SEARCH
You are in browse mode. You must login to use MEMORY

   Log in to start

big history threshold six


🇬🇧
In English
Created:


Public
Created by:
andrew matheson


0 / 5  (0 ratings)



» To start learning, click login

1 / 6

[Front]


What are the ingredients, goldilocks conditions, and emergent properties for Threshold 6
[Back]


Powerful brains, precise and versatile symbolic language, interactions between individuals and between community's. Homo sapiens, connecting with each other in new ways, adapting to their environment with out changing genetically, passing information from generation to generation.

Practice Known Questions

Stay up to date with your due questions

Complete 5 questions to enable practice

Exams

Exam: Test your skills

Course needs 15 questions

Learn New Questions

Dynamic Modes

SmartIntelligent mix of all modes
CustomUse settings to weight dynamic modes

Manual Mode [BETA]

The course owner has not enabled manual mode
Specific modes

Learn with flashcards
Complete the sentence
Listening & SpellingSpelling: Type what you hear
multiple choiceMultiple choice mode
SpeakingAnswer with voice
Speaking & ListeningPractice pronunciation
TypingTyping only mode

big history threshold six - Leaderboard

1 user has completed this course

No users have played this course yet, be the first


big history threshold six - Details

Levels:

Questions:

6 questions
🇬🇧🇬🇧
What are the ingredients, goldilocks conditions, and emergent properties for Threshold 6
Powerful brains, precise and versatile symbolic language, interactions between individuals and between community's. Homo sapiens, connecting with each other in new ways, adapting to their environment with out changing genetically, passing information from generation to generation.
Is Threshold 6 more or less complex than Threshold 5
No the fifth threshold was maybe the most complex of all the thresholds because in that threshold life and free will were created and that requires a lot of complex things working at once in your brain and your body in the sixth threshold is when humans evolved and started learning collectively.
What is Collective Learning? What are its components? Why is it significant
Collective learning is important because if not than humans could not express themselves and that was critical to keep alive and keep building their enterprise in the race to conquer the earth.
List and explain 2-3 pieces of evidence that make us believe Homo Sapiens developed this ability
Well, the signs prove that homo sapiens travelled in groups and must have some form of communication to indicate peace, get along or work together in general.
What role does brain size play in determining the complexity of an organism?
The brain is a very complex organ it has multipule diffrent parts to it
What are the differences and similarities between Archaeology and Anthropology?
Anthropology focuses on the cultural, social and biological diversity of human groups in the present, historic and prehistoric past. Archaeology examines past cultures through the recovery and reconstruction of material remains. Archaeology is also related to biological anthropology in its use of the same methods in excavating and analyzing human skeletal remains found in archaeological sites.