Résumé

It is hard to believe that opinions about any fossil sample could vary as wildly and completely as opinions about Neandertals and their place in human evolution (compare Wolpoff et al. 2004 & Tattersall 2002). The Neandertal sample is more than adequate, and evolutionary theory is the universally held explanatory principle, so there must be more to the story. Part of this is the role Neandertals have come to play in our culture, but even this post-modernist explanation will not suffice. The most compelling explanation of how Neandertal studies landed in so deep a quagmire is that in determining how different Neandertals were from the human condition, the wrong question was being asked.

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Référence papier

Milford H. Wolpoff, « The wrong question », ERAUL, 117 | 2006, 21-34.

Référence électronique

Milford H. Wolpoff, « The wrong question », ERAUL [En ligne], 117 | 2006, mis en ligne le 16 January 2025, consulté le 29 April 2025. URL : http://popups.lib.uliege.be/3041-5527/index.php?id=1984

Auteur

Milford H. Wolpoff

Paleoanthropology Laboratory, Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA 48109-1092