Philip Lieberman (October 25, 1934 – July 12, 2022)[1][2] was a cognitive scientist at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, United States. Originally trained in phonetics, he wrote a dissertation on intonation. His career focused on topics in the evolution of language, and particularly the relationship between the evolution of the vocal tract, the human brain, and the evolution of speech, cognition and language.[3]
In 1974 he was appointed to the faculty at Brown University, where he was George Hazard Crooker Professor from 1992 to 1997. In 1997 he became the Fred M. Seed Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, and in 1999 he became Professor of Anthropology, both at Brown University. Since 2012, when he retired from teaching, he became The George Hazard Crooker University Professor, emeritus[5]
Lieberman's interests included photography and mountaineering.[3] A collection of over 400 photographs of Nepal by Lieberman is held at the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology.[8] Lieberman's photographs have also been exhibited at and are in the collections at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum.[9] His photographs of life in remote Himalayan regions can be viewed on the website of the Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library.[10]
Lieberman, Philip (1998). Eve Spoke: Human Language and Human Evolution. Cambridge: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN978-0-393-04089-0.
Lieberman, Philip (2000). Human Language and Our Reptilian Brain. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN978-0-674-00793-2.
Lieberman, Philip (2006). Towards an Evolutionary Biology of Language. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN0-674-02184-3.
Lieberman, Philip (2013). The Unpredictable Species. Princeton University Press.
Lieberman, Philip (2017). The Theory That Changed Everything: "On the Origin of Species" as a Work in Progress. Cambridge: Columbia University Press. ISBN978-0-231-17808-2.
References
↑'Philip Lieberman' in the contributors list (page 490) for Organization of Behavior in Face-to-face Interaction. Walter de Gruyter. 1975.