Science, asked by Anonymous, 1 month ago

What makes us human?

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Answered by lokeshnandigam69
5

Answer:

Evolutionary biology and scientific evidence tell us that all humans evolved from apelike ancestors more than 6 million years ago in Africa. ... Apart from our obvious intellectual capabilities that distinguish us as a species, humans have several unique physical, social, biological, and emotional traits

Answered by Anonymous
74

Answer:

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Two genuinely pan-human traits may explain many of the phenomena currently attributed to innate human prosociality. The first is our unique propensity for imitation. Humans are the only terrestrial mammals that imitate sounds, and the only animal that imitates the things we see. Language, art, dance, and every aspect of human socialization depend on this propensity. We suggest that preverbal imitation, beginning with mother-infant pairs, is the foundation of all social learning in humans.

Cultural homogeneity arises first from imitation, not from some innate, prosocial tendency to internalize norms and values. Social norms and values are inculcated mainly through language, which requires the faculty of imitation. Therefore, we believe that imitation must precede normative behavior in ontogeny — and, we suggest, in hominin phylogeny as well.

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