Coevolution of language and symbolic meaning: Co-opting meaning underlying the initial arts in early human culture
- PMID: 31502423
- DOI: 10.1002/wcs.1520
Coevolution of language and symbolic meaning: Co-opting meaning underlying the initial arts in early human culture
Abstract
Many of language's components, including communicating symbolic meaning, have neurobiological roots that go back millions of years in evolutionary time. The intersection with the human social survival strategy spawned additional adaptive meaning systems. Under conditions threatening survival in socially oriented human groups, extra-language meaning systems co-opted and adapted to facilitate unity, including the early formats of the arts. They would have percolated into cultural practice for this social purpose and ultimately survival. With evolutionary pressures tapping into biologically inherited, physiologically functioning sensory-motor pathways, anchored specifically in rhythm cognition and motor synchrony output, initial art practice conveyed symbolic group cohesion through communal, all-inclusive synchronously moving dance formations and rhythmically produced vocal or percussion sounds. As with the sounds of language in the deep past, and numerous other cultural behaviors, such nonmaterial early art formats would not have left marks in the archeological record but their evolutionary driven practice would have contributed to adaptive genetic factors woven into brain-behavior evolution. Their practice is likely to have well predated unearthed art-related objects. Consolidation of evidence and notions from language evolution, genetics, human physiology, comparative animal communication, archeology, and climate history in the distant past of early humans in Africa supports the evolutionary driven practice of initial nonmaterial art formats conveying symbolic expressions optimizing group survival. This article is categorized under: Cognitive Biology > Evolutionary Roots of Cognition Linguistics > Evolution of Language Psychology > Comparative Psychology.
Keywords: art expressions; art origins; brain and art; evolution; hominins; social group survival; symbolic cognition.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Similar articles
-
Culture and art: Importance of art practice, not aesthetics, to early human culture.Prog Brain Res. 2018;237:25-40. doi: 10.1016/bs.pbr.2018.03.001. Epub 2018 Apr 10. Prog Brain Res. 2018. PMID: 29779738 Review.
-
Evolution of language. Experiments probe language's origins and development.Science. 2012 Apr 27;336(6080):408-11. doi: 10.1126/science.336.6080.408. Science. 2012. PMID: 22539697 No abstract available.
-
The evolution of language and thought.J Anthropol Sci. 2016 Jun 20;94:127-46. doi: 10.4436/JASS.94029. Epub 2015 Mar 8. J Anthropol Sci. 2016. PMID: 26963222
-
Combinatoriality in the vocal systems of nonhuman animals.Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci. 2019 Jul;10(4):e1493. doi: 10.1002/wcs.1493. Epub 2019 Feb 6. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci. 2019. PMID: 30724476 Review.
-
How can we detect when language emerged?Psychon Bull Rev. 2017 Feb;24(1):64-67. doi: 10.3758/s13423-016-1075-9. Psychon Bull Rev. 2017. PMID: 27368620
Cited by
-
Dance on the Brain: Enhancing Intra- and Inter-Brain Synchrony.Front Hum Neurosci. 2021 Jan 7;14:584312. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.584312. eCollection 2020. Front Hum Neurosci. 2021. PMID: 33505255 Free PMC article.
-
Believing and social interactions: effects on bodily expressions and personal narratives.Front Behav Neurosci. 2022 Oct 6;16:894219. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2022.894219. eCollection 2022. Front Behav Neurosci. 2022. PMID: 36275855 Free PMC article.
-
Human Genomics and the Biocultural Origin of Music.Int J Mol Sci. 2021 May 20;22(10):5397. doi: 10.3390/ijms22105397. Int J Mol Sci. 2021. PMID: 34065521 Free PMC article. Review.
References
REFERENCES
-
- Andersen, P. A. (2011). Tactile traditions: Cultural differences and similarities in haptic communication. In M. J. Hertenstein & S. J. Weiss (Eds.), The handbook of touch: Neuroscience, behavioral, and health perspectives (pp. 351-369). New York, NY: Springer.
-
- Arbib, M. A., Liebal, K., & Pika, S. (2008). Primate vocalization, gesture, and the evolution of human language. Current Anthropology, 49(6), 1053-1063. https://doi.org/10.1086/593015
-
- Ardesch, D. J., Scholtens, L. H., Li, L., Preuss, T. M., Rilling, J. K., & van den Heuvel, M. P. (2019). Evolutionary expansion of connectivity between multimodal association areas in the human brain compared with chimpanzees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(14), 7101-7106. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1818512116
-
- Atkinson, E. G., Audesse, A. J., Palacios, J. A., Bobo, D. M., Webb, A. E., Ramachandran, S., & Henn, B. M. (2018). No evidence for recent selection at FOXP2 among diverse human populations. Cell, 174(6), 1424-1435.e1415. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2018.06.048
-
- Barabas, P., & Bulik, I. (2011). Pygmies the children of the jungle. Slovakia: K2studio.sk.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Research Materials
Miscellaneous