The Principles of Cerebral Dominance: The Evolutionary Significance of the Radical Deduplication of the Human BrainThomas, 1982 - 177 Seiten |
Inhalt
The Biocultural Evolution of Cerebral Dominance | 3 |
Principia Hemispherica | 101 |
Epilogue | 161 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action Anaxagoras Anaximander animal articulated artificial Australopithicines binary biocultural evolution biological evolution brain growth century B.C. cerebral hemispheres cerebral operations cerebral puberty conscious cortical creation creative cultural evolution cultural selection Darwin deduplication dextrals differential dominant hemisphere emotive Empedocles encoding environment environmental evolutionism evolved function gene pools genetic genome genotype gestural grammar Greek hand handedness hemis hominids Homo erectus Homo habilis Homo sapiens sapiens human behavior human brain human condition human evolution human populations human power hyperdynamics imagery images individual innate inner inputs invention Ionian language learned left cerebral dominance left hemisphere linguistic logical manipulative mathematical meaning million B.C. million years B.C. modern natural selection neocortex neuronal neurosocial nonverbal organic output physical prehistoric primate primordial propositions Protagoras protocultural quantifiable orders radical deduplication right hemisphere selective cerebral supremacy semantic sense sensorimotor sinistrals social society species speech Stone Age structure survival tion unconscious usage verbal community words