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- Q17001999 subject Q10053541.
- Q17001999 subject Q7154247.
- Q17001999 subject Q7778243.
- Q17001999 subject Q8734020.
- Q17001999 abstract "The theory of Female Cosmetic Coalitions (FCC) is a new and controversial attempt to explain the evolutionary emergence of art, ritual and symbolic culture in Homo sapiens. It is proposed by evolutionary anthropologists Chris Knight and Camilla Power together with archaeologist Ian Watts.Supporters of this new theory contest the prevailing assumption that the earliest art was painted or engraved on external surfaces such as cave walls or rock faces. They argue instead that art is much older than previously thought and that the canvas was initially the human body. The earliest art, according to FCC, consisted of predominantly blood-red designs produced on the body for purposes of cosmetic display.'Female Cosmetic Coalitions' is a conceptual approach linking (a) Darwin's theory of evolution by natural and sexual selection, (b) research into sexual signalling by wild-living monkeys and apes, (c) the fossil record of encephalization in human evolution, (d) recent archaeological discoveries of red ochre pigments dating back to the speciation in Africa of Homo sapiens around 250,000 years ago and (e) modern hunter-gatherer ethnography. These seemingly divergent topics are brought together in a recent co-authored publication attempting to explain why the world today is populated by modern Homo sapiens instead of by the equally large-brained, previously successful Neanderthals.‘Of course, not everyone is convinced, but anthropologists are starting to take the idea seriously. One of its strengths is that it addresses the question of why symbolic culture evolved, rather than simply how it did so, according to Robin Dunbar from the University of Liverpool.’".
- Q17001999 thumbnail BBC-artefacts.jpg?width=300.
- Q17001999 wikiPageExternalLink PA20130033.pdf.
- Q17001999 wikiPageExternalLink Sex-Strike.pdf.
- Q17001999 wikiPageExternalLink painted_ladies.pdf.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q10053541.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q1086164.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q131207.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q15978631.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q183493.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q1842924.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q189819.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q194191.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q206913.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q27443.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q2916584.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q3053936.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q3118387.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q620505.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q678649.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q7102639.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q7154247.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q7314314.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q735.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q7661177.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q7740883.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q7778243.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q83944.
- Q17001999 wikiPageWikiLink Q8734020.
- Q17001999 comment "The theory of Female Cosmetic Coalitions (FCC) is a new and controversial attempt to explain the evolutionary emergence of art, ritual and symbolic culture in Homo sapiens. It is proposed by evolutionary anthropologists Chris Knight and Camilla Power together with archaeologist Ian Watts.Supporters of this new theory contest the prevailing assumption that the earliest art was painted or engraved on external surfaces such as cave walls or rock faces.".
- Q17001999 label "Female cosmetic coalitions".
- Q17001999 depiction BBC-artefacts.jpg.