Historical aspects of left-handedness

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Abstract

Lateralization is one of the central questions in neurology, neuropsychology, and other related scientific disciplines. There has been very little change in the proportion of left-handers since the Upper Paleolithic Age about 10,000 years ago and it is estimated to be around 10%. As the history of human thinking has developed from superstition to science, the explanation of left-handedness transformed from “devil’s work” to neurological specificity. This paper presents this very interesting historical change by analyzing the data on left-handedness and the attitudes towards it in human societies from prehistory to today. Even in a relatively open-minded society, parents and teachers may encourage a left-handed child to switch to right-handedness to make their lives easier in a largely right-handed world. On the other hand, left-handedness is increasingly seen as a special gift, and left-handed people have started to favor themselves as more competent in relation to the right-handed people.

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Milenković, S., Belojević, G., Paunović, K., & Davidović, D. (2019). Historical aspects of left-handedness. Srpski Arhiv Za Celokupno Lekarstvo, 147(11–12), 782–785. https://doi.org/10.2298/SARH190522095M

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