Give me that juicy bit over there 
Jerry Fodor
- The Singing Neanderthals: The Origins of Music, Language, Mind and Body by Steven Mithen
I’m in a pout about this book; I’m conflicted. On the one hand, there are several respects in which it seems to me to be very good. Mithen knows a great deal and he writes well by the received standards of cognitive science (which are not daunting). So his book is both edifying and a pleasure to read. If you’re in the market for a summary of what’s known (a little) and what’s surmised (a lot) about the evolutionary history of our species, I’d be hard put to think of a better one to recommend. Also, and more to the point, the question to which the book wants to address itself is thoroughly fascinating to, as Mithen says, ‘anyone who has an interest in the human condition’. Namely: ‘Why should we be so compelled to make and listen to music?’ And if all that’s not enough, there’s a theory of the origin of language (that again!) thrown in for free.
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Jerry Fodor is collaborating with Massimo Piattelli-Palamarini on a book about evolution without adaptation.
Other articles by this contributor:
Water’s water everywhere · Kripke
Who ate the salted peanuts? · Michael Frayn
Why Pigs Don’t Have Wings · The Case against Natural Selection
The Trouble with Psychological Darwinism · Pinker and Plotkin
Let your brain alone · why the brain?
Look! · Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge by Edward O. Wilson
Headaches have themselves · Panpsychism
Neither Egypt, nor Italy, nor Broadway, nor Theatre · Jerry Fodor sees the Elton John and Tim Rice reworking of Aida