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Being a Human

Adventures in Forty Thousand Years of Consciousness

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY THE ATLANTIC, KIRKUS REVIEWS, AND NEW STATESMAN
A radically immersive exploration of three pivotal moments in the evolution of human consciousness, asking what kinds of creatures humans were, are, and might yet be
How did humans come to be who we are? In his marvelous, eccentric, and widely lauded book Being a Beast, legal scholar, veterinary surgeon, and naturalist extraordinaire Charles Foster set out to understand the consciousness of animal species by living as a badger, otter, fox, deer, and swift. Now, he inhabits three crucial periods of human development to understand the consciousness of perhaps the strangest animal of all—the human being.
To experience the Upper Paleolithic era—a turning point when humans became behaviorally modern, painting caves and telling stories, Foster learns what it feels like to be a Cro-Magnon hunter-gatherer by living in makeshift shelters without amenities in the rural woods of England. He tests his five impoverished senses to forage for berries and roadkill and he undertakes shamanic journeys to explore the connection of wakeful dreaming to religion. For the Neolithic period, when humans stayed in one place and domesticated plants and animals, forever altering our connection to the natural world, he moves to a reconstructed Neolithic settlement. Finally, to explore the Enlightenment—the age of reason and the end of the soul—Foster inspects Oxford colleges, dissecting rooms, cafes, and art galleries. He finds his world and himself bizarre and disembodied, and he rues the atrophy of our senses, the cause for much of what ails us.
Drawing on psychology, neuroscience, natural history, agriculture, medical law and ethics, Being a Human is one man's audacious attempt to feel a connection with 45,000 years of human history. This glorious, fiercely imaginative journey from our origins to a possible future ultimately shows how we might best live on earth—and thrive.
A Macmillan Audio production from Metropolitan Books

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 9, 2021
      Barrister and philosopher Foster (Being a Beast) travels back in time, over hills, and inside sea caves for this wondrous and moving examination of “what the self is.” On “a desperate search to know what I am, how I should live and what shape consciousness adopts when it is folded into a human body,” Foster traces three phases of evolution. He begins 40,000 years ago, when upper-Paleolithic hunter-gatherers became “behaviorally modern.” Next, he describes Neolithic settlements around 12,000 years ago, when humans domesticated crops and animals and “we started to get boring and miserable.” Then comes an examination of the Enlightenment—which he argues continues to this day. Despite so much knowledge and advancement, he writes, people are “ontologically queasy” and “laughably maladapted to our current lives,” which has led to widespread alienation, insomnia, and depression. To get back in touch with the “constant ecstatic contact with earth, heaven, trees and gods” he argues humans need, Foster witnesses shimmering visions, eats roadkill, contemplates birdsong and language, and hypothesizes that consciousness exists beyond humans, who for a while contain it. Foster is a wonderful prose stylist, and knows how to build a case and support it with plentiful detail. This powerful account is a remarkable achievement.

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  • English

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