Somebody in New York Loves Me
- Ramaya Tegegne
The exhibition is curated by Balthazar Lovay
“Given the relationship between neocortex size and social group size in primates, what does this tell us about humans? We are primates just like all the others. Indeed, the most recent evidence from molecular biology suggests that, on the basis of similarities in generic material, chimpanzees and humans are more closely related to each other than either is to the gorilla, their next closest relatives among the primates. Since this relationship between brain size and group size seems to fit chimps neatly, we should expect the same of humans too.
So what size of group should we predict for humans? Humans have a neocortex ratio of 4:1, and if we plug this value into the graph […], we can read off a predicted group size for humans. The answer turns out to be groups of about 150.
Now, one’s first reaction to this is disbelief. After all, humans live in cities like Tokyo and London, New York and Calcutta, places where 10 million people or more live crowded together. How can a figure as small as 150 possibly be correct?
But remember what kind of group the relationship in the graph was based on. Primates live in small groups where everyone knows everyone else, at least by sight even if they don’t know them from personal interaction. Not all the people who live in giant conurbations are social intimate. The vast majority of the people in Tokyo and New York are born, live their lives and die without even being aware of each other. […]