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The Language Puzzle: How We Talked Our Way out of the Stone Age

Steven Mithen

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The relationship between language, thought and culture is of concern to anyone with an interest in what it means to be human.

The Language Puzzle explains how the invention of words at 1.6 million years ago began the evolution of human language from the ape-like calls of our earliest ancestors to our capabilities of today, with over 6000 languages in the world and each of us knowing over 50,000 words.

Drawing on the latest discoveries in archaeology, linguistics, psychology, and genetics, Steven Mithen reconstructs the steps by which language evolved; he explains how it transformed the nature of thought and culture, and how we talked our way out of the Stone Age into the world of farming and swiftly into today's Digital Age.

While this radical new work is not shy to reject outdated ideas about language, it builds bridges between disciplines to forge a new synthesis for the evolution of language that will find widespread acceptance as a new standard account for how humanity began.

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Praise for The Language Puzzle: How We Talked Our Way out of the Stone Age

  • Illuminating and thought-provoking - The TimesThe most perspicacious portrait of the role of communication among our remote predecessors that I have ever encountered ... A landmark book - New York Review of BooksWonderfully evocative ... A highly original view of our musical origins - GuardianA book that has you making up your own theories about how grunts became speech and songs - Doris Lessing

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Steven Mithen

Steven Mithen

Steven Mithen is Professor of Early Prehistory and Head of the School of Human and Environmental Sciences at the University of Reading.

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