The making of the civilized mind

Bibliographic Information

The making of the civilized mind

Seymour W. Itzkoff

(Evolution of human intelligence, 4)

P. Lang, c1990

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Making of the Civilized Mind is the fourth and final volume of the series, The Evolution of Human Intelligence. In this volume, the author discusses the sociobiological status of the human brain in producing social and cultural behavior. Itzkoff argues that culture is a unique product of man's biology traceable to the earliest stages of Homo's evolution. However, it is the variability of human intelligence in producing different forms of culture that provides the central argument of the book. Here, Professor Itzkoff shows how high intelligence leads to abstract symbolic thinking and that civilization itself can be seen as a form of cultural life that has been produced by the highest forms of abstraction in such fundamental areas as technology, religion, philosophy, science, music, etc.

Table of Contents

Contents: The relationship of human intelligence variability to the content and institutions of culture and civilization. To be used in upper level undergraduate courses. The Making of the Civilized Mind is a new interpretation of the sociobiology of civilizational behavior.

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