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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!bnr.co.uk!uknet!newcastle.ac.uk!news
- From: w.p.coyne@newcastle.ac.uk
- Newsgroups: sci.bio
- Subject: Re: Evolution of the human brain's cognitive capacity
- Message-ID: <BztI7q.1oM@newcastle.ac.uk>
- Date: 25 Dec 92 13:45:25 GMT
- References: <1992Dec24.025548.27816@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au> <Bzrn4H.GMq@newcastle.ac.uk> <1992Dec24.164212.20700@news.media.mit.edu> <1992Dec25.011901.22049@u.washington.edu>
- Reply-To: w.p.coyne@newcastle.ac.uk
- Organization: Chemical & Process Engineering Dept, University of Newcastle, UK.
- Lines: 29
- Nntp-Posting-Host: erui
-
- wcalvin@stein.u.washington.edu (William Calvin) writes:
-
- >minsky@media.mit.edu (Marvin Minsky) writes:
-
- >>I think this theory (nicely explained here) is mainly due to William
- >>Calvin <wcalvin@milton.u.washington.edu>, an occasional contributor
- >>here. See his book, The Cerebral Symphony.
-
- >Thanks. Actually, it is the book after that, THE ASCENT OF MIND: Ice Age
- >Climates and the Evolution of Intelligence (Bantam 1990).
- > William H. Calvin WCalvin@U.Washington.edu
-
- Had you publicised the theory before 1990 in articles, talks or the
- media? Or was yours an expansion of an existing well publicised
- theory of the effects of climate on human evolution..
-
- I ask because "Children of the Ice" by John and Mary Gribbin
- was also published in 1990. I think sometime in the late 80's John
- Gribbin did a radio series for the BBC of 10 minute episodes where
- he explained this theory of the importance of climatic interaction with
- humans.
-
- HIs discussion of the settlement of Greenland by the Vikings
- during a warm period
- lasting a few centuries, and then its destruction caused by the colder
- weather of the 15th century was memorable. The phrase "adapt or die"
- was very appropriate because the settlers could have survived if they
- had discarded their European lifestyle and agriculture and adopted the
- eskimo way of life (maybe some of them did).
-