Thursday, November 12
1:00 Session 1: Keynote Address
Matt Ridley “Darwin
in Genes and Culture”
2:30 – 2:45 break
2:45 Session 2: Brain Evolution
Jim Rilling (Anthropology,
Emory University)
"Comparative Higher Primate Neuroimaging: Insights into the Evolution of Human Brain and Mind"
Richard Passingham (Psychology,
University of Oxford)
“How to Turn a Chimpanzee into a Person”
Todd Preuss (Yerkes Primate Center,
Emory University)
“The Human Brain: Rewired and Running Hot”
Friday, November 13
9:00 Session 3: The Evolution of Mind
Melvin Konner (Anthropology, Emory
University)
"Childhood Evolving: The
Role of Development in the Evolution of Mind."
Pascal Boyer (Psychology and
Anthropology, Washington University)
“What is Memory for?”
Debra Lieberman (Psychology, University
of Miami)
“It's All Relative: The
Evolution of Psychological Mechanisms Governing Kin Detection, Incest
Avoidance, and Altruism”
12:00 – 1:30 Lunch
1:30 Session 4: The Evolution of Culture
Frans de Waal (Psychology, Emory
University)
“Prosocial Primates: Empathy, Fairness, and
Cooperation”
Sally McBrearty (Anthropology,
University of Connecticut)
“Behavioral Change at the Origin
of Homo sapiens”
Joe Henrich (Psychology and Economics,
University of British Columbia)
“On
the origins of a cultural species: How social learning shaped human evolution”
4:30 - 4:45 break
4:45 Session 5: Discussion
Keynoter’s Observations: Matt Ridley
General discussion
6:30 – 9:30 Reception at the Great Hearth of the
Emory Conference Center
This conference is occurring in coordination with the premiere of a new play entitled “Hominid” by Ken Weitzman at Theater Emory (co-produced with Out of Hand Theater), based on Frans de Waal's Chimpanzee Politics (http://theater.emory.edu/Theater-Emory/09-Hominid.php), as well as with an exhibition, entitled "Origin" at the Schatten Gallery of the Robert W. Woodruff Library.