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8. The Neanderthals
The origins of language and human consciousness?
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Abraham Jonker
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Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Notes on contributors vii
- Introduction by the editors xv
- 1. A functional reconstruction of the supralaryngeal vocal tract of the fossil hominid from Petralona 1
- 2. A much-too-brief evolutionary history of the mammalian middle ear 21
- 3. Spatial mapping and the origin of language 31
- 4. Some acoustic properties of baby-talk and the prototype effect in infant speech perception 45
- 5. Cerebral lateralization for cognitive and linguistic abilities 55
- 6. Echolocation 77
- 7. Further evidence of verbal and non-verbal communication between the mother and her unborn child in the womb — in support of the author’s theory of the bi-modal origin of language 91
- 8. The Neanderthals 101
- 9. Motor theory of language origin 125
- 10. Sign arbitrariness as an index of semiogenesis 161
- 11. Language as analogic strategy 179
- 12. Vocal/auditory cognitive mapping, shared meaning and consciousness 205
- 13. Historical motivation in the linguistic sign and its cognitive origin 221
- 14. The red marbles of phonological and semantic stability through the ages 235
- 15. The elaboration of language structure 247
- 16. The use of the scenario method in the historical sciences 259
- 17. Developments in the pongid and human motor systems as preadaptations for the evolution of human language ability 271
- 18. The gestural origin of language and new neurological data 293
- 19. Memory for personal information 309
- Name index 325
- Subject index 333
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Notes on contributors vii
- Introduction by the editors xv
- 1. A functional reconstruction of the supralaryngeal vocal tract of the fossil hominid from Petralona 1
- 2. A much-too-brief evolutionary history of the mammalian middle ear 21
- 3. Spatial mapping and the origin of language 31
- 4. Some acoustic properties of baby-talk and the prototype effect in infant speech perception 45
- 5. Cerebral lateralization for cognitive and linguistic abilities 55
- 6. Echolocation 77
- 7. Further evidence of verbal and non-verbal communication between the mother and her unborn child in the womb — in support of the author’s theory of the bi-modal origin of language 91
- 8. The Neanderthals 101
- 9. Motor theory of language origin 125
- 10. Sign arbitrariness as an index of semiogenesis 161
- 11. Language as analogic strategy 179
- 12. Vocal/auditory cognitive mapping, shared meaning and consciousness 205
- 13. Historical motivation in the linguistic sign and its cognitive origin 221
- 14. The red marbles of phonological and semantic stability through the ages 235
- 15. The elaboration of language structure 247
- 16. The use of the scenario method in the historical sciences 259
- 17. Developments in the pongid and human motor systems as preadaptations for the evolution of human language ability 271
- 18. The gestural origin of language and new neurological data 293
- 19. Memory for personal information 309
- Name index 325
- Subject index 333