
The Shape of Thought: How Mental Adaptations Evolve presents a road map for an evolutionary psychology of the twenty-first century. It brings together theory from biology and cognitive science to show how the brain can be composed of specialized adaptations, and yet also an organ of plasticity. Although mental adaptations have typically been seen as monolithic, hard-wired components frozen in the evolutionary past, The Shape of Thought presents a new view of mental adaptations as diverse and variable, with distinct functions and evolutionary histories that shape how they develop, what information they use, and what they do with that information.The book describes how advances in evolutionary developmental biology can be applied to the brain by focusing on the design of the developmental systems that build it. Crucially, developmental systems can be plastic, designed by the process of natural selection to build adaptive phenotypes using the rich information available in our social and physical environments. This approach bridges the long-standing divide between "nativist" approaches to development, based on innateness, and "empiricist" approaches, based on learning. It shows how a view of humans as a flexible, culturally-dependent species is compatible with a complexly specialized brain, and how the nature of our flexibility can be better understood by confronting the evolved design of the organ on which that flexibility depends.
This book investigates how the human brain functions as a complex system of specialized adaptations that remain inherently plastic and responsive to environmental input. H. Clark Barrett, a researcher in evolutionary psychology and anthropology, synthesizes principles from evolutionary developmental biology and cognitive science to propose a framework that reconciles innate mental structures with behavioral flexibility. He argues that natural selection designs developmental systems capable of utilizing environmental information to build adaptive phenotypes, effectively bridging the traditional divide between nativist and empiricist theories of human development.
What You Will Find
Experts in the field recognize this work as a significant contribution to the modernization of evolutionary psychology. Scholars frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational text for those interested in the intersection of developmental biology and cognitive architecture.
Page Count:
416
Publication Date:
2015-01-16
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199348308
ISBN-13:
9780199348305
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