The Origins of Time: Temporal Reckoning in the genus Homo

Author:   Max R Schmidt
Publisher:   Independently Published
ISBN:  

9798242451407


Pages:   182
Publication Date:   27 January 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Our Price $47.26 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

The Origins of Time: Temporal Reckoning in the genus Homo


Overview

When did humans first begin to reckon time - not merely live within it? Across the vast span of human evolution, our ancestors moved from sensing cycles in the body and landscape to building calendars, carving notches into bone, and raising monuments aligned to the turning sun. The Origins of Time: Temporal Reckoning in the Genus Homo is a sweeping, thought-provoking exploration of how and why timekeeping emerged as one of humanity's most profound cognitive and cultural achievements. Anthropologists have long studied tools, language, symbols, and ritual - yet surprisingly little systematic attention has been given to the origins of time itself: how early humans first began to measure, mark, and ritualize temporal cycles. This book fills that gap with an ambitious narrative spanning 2.8 million years, tracing temporal consciousness from early Homo species to the first portable tallies of Homo sapiens, and finally to monumental calendrical architectures of the Neolithic world. Max R. Schmidt argues that time-reckoning is not merely an agricultural convenience or bureaucratic invention. It is a defining expression of human consciousness: a way of externalizing memory, coordinating community, asserting meaning, and responding to existential uncertainty. By transforming time from an implicit, embodied experience into explicit, shared systems, humans created the foundations for ritual calendars, social coherence, historical record, and long-term planning - the essential scaffolding of civilization. The book unfolds through three major stages: Implicit Time in Early Homo - Long before calendars, early humans lived by rhythms of day, night, seasonality, migration, scarcity, and ecological recurrence. Their awareness of time was practical, embodied, and deeply tied to survival - yet left little direct material trace. Symbolic Time and the First Tallies - In the Upper Paleolithic, Homo sapiens began making deliberate marks on bone and stone: notches and sequences that may reflect lunar observation, counting systems, ritual timing, or memory aids. These artifacts represent a cognitive leap: time made visible, portable, teachable, and transmissible across generations. Architectural Time and Early Calendars - In the Neolithic and early Holocene, time moved from handheld devices into the landscape itself. Communities built ritual centers and monuments aligned with solstices and celestial cycles, embedding temporal knowledge into stone, ceremony, and social institutions - and reshaping what it meant to be human. Special attention is given to the Younger Dryas climate shock (12,900-11,700 BP) as a potential catalyst for ritual intensification and calendrical innovation. In moments of environmental chaos, humans responded not only with adaptation, but with meaning: building monumental ritual spaces, tracking cosmic cycles, and staging ceremonies that asserted order and hope when the world seemed unstable. To balance academic rigor with imaginative insight, the book employs a clear evidence hierarchy, distinguishing established fact from well-supported inference and speculative reconstruction. One of its most compelling sections is the ""Tepe Cosmogony of Time,"" a mythic reconstruction grounded in archaeological and paleoenvironmental evidence. It models how controlled narrative can illuminate plausible lived experience in deep prehistory without pretending certainty. At once scholarly and readable, The Origins of Time is a landmark synthesis for readers fascinated by human evolution, archaeology, anthropology, cognitive science, ritual, and the ancient roots of meaning-making. Because to understand the invention of time is to understand the invention of the human.

Full Product Details

Author:   Max R Schmidt
Publisher:   Independently Published
Imprint:   Independently Published
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.218kg
ISBN:  

9798242451407


Pages:   182
Publication Date:   27 January 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Author Information

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG 26 2

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List