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The creative double negation and the non-non-cascade
pp. 95-111
Résumé
This chapter describes how the Adam and Eve-like event unfolded to create the human being with its cascade of unique features. Employing a dialectical scheme, the negation of the negation, it is argued that a contradiction in the new way of being created human consciousness, self-consciousness, and language as new templates for evolution to fill out. An educated guess places the first time event with the Australopithecines. With reference to Claude Lévi-Strauss, it is further described how the event led to the development of human institutions like exogamy, totem and taboo, marriage, and social contracts. A brief sketch of society's subsequent economical history follows. A pivot in this history is the introduction of slavery, which fatefully changes the status of women, here quoted from Friedrich Engels' rendition of Lewis H. Morgan's work.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Engelsted Niels (2017) Catching up with Aristotle: a journey in quest of general psychology. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 95-111
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-51088-0_11
Citation complète:
Engelsted Niels, 2017, The creative double negation and the non-non-cascade. In N. Engelsted Catching up with Aristotle (95-111). Dordrecht, Springer.