Weekly Insights for Thinkers

FAQ

Did talking our way through life drive a million years of brain growth?

Wed 28 Jan 2026
Published 2 months ago.
Updated 2 months ago.
Evolution
Related FAQs
Were neanderthals artistic?
When did ancient humans develop symbolic thought?
History: What ancient invention influenced modern life the most?
What is Ninio’s Extinction Illusion?
What ancient human species first realized it was going to die?
When was the first written language developed?
Share :

Did talking our way through life drive a million years of brain growth?

What science clearly shows is this: human brain size did not grow gradually over millions of years. Instead, it accelerated. From roughly 800,000 to 850,000 years ago, hominin brain volume began increasing rapidly, reaching near-modern levels long before agriculture, writing, or civilization. This growth is real, measurable, and one of the most striking patterns in human evolution.

What science does not yet have is a single agreed-upon cause.

Tools, fire, hunting, and diet all played roles—but none fully explain the speed and scale of the change. An increasingly compelling idea is that communication itself became the pressure. As early humans relied more on shared knowledge, those who could explain, remember, and respond gained an advantage. Stories became survival tools. Oral traditions became the libraries of their time. Teaching reduced risk. Coordination increased success.

In such a world, intelligence stopped being just an individual trait and became a social one. Those better at communicating ideas—not just reacting to danger—were more likely to be trusted, followed, and ultimately to reproduce. Over generations, this creates a feedback loop: culture favors cognition, and cognition accelerates culture.

We can’t yet prove when full language emerged, but it’s increasingly plausible that language-like communication predates symbolic artifacts by hundreds of thousands of years. Before writing, before art, and perhaps even before complex tools, humans may already have been talking, gesturing, singing, and teaching—building brains not just to survive nature, but to navigate meaning.

— map / TST —

Michael Alan Prestwood
Author & Natural Philosopher
Prestwood writes on science-first philosophy, with particular attention to the convergence of disciplines. Drawing on his TST Framework, his work emphasizes rational inquiry grounded in empirical observation while engaging questions at the edges of established knowledge. With TouchstoneTruth positioned as a living touchstone, this work aims to contribute reliable, evolving analysis in an emerging AI era where the credibility of information is increasingly contested.
This Week @ TST
March 11, 2026
»Edition Archive
WWB Research….
1. Story of the Week
Galileo: Observation Corrects the Map
2. Quote of the Week
“The Dao that can be told is not the eternal Dao; The name that can be named is not the eternal name.”
3. Science FAQ »
Is red an empirical idea?
4. Philosophy FAQ »
Does infinity exist?
5. Critical Thinking FAQ »
Was math discovered or invented?
6. History FAQ!
Is Philo’s interpretation related to the split in the Idea of Ideas?
Bonus Deep-Dive Article
TST Metaphysical Position: The Split

Comments

Join the Conversation! Currently logged out.
NEW BOOK! NOW AVAILABLE!!

30 Philosophers: A New Look at Timeless Ideas

by Michael Alan Prestwood
The story of the history of our best ideas!
Scroll to Top