Humans learn in ways that are influenced by others. As a result, cultural items of many types are elaborated over time in ways that build on the achievements of previous generations. Culture therefore shows a pattern of descent with modification reminiscent of Darwinian evolution. This raises the question of whether cultural selection-a mechanism akin to natural selection, albeit working when learned items are passed from demonstrators to observers-can explain how various practices are refined over time. This Element argues that cultural selection is not necessary for the explanation of cultural adaptation; it shows how to build hybrid explanations that draw on aspects of cultural selection and cultural attraction theory; it shows how cultural reproduction makes problems for highly formalised approaches to cultural selection; and it uses a case-study to demonstrate the importance of human agency for cumulative cultural adaptation.
ISBN: | 9781009539067 |
Publication date: | 27th June 2024 |
Author: | Tim Lewens |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 75 pages |
Series: | Elements in the Philosophy of Biology |
Genres: |
Philosophy of science Evolutionary anthropology / Human evolution Cultural studies Social and cultural anthropology |