How Humans Invented Themselves | The Intersection

Here’s an excerpt from my third post at the Techonomy blog–which is on how technology and humanity are “coproduced.” You can read the full post here.

At the official opening plenary session of Techonomy, Kevin Kelly–a co-founder of Wired, and author of the forthcoming book What Technology Wantsmade what I considered a pretty profound remark. “The first animal we domesticated was humans,” Kelly said. He went on to describe how we “physically changed ourselves through agriculture, through cooking…we’re both masters of technology and also the children of technology.”

catching-fireKelly sounded, in this statement, as though he’d read a book that I recently recommended and blogged about, and whose author I interviewed for BBC 2’s “The Culture Show”: Harvard anthropologist Richard Wrangham’s Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human. It’s hard to think of a better example than cooking if you want to show how human beings and technology are “co-produced,” which I take to be Kelly’s argument.

In Wrangham’s account, our ancestors discovered fire and cooking at some hard-to-fix point in the past—but farther back than most scientists had previously assumed. At this point, the power of this innovation then dramatically drove human evolution.

Cooking food was a game changer….READ ON.


Related Posts

Comments are closed.