The Origins of Music: Preface - Preface

(Amelia) #1
Maria Ujhelyi

Abstract
The social organization of primate species is a key factor in the evolution of vocal
communication, and this is relevant to the emergence of music and language. The
most elementary languagelike characteristics, both in structure and function,
arise in the context of vocal territorial marking, which among present-day species
has attained its most sophisticated form in the solo and duet singing of the lesser
apes (gibbons). The social organization of the great apes, especially that of
common chimpanzees and bonobos, makes it possible to preserve and maintain
these characteristics while adding new, essential functions, namely, an increase
in voluntary control and social transmission. However, specializations present
in these species, which differ from those of humans ancestors, are obstacles to
further elaboration of these capacities. Either typical speech sounds and true
grammar, or the application of representational meaning to external objects, is
as yet missing at this stage. This primatological perspective provides a heuristic
framework for the reconstruction of a social setting in which these limitations
would not have been operative and, consequently, might have permitted lan-
guage to emerge as a qualitative novelty.

In this chapter I suggest that issues pertaining to the origins of music
and of language are related by more than superficial parallelism. Since
human language differs qualitatively from animal communication
systems, any attempt to reconstruct its origin within the framework of
biology must come to grips with the problem of qualitative change.
Qualitative change, the emergence of new qualities, implies system-level
organizational change. For the evolution of communication, the most
important system level is sociality: evolution of the social system.^1 Since
the social system, the network of social behaviors and interactions,
supplies the framework and field for possible communicative interac-
tions, evolutionary change there may result in drastic and discontinuous
transitions at the level of communication and vocal signals. Thus, the
connection between sociality and mental capacities, including com-
municative ones, becomes a central issue for understanding the primate
order (Ujhelyi 1979). As early as the 1970s primatologists suggested
that social contexts pose stronger challenges for primate intelligence
than manual tasks (Humphrey 1976). Since then a number of field
studies and laboratory investigations showed that monkeys and apes
have more sophisticated problem-solving skills in dealing with social
relations than in object manipulation (see Cheney and Seyfarth
1990). Sociality as a principal selection factor in the evolution of
primate intelligence is thus gaining wider acceptance (Whiten and Byrne
1988).
Since communication itself (including language) is an aspect of social
interactions, it may not be independent of social organization, and its

8


Social Organization as a Factor in the Origins of Language


and Music

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