attempts to pigeon-hole hominid fossils into the rigid constraints of the
biological species concept (BSC). I suggest that whilst late-Middle and
Upper Pleistocene Homo Sapiens are reproductively isolated from
their synchronic congeners, H. neanderthalensis and H. erectus,
they cannot be viewed as species in the strict sense of the BSC, and as
'modern' humans in any biologically meaningful way. Instead, they are the
result of a unique series of environmental and bio-cultural selection pressures
which have no ontogenetic counterpart in today's post-glacial world. In
the light of this, the status of biological 'modernity' and implications
for hominid taxonomic diversity will be discussed.
Kate A Robson-Brown
(Centre for Human Evolutionary Research,
Department of Archaeology, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol,
BS8 1TB)
Conflict and Continuity in Hominid Phylogeny:
Implications for the Definition of 'Modernity'
Over a century of research into hominid
systematics has produced a rich and varied set of phylogenetic hypotheses.
Within this field the concept of 'modernity' is very specific in meaning.
This meaning may be challenged if reticulate evolutionary processes, such
as convergence, hybridization or introgression, are taken into account.
To investigate this suggestion, a phylogenetic analysis of 14 hominid taxa
is demonstrated in which reticulate relationships may be accounted for.
The method employed is continuous track analysis (CTA), which searches
for graphs with the minimal number of connections and where most character
states have distributions or tracks across taxa that are continuous. The
results show that reticulate relationships are important in human evolution,
and that our concept of phylogenetic 'modernity' should take account of
this.
Marcel Otte
(Université de Liege, Service
de Préhistoire, Place du XX Août 7 bât A1, B-4000 Liege,
Belgique)
Anatomical Modernity as a Cultural Product
The 'modern' aspects of present-day
humankind are the result of a phenomenon of convergence which has acted
on all primitive humanities by highlighting their cultural components as
evolutionary factors. The progressive replacement of anatomical functions
by behavioural functions acts as an evolutionary trend which manifests
itself through common and correlative features: cerebral development, facial
reduction, aptitude for manipulation, running, throwing, etc. Operating
in every place and at every time, this 'cultural selection' produced morphological
analogies (present-day races) on an already unified anatomical substratum,
more than a million years ago in a single biological species. The process
is still underway. The Illusion of a 'modern' stage is a result of three
non-scientific conditions: 1) A late migration of populations from outside
Europe; 2) The history of sciences founded in Europe has been given this
circumstance a universal value, and ; 3) This opposition between primitive
animality and accomplished humanity satisfies and reinforces our contemporaneous
mentality, just as the Bible did in earlier times.
Jennie E Hawcroft
(Research School of Archaeology, Dept
of Archaeology and Prehistory, University of Sheffield, West Court, 2 Mappin
Street, Sheffield S1 4DT)
A Wide Range of Human Humans: Against the Notion
of Humanness as a Phylogenetic Criteria
The intriguing thing about Neanderthals
is that they are so tantalisingly similar to extant humans (20th-century
ones and their Upper Palaeolithic ancestors), yet there are notable differences
which prevent the two types being as classed as one species. In the context
of this session, I propose, using Neanderthals as a case study, that we
should not attempt to define or even conceptualise modernity or humanness.
I shall demonstrate that Neanderthals fulfil the behavioural and neuro-anatomical
(brainsize) qualifications that might be laid down for humanness, yet they
are clearly behaviourally and genetically different to H. Sapiens.
I shall further discuss the notion that current humans have no experience
of humanness outside of realm of H. Sapiens, as we are currently
in the phylogenetically atypical situation of being the lone extant hominid.
I will argue that in our limited experience, humanness is something diagnostic
of H. Sapiens, so it is impossible for us to comment on something
as intuitive as humanness in other species of hominid. I will conclude
that the inclusion of some hominid species and exclusion of others in the
group with which we ally H. Sapiens is detrimental to our understanding
of human evolution and primatology, and that such "species-ist" approaches
should be discouraged.
Tim Ingold
(Department of Social Anthropology,
The University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL)
Picasso in the Palaeolithic? Art, Humanity
and Modernity
In a recent review of the book Chauvet
Cave, which documents the paintings produced at the site by Cro-Magnon
people some 31,000 years ago, Stephen Jay Gould argues that while we are
right to admire the artistic excellence of the paintings, we should not
be surprised that art of such sophistication appeared at so early a date.
Our surprise, he maintains, is an index of our lingering commitment to
an outmoded evolutionism which insists that our culturally 'primitive'
forbears could have managed only the most rudimentary kinds of artistic
expression. Yet the people who painted at Chauvet were 'modern humans';
they were 'fully us, with all our foibles and potentialities'. We should
therefore expect art of fully human sophistication. In this paper,
I show that the attempt to populate the past with people like ourselves,
equipped with the same capacities and dispositions, betrays a form of presentism
that is deeply rooted in modern Western thought. Against Gould, I argue
that the people of Chauvet were not like us at all. Far from revealing
a universal, innate competence - a capacity for art - that marks its possessors
as fully human, their paintings called for embodied skills and sensibilities
generated within the context of a form of life unlike anything known to
us today. The 'modern human', I conclude, is a creature of the modernist
imagination, and its characterisation does more to legitimate the present
than to illuminate the past.
Margherita Mussi
(Dipartimento di Scienze dell'Antichité,
Università di Roma, Via Palestro 63, 00185 Roma, Italia)
In Search of Palaeo-Shamanism
Shamanic beliefs are widespread amongst
contemporary hunter-gatherers, especially in Siberia and America. They
imply that the cosmos is structured in different layers, inhabited by ordinary
people and beings, as well as spirits. Special people learn how to gain
access to different and non-ordinary levels, travelling there to negotiate
with spirits the killing of animals, to rescue the souls of endangered
or sick people, and the like. We will examine the Palaeolithic record,
including burial customs, portable and parietal art, and other evidence,
to assess if a shamanic perspective to life can be taken as already established
during the Pleistocene, and, in case, if it underwent discernible changes
through time. We will also discuss the impact of a structured system of
beliefs on the life of hunter-gatherers, and its relevance in the definition
of humanness.
Mark Roberts
(Institute of Archaeology,
31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY)
Boxgrove and Schöningen: Examples of Modern
Human Behaviour in the Middle Pleistocene?
The site at Boxgrove in the south
of England has revealed evidence for the hunting and butchery of large
size-class mammals, such as rhinoceros and horse. There is also evidence
for making bone and antler tools, and co-operative behaviour. The site
at Schöningen has yielded wooden artefacts, including spears and hafts
for stone tools. This paper examines whether these finds are really indicators
of 'modern' behaviour, or if they form part of the normal behavioural repertoire
of Middle Pleistocene hominids.
Steven Mithen
(Dept of Archaeology, University of
Reading, Whiteknights, PO Box 128, Reading RG6 6AA)
Want to Make a Hand-axe? Well, Just Say the
Word!
The relationship between the evolution
of Palaeolithic technology, cognition and language is a matter of considerable
debate. One particularly question concerns the cognitive/linguistic implications
(if any) of the appearance of technically demanding, symmetrical bifaces
inthe archaeological record. Are these a reflection of modernity in thought
and behaviour? A trend during the last decade has been to think not to
think that the Acheulean is a reflection of a very different, and probably
non-linguistic, mentality and behaviour to modern humans. This question
is explored by drawing on recent research in evolutionary and developmental
psychology. I consider whether proto-language involving the naming of physical
entities in the world was indeed essential for manufacturing handaxes.
Perhaps it was literally by saying the word that the separate mental modules
which together constituted technical intelligence could be adequately fused
together.