ABSTRACT

How does learning transform us biologically?

What learning processes do we share with bacteria, jellyfish and monkeys?

Is technology impacting on our evolution and what might the future hold for the learning brain?

These are just some of the questions Paul Howard-Jones explores on a fascinating journey through 3.5 billion years of brain evolution, and discovers what it all means for how we learn today.

Along the way, we discover

  • how the E. coli in our stomachs learn to find food 
  • why a little nap can help bees find their way home
  • the many ways that action, emotion and social interaction have shaped our ability to learn
  • the central role of learning in our rise to top predator.

An accessible writing style and numerous illustrations make Evolution of the Learning Brain an enthralling combination of biology, neuroscience and educational insight. Howard-Jones provides a fresh perspective on the nature of human learning that is exhaustively researched, exploring the implications of our most distant past for twenty-first-century education.

chapter 1|17 pages

The idea of evolution

chapter 2|24 pages

Origins

chapter 3|20 pages

The vertebrate brain

chapter 4|17 pages

The social primate

chapter 5|18 pages

Homo – the cooperative social learner

chapter 6|18 pages

Speech

chapter 7|18 pages

The arrival of numeracy

chapter 8|13 pages

The emergence of the written word

chapter 9|18 pages

Evolution meets education

chapter 10|15 pages

The future of the learning brain