[lbo-talk] Dustup - final installment

Dennis Claxton ddclaxton at earthlink.net
Tue Jul 29 13:01:42 PDT 2008


At 12:40 PM 7/29/2008, Charles A. Grimes wrote:


>``...the unique human essence or species-being is culture.'' CB
>
>-------
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>Some noontime thoughts, besides work sucks greatly these days....
>
>This reminds me, that Cassirer got around to the same point

I've just started reading Language and Myth. I also picked up a little book on prehistory from the very short introduction (VSI) series. The two are going together very well.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Prehistory-Very-Short-Introduction-Introductions/dp/0192803433

This VSI to prehistory will introduce the reader to four and a half million years of human existence. Many of the familiar aspects of modern life are no more than a century or two old, yet our deep social structures and skills were in large measure developed by small bands of our prehistoric ancestors many millennia ago. Chris Gosden invites us to think seriously about who we are by considering who we have been. The idea of prehistory owes its origins to Darwin - suddenly any description of human life on Earth had to take account of a much longer timespan than ever before. What new views of ourselves has this new timespan opened up? Chris Gosden's fascinating new book asks: What relationships did our distant ancestors have with the natural world, with each other, and with the objects and values they created? And as humanity hurtles into a future of virtual interraction and genetic manipulation, what can the darkest recesses of our past teach us about our future?



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