Contents
Acknowledgments
Part I: Overview
1. The Thesis, the Method, and Related Matters
Part II: Paleoanthropological Case Studies
2. The Hermeneutics of Tool-Making: Corporeal andTopological Concepts
3. On the Origin of Counting: A Re-Thinking ofUpright Posture
4. Hominid Bipedality and Primate Sexuality: A FurtherRe-Thinking of Upright Posture
5. Corporeal Representation
6. On the Origin of Language
7. Hominid Bipedality and Sexual Selection Theory
8. On the Conceptual Origin of Death
9. On the Origin and Significance of Paleolithic Cave Art
Part III: Theoretical and Methodological Issues
10. The Thesis and Its Opposition: Cultural Relativism
11. The Thesis and Its Opposition: Institutionalized Metaphysical Dualism
12. The Case for a Philosophical Anthropology
13. Methodology: The Hermeneutical Strand
14. Methodology: The Genetic Phenomenology Strand
15. The Case for Tactile-Kinesthetic Invariants
Name Index