How Darwinian is cultural evolution?
Darwin-inspired population thinking suggests approaching culture as a population of items of different types, whose relative frequencies may change over time. Three nested subtypes of populational models can be distinguished: evolutionary, selectional and replicative. Substantial progress has been m...
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Published in | Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences Vol. 369; no. 1642; p. 20130368 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
The Royal Society
19.05.2014
Royal Society, The |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Darwin-inspired population thinking suggests approaching culture as a population of items of different types, whose relative frequencies may change over time. Three nested subtypes of populational models can be distinguished: evolutionary, selectional and replicative. Substantial progress has been made in the study of cultural evolution by modelling it within the selectional frame. This progress has involved idealizing away from phenomena that may be critical to an adequate understanding of culture and cultural evolution, particularly the constructive aspect of the mechanisms of cultural transmission. Taking these aspects into account, we describe cultural evolution in terms of cultural attraction, which is populational and evolutionary, but only selectional under certain circumstances. As such, in order to model cultural evolution, we must not simply adjust existing replicative or selectional models but we should rather generalize them, so that, just as replicator-based selection is one form that Darwinian selection can take, selection itself is one of several different forms that attraction can take. We present an elementary formalization of the idea of cultural attraction. |
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Bibliography: | Joint first authors. ArticleID:rstb20130368 href:rstb20130368.pdf ark:/67375/V84-1Q19LWVF-S istex:D6756F387D79CEF31AE5C8CEFFD0C5DCBD634D00 Theme Issue 'Inclusive fitness: 50 years on' compiled and edited by Andy Gardner and Stuart A. West ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 PMCID: PMC3982669 One contribution of 14 to a Theme Issue ‘Inclusive fitness: 50 years on’. |
ISSN: | 0962-8436 1471-2970 1471-2970 |
DOI: | 10.1098/rstb.2013.0368 |