Big Brains and the Human Superorganism

Why Special Brains Appear in Hominids and Other Social Animals

By (author) Niccolo Leo Caldararo

Publication date:

05 September 2017

Length of book:

282 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

239x156mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781498540872

This book examines why humans have big brains, what big brains enable us to do, and how specialized brains are associated with eusociality in animals. It explores why brains expanded so slowly, and then why they stopped growing. This book whittles down the theories on brain size evolution to a few that represent testable hypotheses to identify logical and practical explanations for the phenomenon. At the core of this book is data derived from original, previously unpublished research on brain size in a number of social mammals. This data supports the idea that evolution of the brain in humans is the result of social interaction. This book also traces the products of the social brain: ideology, religion, urban life, housing, and learning and adapting to dense complex social interactions. It uniquely compares brain evolution in social animals across the animal kingdom, and examines the nature of the human brain and its evolution within the social and historical context of complex human social structures.

Niccolo Caldararo’s new book Big Brains and the Human Superorganism: Why Special Brains Appear in Hominids and Other Social Animals (2017) show cases his prodigious cross-disciplinary knowledge. The book is nicely organized beginning with human craniomania of the 19th and 20th centuries and ending in the apparent downward spiral of homo. It is a logical and well formulated literary progression.