Tennie Claudio, Snyder William D, Planer Ronald J
Faculty of Science, Department of Geosciences, Working Group Early Prehistory and Quaternary Ecology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
DFG Center for Advanced Studies "Words, Bones, Genes, and Tools", Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Hum Nat. 2025 Jun;36(2):180-218. doi: 10.1007/s12110-025-09494-w. Epub 2025 Jul 2.
Compared to other apes, humans show a distinctive capacity for the cultural learning and transmission of know-how: we extract know-how from other individuals and artifacts in ways that regularly give rise to forms of know-how that no single individual could realistically invent on their own. Such a capacity is plausibly foundational to humans' striking cultural prowess and hence all that goes with it (e.g., symbolic language, religion). In this article, we critically examine attempts to date the transformation of know-how copying in the hominin lineage through an estimation of the costs of stone toolmaking. More specifically, we take as our target the idea that the costs inherent in making early stone tools, that is, Oldowan and Early Acheulean tools, already likely reflect a meaingful upgrade in hominin know-how copying abilities. Our survey of potentially relevant costs of stone toolmaking is generous, covering: (i) the risks and dangers of toolmaking; (ii) the time, energy, and opportunity costs of toolmaking; and finally (iii) the material costs of toolmaking. Ultimately, we find that, based on current evidence pertaining to these costs, the case for inferring know-how copying abilities in Oldowan or even Early Acheulean stone toolmakers is weak. This skeptical conclusion, combined with independent evidence that the design of stone tools during this period likely remained within the range of what the relevant hominins could invent without know-how copying, points to a later date for the establishment of this crucial human skill.
与其他猿类相比,人类在文化学习和技能传承方面展现出独特的能力:我们从其他个体和器物中提取技能的方式,常常会产生出任何个体都难以独自实际发明出来的技能形式。这种能力很可能是人类卓越文化能力及其相关一切(例如,符号语言、宗教)的基础。在本文中,我们批判性地审视了通过估算石器制作成本来确定人类谱系中技能模仿转变时间的尝试。更具体地说,我们的目标是这样一种观点,即制作早期石器(即奥杜威石器和早期阿舍利石器)所固有的成本,可能已经反映出人类在技能模仿能力方面有意义的提升。我们对石器制作潜在相关成本的调查范围很广,涵盖:(i)石器制作的风险和危险;(ii)石器制作的时间、精力和机会成本;最后(iii)石器制作的材料成本。最终,我们发现,基于目前与这些成本相关的证据,推断奥杜威甚至早期阿舍利石器制造者具有技能模仿能力的理由并不充分。这一怀疑性结论,再加上独立证据表明在此期间石器的设计可能仍在相关人类在没有技能模仿的情况下能够发明的范围内,表明这项关键人类技能的确立时间要更晚。