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Hobbit Trap
A01=John Schofield
A01=Maciej Henneberg
A01=Robert B Eckhardt
academic skepticism
Agnostic
Australian National Universities
Author_John Schofield
Author_Maciej Henneberg
Author_Robert B Eckhardt
Biological Anthropology
brown
bua
Category=JHM
critique of human evolution theories
Dental Anthropology
East Timor
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
evolutionary theory
Forensic Anthropology
fossil interpretation
Gadjah Mada University
group
henneberg
Hobbit Trap
Hominin Sites
Homo Erectus
Iodised Salt
Laron Syndrome
liang
Lower Left Molar
maciej
mike
Mike Morwood
morwood
National Academy
Over-the Horizon Radar
paleoanthropology
pathology
Pathology Group
peter
Piltdown Man
PNAS Paper
Positional Plagiocephaly
Puerperal Fever
scientific controversy
Siwalik Hills
species classification
Thermo Luminescence
Tooth Germ
Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center
Product details
- ISBN 9781598745719
- Weight: 498g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 15 Nov 2010
- Publisher: Left Coast Press Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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When scientists found the remains of a tiny hominid on an Indonesian in 2004, they claimed they found a totally new species of human ancestor (homo floresiensis), and called it a Hobbit. Film crews rolled in and the little creature took the world by storm, but a group of prominent scientists, including Maciej Henneberg and Robert Eckhardt, smelled a rat. They refuted the data—the size and shape of bones, the inferences about height—and they raised fundamental questions about scientific method, revealing cultural and political pressures that lead to the wide acceptance of unsupported theories. The Hobbit Trap describes how the case against the “new species” theory developed and offers an important critique of the species concept in evolution. In this thoroughly updated second edition, the authors include new data and analysis of the Flores fossils, and expand their important analysis of scientific practice, calling for a new movement to reverse the decline in scientific standards and the rise in scientific politics. This lively and important challenge to conventional wisdom is accessible to the general reader and makes a stimulating addition to courses on the history and philosophy of science, evolution and physical anthropology.
Henneberg, Maciej; Eckhardt, Robert B; Schofield, John
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