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Poincare's Chaos

Over two hundred years after Newton published his laws of planetary motion the King Oscar II of Sweden and Norway sponsored a most unusual competition that would discover a whole new science. ...

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PoincaresChaos
Medicine

My Aching Back

The back is an intricate structure of bones, muscles, and other tissues that form the posterior part of the body’s trunk, from the neck to the pelvis. The centerpiece is the spinal column, which not ... Continue reading

MyAchingBack
Chemistry

Ice That Burns

What looks like regular water ice but hisses and jumps around like water on a hot plate when you put it on a room-temperature surface and bursts into flame when you light it up? It is a rare and ... Continue reading

IceThatBurns
Biology

Let Go, Gecko!

Geckos are small, insect-eating, noisy lizards that live in many parts of the world. While geckos have become common pets, the way that they manage to stick to smooth ceilings has remained a mystery. ... Continue reading

Geckos
Geology

Is The Sea Really On The Level?

When we measure the height of mountains, we measure from a constant number called sea level. For instance Mount Whitney in California is 14,494 feet (4,418 m) above sea level. We start at 0 feet and ... Continue reading

SeaLevel

New Ideas About An Old Puzzle

NewIdeasAboutAnOldPuzzleThere's a familiar way of talking about language as a 'tool,' but of course that's just a metaphor. Literal tools made of rock can last for millennia as evidence of the skills of early humans. Not so with the metaphorical tool of language. Plumbing the origins of language is more like investigating the evolution of empathy than it is like studying the development of flint-knapping skills.

Leaving aside the questions of how and when language evolved, can we at least say why it did? University of Liverpool evolutionary psychologist Robin Dunbar proposes that, for humans, gossip serves the same social function as grooming does for other primates. He has identified a clear correlation between primate social group size and brain size -- or, more precisely, the ratio of neocortex to the rest of the brain. The size of the human brain points to a natural social group of about 150. That just happens to be the typical size of human hunter-gatherer groups from prehistoric times to the present.

On the one hand, a larger social group would have provided a significant survival advantage. On the other hand, in a group of 150, so much time would be spent grooming that there would be little time for anything else. By Dunbar's view, social group size drove the development of both brain and language in humans, with significantly greater intelligence required to keep track of social relationships in a larger group. Language, then, came to provide a more efficient mode of nit-picking and took over the grooming function, allowing for more efficient, less time-intensive bonding and thus permitting the existence of larger groups.