Meditations (Spirituality - From Martin LeFevre in California
Sub-Humans, Humans, and Human Beings
New findings and nuanced theories have been coming out recently regarding the clash in Europe between Neanderthals and
the first fully modern humans, the Cro Magnons, tens of thousands of years ago. These findings speak of the last great
breakthrough in human evolution, highlight the darkest impulses in human nature, and point to the next, urgently
required leap in consciousness.
When the Cro Magnons encountered the Neanderthals in Europe over 40,000 years ago, it was a clash between the primal
human consciousness, which had existed for hundreds of thousands of years, and modern human consciousness. Undoubtedly
there was conflict, just as there has been between groups of Homo sapiens ever since.
After all, throughout history when Homo sapiens encounter unfamiliar groups, they most often were (and still are)
perceived as sub-human. Imagine then what an encounter between humans and actual sub-humans must have been like!
It’s important to realize, and remember, that Cro Magnons were every bit as smart, and human, as we are. Indeed, they
may well have been smarter and more human, if smarts are measured by the ability to master new environments, and
humanness pertains to social and emotional richness.
A leap in consciousness occurred in East Africa about 100,000 years ago, a breakthrough in cognitive ability that
enabled much more complex and varied languages and cultures, sophisticated art and music, and rapidly expanding
knowledge and technology.
Neanderthals, who were not part of this leap, became the ultimate ‘other.’ Whatever humans are capable of doing to each
other since the beginning of ‘civilization’ (by believing other groups as less than human, or not human at all), Cro
Magnons were capable of doing to the Neanderthals.
Neanderthals were keenly adapted, if cognitively, culturally, and technologically primitive humans, capable of bringing
down the largest animals. After being the only human species in Europe for tens of thousands of years, what would the
encounter with modern humans have seemed like to them? Meeting modern humans would have been as overwhelming to
Neanderthals as if brainy humanoids with much superior technology landed on earth now.
Human evolution is like the bifurcating branches of a tree. The juncture where the descendents of the Neanderthals split
from the rest of the human line occurred nearly half a million years ago in Africa.
When glaciers descended upon Europe and Asia, the proto-humans living there evolved adaptations for colder climates,
including short, massive limbs, and huge chests and noses. Neanderthal brains also increased in size, and actually
became larger than our own, though their cognitive and linguistic abilities were not as advanced as modern humans.
Ian Tattersall is the Curator at the Department of Anthropology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York
City, and the author of “The Last Human—A Guide to Twenty-Two Species of Extinct Humans.” He says “if there is one
single thing that distinguishes [modern] humans from all other life forms, living or extinct, it is the capacity for
symbolic thought, the ability to generate complex mental symbols and to manipulate them into new combinations.”
When symbolic thought emerged, so too did complex language, diverse cultures, art and music, and the rapid expansion of
knowledge and technology. Neanderthals were human, but they didn’t have our cognitive ability. All modern humans,
including the Cro Magnon people in Europe, did, and do.
It is this increased cognitive ability that eventually allowed humans to domesticate plants and animals during the
Agricultural Revolution, to replace the ox and horse with the steam engine and automobile during the Industrial
Revolution, and replicate thought- consciousness during the Computer Revolution.
Until recently, there were many indigenous people who did not follow this path of ‘development,’ and yet they maintained
highly complex cultures, and amassed tremendous knowledge about their environments. They were, and are, fully ‘modern
humans.’ Indeed, in a deeper sense, the Agricultural, Industrial, and Computer Revolutions have made us less human, not
more, because indigenous people had a relationship with nature that prevented the hubris of thought from overtaking
them.
All Homo sapiens possess the same basic capacity for ‘higher thought.’ And it is the capacity for symbolic thought,
untutored and unrestrained by insight into its nature and place, which is causing humankind to fragment the earth, and
us, to the breaking point.
Symbolic thought is the basis of consciousness as we know it, arising from the storehouse of experience and memory. But
there is another kind of consciousness altogether, arising from mindfulness and quiescence, which people throughout the
ages have experienced to some degree.
This kind of consciousness, which I’m not setting up as another dualism (because the negation of thought-consciousness
opens the door to insight-consciousness), does not rest on or arise from symbols and memory.
Thought-consciousness has reached the limits of accumulation in the human mind and heart, and the limits of
fragmentation of earth and its ecosystems.
Therefore the way ahead is not through more knowledge, scientific or otherwise, but through negation and
non-accumulative learning based on self-knowing.
Homo sapiens’ existential crisis, and its resolution, are now firstly and consciously within each one of us, not in some
version of the primal pattern of ‘us vs. them.’ The vast, endarkening, and suffocating material of human consciousness
can and must ignite, and begin to light the way for the emergence of veritably a new species of human being.
*************
- Martin LeFevre is a contemplative, and non-academic religious and political philosopher. He has been publishing in
North America, Latin America, Africa, and Europe (and now New Zealand) for 20 years. Email: martinlefevre@sbcglobal.net. The author welcomes comments.