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CARTA: Comparative Anthropogeny - Social Complexity: Why Modern Humans are More Like Ants Than Chimpanzees with Mark Moffett

CARTA: Comparative Anthropogeny - Social Complexity: Why Modern Humans are More Like Ants Than Chimpanzees with Mark Moffett

CARTA: Comparative Anthropogeny and Other Approaches to Studying Human Origins

CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego

December 8, 202322m 19s

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Show Notes

The most complex organizations in the living world beside those of humans are the colonies of ants. Mark Moffett will argue that points of comparison between sharply different organisms like ants and humans are exceptionally valuable to science, and indeed that modern humans are in many ways much more like certain ants than we are to our nearest relatives, the chimpanzees. He considers such issues as the role of individuality and group identity in ant societies; the advantages to ants of flat organizations without leaders or hierarchies; and what we can learn from ants with respect to direct and indirect communication, self-organization, job specialization, labor coordination, and global domination. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 39272]

Topics

CARTAanthropogenyoriginshuman originshumanhumansHomo sapiensevolutionprimateschimpanzeesantsant colonycivilizationsocietysocietiesmodern societycomplex societiesAnthropology and ArchaeologyAnthropology and Archaeolo