Many Minds

From the archive: Revisiting the dawn of human cognition

Sep 4, 2025
In this thought-provoking discussion, Dr. Eleanor Scerri, an archaeologist at the Max Planck Institute, and Dr. Manuel Will, a lecturer at the University of Tübingen, challenge the popular notion of a sudden cognitive revolution in humans. They present evidence of a gradual development of cognitive abilities during Africa's Middle Stone Age. They also explore early personal ornamentation using marine shells, the significance of ochre in human culture, and the diverse pathways of cognitive evolution, urging a reassessment of our understanding of human history.
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INSIGHT

The Revolution Narrative Is Dead

  • The classic 'Upper Paleolithic cognitive revolution' story is almost certainly wrong.
  • Eleanor Scerri and Manuel Will argue modern cognition emerged earlier across Africa, not suddenly in Europe.
INSIGHT

2000 Paper Reoriented The Field

  • Brooks and McBrearty's 2000 paper shifted the origin of modern behavior from Europe to Africa and earlier in time.
  • Scerri and Will update that model with two decades of new evidence and broader geography.
INSIGHT

Iconic European Finds Misled Histories

  • The European Upper Paleolithic displays an iconic cultural flowering but is not the origin of modern human behavior.
  • That view persisted partly because Africa was under-researched and under-appreciated then.
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