6533b82afe1ef96bd128cbdf
RESEARCH PRODUCT
History and reality of the genus 'Homo' : what is it and why do we think so?
Ian Tattersallsubject
0301 basic medicine03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyMultidisciplinaryHistory and Philosophy of ScienceHuman evolutionBiologyHumanitiesDramaEpistemologydescription
Paleoanthropologists who worry about how nature is organized into species, and about what we should call them, are very often accused by their peers of «just arguing about names». This implies that basic taxonomy is a boring clerical operation that should be dispensed with as quickly as possible or even ignored, so that we can get to the really interesting questions about human evolution. Yet the reality is that we shall never understand the events of the intricate human evolutionary play if we cannot accurately identify the actors who participated in that drama. This article looks briefly at how our current supremely woolly concept of the genus Homo has come about, as background for urging a more rational approach to defining it.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017-06-05 |