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The Firelight Genesis: The Evolutionary Architecture of Proto-Human Culture. Hearths, Symbols, and the Neurological Leap from Primal Survival to Shared Traditions
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- Nombre de pages216
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-38468-6
- EAN9783565384686
- Date de parution05/04/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille907 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
For millions of years, early hominids possessed basic stone tools and functional, primal communication-but they did not possess culture. The transition from a species driven purely by biological survival to a society bound by shared traditions required a monumental environmental catalyst: the taming of fire.
This book deconstructs the exact evolutionary steps that birthed human culture. It explores the "Hearth Hypothesis, " demonstrating how the invention of the campfire fundamentally altered our sociology.
By extending waking hours past sunset and providing a centralized, safe perimeter, the fire created a temporal void that was no longer needed for hunting or gathering. In this firelit darkness, functional grunts slowly evolved into the very first abstract words, birthing the concept of storytelling. We dissect the timeline of the "Symbolic Revolution." The narrative tracks the profound cognitive leap required to transition from recognizing physical objects to inventing shared fictions-from the first intentional, ritualistic burials of the dead, to the creation of rhythmic chanting, to the painting of abstract symbols on cave walls.
These early traditions were not mere hobbies; they were the essential psychological glue that allowed human tribes to bypass their biological size limits, cooperating in massive numbers based on shared beliefs rather than just bloodlines. Witness the true birth of the human mind. Discover the precise evolutionary moments when a species of surviving primates learned to tell stories, invent gods, and weave the complex, imaginary webs we now call culture.
By extending waking hours past sunset and providing a centralized, safe perimeter, the fire created a temporal void that was no longer needed for hunting or gathering. In this firelit darkness, functional grunts slowly evolved into the very first abstract words, birthing the concept of storytelling. We dissect the timeline of the "Symbolic Revolution." The narrative tracks the profound cognitive leap required to transition from recognizing physical objects to inventing shared fictions-from the first intentional, ritualistic burials of the dead, to the creation of rhythmic chanting, to the painting of abstract symbols on cave walls.
These early traditions were not mere hobbies; they were the essential psychological glue that allowed human tribes to bypass their biological size limits, cooperating in massive numbers based on shared beliefs rather than just bloodlines. Witness the true birth of the human mind. Discover the precise evolutionary moments when a species of surviving primates learned to tell stories, invent gods, and weave the complex, imaginary webs we now call culture.



