Review:
Although the general framework, findings and the titles of the two books appear to be amazingly close; The prize-winner, in his TV interview with the BBC oversimplifies the issue of abstraction (what he calls "imagination"), and presents a couple of slightly distorted facts, such as that the difference between our species and the previous human species is not in the "brain"; stating that the most-recent previous human species (Neanderthals) had bigger brains, without any reference to areas of growth, shrinking or development. In all cases, it conflicts with his own findings: If the difference lies only in the faculty of "imagination", as he argues, or in "abstraction, conceptualization and strategic planning" (among other factors) as I argued, then it has - one way or another, to relate to the brain. Here is a quick comparison between the two arguments in six points, listed neatly in one table.
“Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler.”
~ Albert Einstein
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Conservation of the Homo sapiens: The survival of the Wise; on the Cybernetics of education;
By
Gihan Sami Soliman
Published April 2014
(284678811©1/3/2014 UK Copyright Registration Service)
&
BBC bestseller
Sapiens: A Brief History of Mankind
By
Yuval Noah Harari
Published 4 Sep 2014
Based on a BBC interview with the author of the latter on what makes us human.
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For those interested in interdisciplinary perspectives.
For those interested in interdisciplinary perspectives.
My argument on what makes us human.
From the Conservation of the Homo sapiens: The survival of the Wise; on the #Cybernetics of education.
#~#~#~# New Concepts #~#~#~#:
* The Real-living-system Theory.* The sociophysiobiological kingom.* The Cybernetic Phylogeny.
More Cybernetics designs and illustrations on MY Own Education.
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