ABSTRACT

How did humans develop the capacity for symbolic imagination?

In this ground-breaking book, Warren Colman provides a reformulation of archetypal symbols as emergent from humans’ embodied and affective engagement with their social and material environment. Beginning with the oldest known figurative image in the world, the 40,000-year-old Lion Man of Hohlenstein-Stadel in Germany, he traces the emergence of symbolic imagination through the origins of language, the growth of human sociality and co-operation, and the creative use of material objects, from the earliest stone tools through the cave paintings and figures of Upper Paleolithic Europe and beyond. This leads to a consideration of how the imaginal world of the spirit may have come into being, not as separate from the material world but through active participation within a world alive with meaning.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter |11 pages

Prologue

chapter |33 pages

The Archetypal Hypothesis

chapter Chapter Two|38 pages

Expanding the Mind

chapter Chapter Three|30 pages

From Ape to Human I

Language and Sociality

chapter Chapter Four|29 pages

From Ape to Human II

Material Engagement

chapter Chapter Five|18 pages

Constitutive Symbols and the Imaginal Realm

chapter Chapter Six|34 pages

The Emergence of the Spirit World

chapter Chapter Seven|31 pages

Two Kinds of Thinking

chapter Chapter Eight|26 pages

Participation Mystique Revisited Thinking the Spirit