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Autor:
Morley, IRM
Archaeological evidence for musical activities pre-dates even the earliest-known cave art and it remains the case that no human culture has yet been encountered that does not practise some recognisably musical activity. Yet the human abilities to mak
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=dedup_wf_001::141c75513da3c5a2d692ae2086f4aaee
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:ccbaf26a-8a71-4113-8b23-1ae032d665ae
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:ccbaf26a-8a71-4113-8b23-1ae032d665ae
Autor:
Morley, IRM, Bannan, N
Publikováno v:
Music, Language, and Human Evolution
The production and processing of the various elements of musical behaviours relies upon the integration of a number of physiological and neurological capacities. These have evolved into their current form in modern humans from foundations present in
Publikováno v:
Serendipity: Fortune and the Prepared Mind. (1)
Serendipity was recently voted the most popular word in the English language. From only a handful of references in the late 1950s, a Google search today reveals nearly 8 million references (up from 3 million references a year ago). Ironically, ‘ser
Publikováno v:
Cult in Context: Reconsidering Ritual in Archaeology. (27)
This paper attempts to touch upon a number of issues attendant upon considering the nature, purposes and motivations for ritual activity; there is not the space to do more than scratch the surface of either the relevant literature or the implications
Publikováno v:
Communicative Musicality: Exploring the Basis of Human Companionship. (5)
It is nowadays uncontroversial among scientists that there is biological continuity between humans and other species. However, much of what humans do is not shared with other animals. Human behaviour seems to be as much motivated by inherited biology
Publikováno v:
Image and Imagination: a Global Prehistory of Figurative Representation.
Investigating aspects of interpretation of figurative representation from the Upper Palaeolithic of western Europe is a task that can be approached with both relish and a certain amount of trepidation. On the one hand it is a rich and dynamic body of
Publikováno v:
Archaeoacoustics. (10)
In attempting to identify human intention in the use of acoustic features of the environment, it is important that consideration be given to the potential forms and purposes of the activities that may have been carried out in the space under investig
Publikováno v:
Mesolithic Studies at the Beginning of the 21st Century. (14)
The Upper Palaeolithic in Europe sees the first incontrovertible archaeological evidence for musical behaviour in humans, in the form of bone items which have been variously interpreted as flutes, pipes or whistles. In addition, there are items which