Nature cannot build organisms biologically prepared for every contingency they might possibly encounter. Instead, Nature builds some organisms to function as feedback control systems that pursue goals, make informed behavioural decisions about how best to pursue those goals in the current situation, and then monitor behavioural execution for effectiveness. Nature builds psychological agents. In a bold new theoretical proposal, Michael Tomasello advances a typology of the main forms of psychological agency that emerged on the evolutionary pathway to human beings. Tomasello outlines four main types of psychological agency and describes them in evolutionary order of emergence. First was the goal-directed agency of ancient vertebrates, then came the intentional agency of ancient mammals, followed by the rational agency of ancient great apes, ending finally in the socially normative agency of ancient humans. Each new form of psychological organisation represented increased complexity in the planning, decision-making, and executive control of behaviour. Each also led to new types of experience of the environment and, in some cases, of the organism's own psychological functioning, leading ultimately to humans' experience of an objective and normative world that governs all of their thoughts and actions. Together, these proposals constitute a new theoretical framework that both broadens and deepens current approaches in evolutionary psychology.
ISBN: | 9780262047005 |
Publication date: | 2nd September 2022 |
Author: | Michael Tomasello |
Publisher: | The MIT Press |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 164 pages |
Genres: |
Biology, life sciences Evolution |