This episode explores why early humans across multiple species created similar geometric patterns, what neuroscience reveals about these ancient marks, and how our brainâs wiring may have shaped the foundations of art and written language. Julia guides listeners through the latest experimental evidence.
About the podcast
Developed by cognitive archaeologist Derek Hodgson, the Neurovisual Resonance Theory proposes that early humans created "art" because certain visual patternsâlike symmetry and repetitive marks âresonated with the structure of their brains. In other words, our ancestors werenât just painting what they saw, they were painting what their brains were wired to respond to. This resonance comes from the way our visual cortex processes information. Over millions of years, humans evolved to detect movement and forms in complex environments. These survival skills shaped the way we seeâand ultimately, the way we create.
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