Erectus: Why is it the 'wrong' species that survived? - Couverture souple

Heemann, Felipe

 
9786598812669: Erectus: Why is it the 'wrong' species that survived?

Synopsis

Erectus is a philosophical and scientific investigation into the possibility that the human species which endured was not the one best suited for long¿term survival. Drawing on evolutionary biology, paleoanthropology, cognitive neuroscience, and existential philosophy, Felipe Heemann examines the profound disparity between our extraordinary technical efficacy and our catastrophic evolutionary effectiveness. Where Homo erectus persisted for more than a million years in relative ecological equilibrium, Homo sapiens developed a hypertrophied cortex and a recursive, symbolic language that allowed us to inhabit psychological pasts and imagined futures-temporalities that generate chronic anxiety, depression, and existential dread. These forms of suffering are not civilizational malfunctions to be corrected, but structural consequences of our neurocognitive architecture. Rejecting romantic primitivism and human exceptionalism alike, Erectus confronts the brutal naturalistic possibility that our survival was an accident whose costs we are only beginning to understand. Without consolation or optimism, the book invites the reader to face the mirror of our lineage with clarity, rigor, and a rare existential honesty.

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À propos de l?auteur

Professor Heemann holds degrees in Biological Sciences, Literature, Mathematics, and Physics, with further specializations in Neurobiology, Neuropsychopharmacology, Pathophysiology, Toxicology, Pharmacology, and Linguistics. His academic training - rooted in the University of São Paulo (USP) - positions him at the crossroads of Neuroscience, Epistemology, and the Philosophy of Science: a terrain where empirical rigor meets conceptual architecture, and where his work insists on making both speak to each other with uncommon clarity.His transdisciplinarity is not the diluted kind. Physics, Mathematics, Evolutionary Biology, and the Philosophy of Mind operate in his work as equal and mutually corrective instruments - not as borrowed vocabularies, but as native ones. He moves between disciplines because the problems he pursues refuse to stay inside them.The argument running through all his work is geometric before it is philosophical: Clinical Medicine inherited a Laplacian-Cartesian framework and applies it to a system - the living body - that is fundamentally fractal, nonlinear, and irreducible to that framework. This is not a methodological objection. It is an ontological one.He does not write to popularize. He writes to argue. The difference matters.His essays guide the reader through the history of ideas with scientific rigor and the precision of a committed educator. In his pages, science ceases to be mere explanation - it becomes narrative, critical interrogation, and, occasionally, revelation.Heemann is the founder of Brain Codex, an independent scientific publishing imprint dedicated to works at the frontier of Neuroscience, Philosophy of Science, and Complexity Theory. He works out of São Paulo and Ribeirão Preto, Brazil.

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