APE MIND OLD MIND NEW MIND

ISBN
9781543919370
$23.65
Format Paperback
Details
  • 9.0" x 6.0" x 0.9"
  • Active Record
  • Individual Title
  • 2018
  • 382
  • Yes
  • 1
  • QH375
Ape Mind, Old Mind, New Mind asserts that the remarkable aspect of Darwin's evolution by sexual selection is that it is driven merely by the desire for a trait, in this case the desire for justice. The author realized that sexual selection is not only driven by the peahen's desire for the peacock's tail, but also by the peacock's desire to be desired for his tail (i.e., vanity). What gave sexual selection the creative power to launch and then sustain our hominin tribe was, and still is, the additive effect of both the desire for justice and the desire to be just, both passed down together tightly engaged in the pioneering of rightness and wrongness. Indeed, the fact that our minds are comprised of capacities determined by motivations that involve both the actor and the object of the action has much to do with both our expansive consciousness and our linguistic virtuosity. We are at once the seer and the seen, condemner and condemned, lover and loved. However, because human evolution has left us so intricately fraught with these condensed motivations, our minds are also vulnerable to the unraveling of emotion into the spinning feedback scream of mental illness. Dr. Wylie focuses on the role of natural selection in the conversion from submission and dominance in apes to obedience and authority in humans. Under the protective shield of justice, groups of mated pair-bonds could evolve the productive benefits of coordinating and dividing the labor of child care and food gathering. At the end of the day, those groupings of relationships that "believed" in the rules of this organic social structure would be naturally selected. The procreative benefits to individuals within a given group immersed in this obedience-authority system would exceed any benefits of pursuing their own dominance. The will to dominate in the ape mind transformed into the authority of justice in the early human (old) mind by migrating from individuals to dwelling within the thin ether of relationships between individuals; no one could see it, but all could feel it. This invisible but biologically based will could be said to possesses intentions, i.e.: a spirit…the human spirit. Human bonds animated by this still evolving spirit ultimately would become more powerful than those of blood, tribe or country.