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Tom Gundling examines a period in anthropological history when ideas about what it means to be human were severely tested. Drawing on extensive primary sources, many never before published, he argues that the reinterpretation of early human fossils came about at last because of changes in theoretical approach, not simply because new and more complete fossils had been recovered.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Nonfiction, Science, Evolution, Origin, Human beings, Paleoanthropology, Australopithecines, Fossil hominids, Human biology & related topics, Social Science, Sociology, Life Sciences - Evolution - Human, Social Science / General, Anthropology - General, Human beings, origin, Biological Evolution, Hominidae, FossilsEdition | Availability |
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First in Line: Tracing Our Ape Ancestry
Jul 30, 2011, Yale University Press
paperback
0300180179 9780300180176
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2
First in Line: Tracing Our Ape Ancestry
2010, Yale University Press
in English
1281730866 9781281730862
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First in Line: Tracing Our Ape Ancestry
May 10, 2005, Yale University Press
Hardcover
in English
0300104146 9780300104141
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Book Details
First Sentence
"Long before Charles Darwin and his intellectual heirs began to seriously consider the biological evolution of modern human beings from some "nonhuman" species, Western thinkers formulated a very different way of understanding the natural world around them."
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