In Search of Homo sapiens

hsapiens cover

From the Great Chain of Being to Out of Africa : Understanding the origins of modern humans

How do we as humans view ourselves? We have a scientific name for ourselves: Homo sapiens. It means (some would say ironically) ‘wise man’. The term was originated by the Swedish biologist Linnaeus, who believed that he was arranging what God had created. He was nonetheless criticised for suggesting that humans be ranked with mere animals.

We still tend to think we are very different to anything else living on the planet Earth, even if we now recognise that we are indeed part of the animal kingdom. Evolutionary biologists, supported by genetic evidence, tell us that humans (Homo sapiens) are closely related to African apes, as Darwin suggested in the nineteenth century.

Since the publication of Huxley’s Evidence as to Man’s place in Nature and Darwin’s The Descent of Man a century and a half ago, we have learned that we were not even the first human species, but comparative newcomers. In the last forty years, theories have come and gone as to our origins. Only now, helped by accurately dated fossils and more powerful genetic techniques, are palaeoanthropologists beginning to learn the real picture.

This is the eighth in the In Search of series of eBook short reads.

*** This and the other 11 short reads in this series are available in a single collection: Prehistoric Investigations 2: In Search of ***

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