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Eventually, the highly efficient Cro-Magnon eradicated his laid-back but more intuitive cousin, but not before he mated with her, and in our own psyches we continue the battle between them, much as McGilchrist argues goes on between our two brains. It should be mentioned that Gooch did not see the struggle going on between the cerebral hemispheres, but between the cerebrum and the cerebellum.50 But although he disagrees on its location and participants, on all other accounts his version of the battle is practically the same.51 Our inheritance from Neanderthal, Gooch argues, is behind what, in Total Man and other books, he calls our “ancient adversary” and “other self” with whom our rational ego is in constant conflict. According to Gooch, this “adversary” has given rise to our myths and legends of vampires, werewolves, goblins, centaurs, to fairy tales and other fables, as well as to works of literature such as Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
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