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The Artful Species

Aesthetics, Art, and Evolution

By (author) Stephen Davies
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom
Published: 27th Nov 2014
Dimensions: w 157mm h 234mm d 18mm
Weight: 476g
ISBN-10: 0198709633
ISBN-13: 9780198709633
Barcode No: 9780198709633
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Synopsis
The Artful Species explores the idea that our aesthetic responses and art behaviors are connected to our evolved human nature. Our humanoid forerunners displayed aesthetic sensibilities hundreds of thousands of years ago and the art standing of prehistoric cave paintings is virtually uncontested. In Part One, Stephen Davies analyses the key concepts of the aesthetic, art, and evolution, and explores how they might be related. He considers a range of issues, including whether animals have aesthetic tastes and whether art is not only universal but cross-culturally comprehensible. Part Two examines the many aesthetic interests humans take in animals and how these reflect our biological interests, and the idea that our environmental and landscape preferences are rooted in the experiences of our distant ancestors. In considering the controversial subject of human beauty, evolutionary psychologists have traditionally focused on female physical attractiveness in the context of mate selection, but Davies presents a broader view which decouples human beauty from mate choice and explains why it goes more with social performance and self-presentation. Part Three asks if the arts, together or singly, are biological adaptations, incidental byproducts of nonart adaptations, or so removed from biology that they rate as purely cultural technologies. Davies does not conclusively support any one of the many positions considered here, but argues that there are grounds, nevertheless, for seeing art as part of human nature. Art serves as a powerful and complex signal of human fitness, and so cannot be incidental to biology. Indeed, aesthetic responses and art behaviors are the touchstones of our humanity.

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[T]his book is of considerable value. Taking Davies's criticisms seriously would certainly enhance the quality of research in this area. * James Grant, Mind * a rare achievement of lucid explanation and fair-minded analysis * Denny Kinlaw, Transpositions * sterling work * Marek Kohn, The Independent * comprehensive, well-organized, and cogently argued * Troy Jollimore, Boston Globe *