The Making, the Rise, and the Future of the Speakingman-Seventh Edition
Posted by Literary Titan

Dan M. Mrejeru’s The Making, the Rise, and the Future of the Speakingman is, in its seventh edition, an ambitious work that joins paleoanthropology, neuroscience, climatology, geomagnetism, and civilizational theory into a single interpretive design. Its architecture matters. The book moves from prelinguistic hominin development through migration, cognition, and symbolic culture, then turns toward the future, planetary thermal cooling, and finally the emergence of the Information Society. That breadth gives the volume its proper scale. This isn’t a monograph in the narrow academic sense. It’s a speculative system, a long argument about what kind of creature the human being became, what forces shaped that becoming, and what mental regime may be arriving next.
What gives the book its peculiar identity is the author’s insistence that human evolution can’t be understood by anatomy alone. Mrejeru treats the brain as a structure formed under planetary pressures, especially cooling cycles and geomagnetic disturbances, and he frames the human story around two decisive cerebral transformations: one that differentiates late hominins from apes, and another that produces the “modern brain.” Even the title term, “Speakingman,” is revealing. It presents humanity less as a biological species than as a being constituted by language, cognition, and collective adaptation. The result is a work that reads as both grand hypothesis and metaphysical anthropology, a theory of how matter, environment, and mind coevolve.
I think the book’s most interesting intellectual gesture lies in its contrast between nonlinear and linear modes of thought. Mrejeru isn’t content to narrate the emergence of Homo sapiens. He explains shifts in consciousness, the rise of quantification, the growth of individualism, and the possible need for a future “hybrid thinking approach.” That conceptual range lets the book travel unusually far, from cerebellar development to the political psychology of modernity. At one point, it distills its civilizational unease into the sentence, “This linear way of thinking produced many things,” and the line carries more weight than its plainness first suggests, because the entire book is wrestling with the achievements and costs of linearity as a cultural form.
Mrejeru writes like someone trying to assemble a total picture before the fragments drift apart. The book’s real subject is not only human origins. It’s the author’s attempt to think of origins and destiny within one continuum. That’s why a phrase from the dedication, “I am a nonlinear person,” feels more than autobiographical. It reads as a key to the entire enterprise: the book is shaped by a mind that values cross-domain association, recursive analogy, and large explanatory arcs over disciplinary restraint.
As a five-hundred-page intellectual construction, this seventh edition is best read for the pattern it proposes rather than for any single conclusion. Its scale is its argument. By the time it reaches the Information Society, the book has made clear that it sees humanity as an unfinished cognitive project, still being reorganized by environment, technology, and forms of thought. What remains most memorable to me is the seriousness of that wager. Mrejeru believes that the history of the human mind is inseparable from the history of the planet, and he writes as though both histories are entering another phase together. Whether one accepts every step of the argument or not, the book presents itself as a comprehensive anthropology of becoming, and that’s what makes it a singular, intellectually provocative work.
Pages: 542
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on April 25, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Dan M. Mrejeru, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, philosophy, read, reader, reading, Science & Math, story, The Making the Rise and the Future of the Speakingman, writer, writing. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.





Leave a comment
Comments 0