The Origin of Man and of His Superstitions

audiobook

The Origin of Man and of His Superstitions

by Carveth Read

EN·~12 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total
1

The cover of this book was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain. A more extensive transcriber’s note can be found at the end of this book.

0:30
2

THE ORIGIN OF MAN AND OF HIS SUPERSTITIONS

0:21
3

PREFACE

3:48
4

CHAPTER I ON THE DIFFERENTIATION OF MAN FROM THE ANTHROPOIDS - § 1. The Hypothesis

1:01:13
5

CHAPTER II ON THE DIFFERENTIATION OF THE HUMAN FROM THE ANTHROPOID MIND - § 1. Heredity, Adaptation, Accommodation

1:27:00
6

CHAPTER III BELIEF AND SUPERSTITION - § 1. Superstition

1:23:03
7

CHAPTER IV MAGIC

1:19:07
8

CHAPTER V ANIMISM - § 1. What is Animism?

1:29:19
9

CHAPTER VI THE RELATIONS BETWEEN MAGIC AND ANIMISM - § 1. The Question of Priority

1:19:54
10

CHAPTER VII OMENS - § 1. The Prevalence of Omens

56:33

Description

This work offers a thoughtful reconstruction of humanity’s deep past, proposing that our species emerged from an ape‑like lineage whose early members survived by hunting in coordinated packs. By tracing the anatomical changes that set us apart from our primate cousins, the author links physical evolution to the emergence of a distinctive social structure, where cooperation in the hunt laid the groundwork for later communal life.

In the second half, the focus shifts to the mind, exploring why early societies embraced magic, animism, and superstition. The argument is that such beliefs gave senior members authority when the obvious leadership of the hunt faded, eventually giving rise to priest‑kings and wizard‑rulers. Drawing on comparative psychology, anthropology and the classics of evolutionary thought, the book weaves scientific evidence with cultural insight, inviting listeners to reconsider the roots of both our bodies and our beliefs.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~12 hours (726K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow, eagkw and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-09-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

CR

Carveth Read

1848–1931

A British philosopher and logician, he taught at University College London and wrote influential books that helped generations of students learn formal reasoning. He is also remembered for a line from his work on logic that later became famous in paraphrased form: it is better to be roughly right than exactly wrong.

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