1 / 11

Evolutionary Psychology

Evolutionary Psychology. Week 11 Evolution & Culture. Running Order The Standard Social Science Model The argument for ‘evolutionary sociology’ The Adapted Mind Approach Metaculture Evoked culture Epidemiological culture Evolutionary explanation of art.

hye
Télécharger la présentation

Evolutionary Psychology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 Evolution & Culture

  2. Running Order The Standard Social Science Model The argument for ‘evolutionary sociology’ The Adapted Mind Approach Metaculture Evoked culture Epidemiological culture Evolutionary explanation of art Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture

  3. Aim To introduce you to a variety of theories of culture and social structure inspired by Darwinian viewpoints. Reward You should be better able to assess the prospects of an incipient ‘evolutionary sociology’. Evolutionary PsychologyWeek 11 - Evolution& Culture

  4. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture The Standard Social Science Model: Mind • Psychic unity: The claim that humans are more similar in terms of biological endowment than they are dissimilar. It follows that patterns of within-group similarity and between-group differences show culture to be the formative mode. • Variation begins at birth. This follows from 1. “Nature” in the raw form of the new born is overridden and overwritten by culture. That nature is overridden demonstrates that human biological and genetic endowment is insignificant. • The Wild Child. This follows from 2. Individuals, undirected by cultural rules, would not spontaneously exhibit organised behaviour or recognisable emotions. • Conclusion: Homini Tabula Rasa. Human nature is defined by its capacity to be enculturated. Its most universal feature is its flexibility and variability.

  5. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture The Standard Social Science Model: Culture • The causal arrow. This follows from homini tabula rasa. Given that the mind acquires organisation from a ready organised social world, the cause of organised behaviour and mental content is without and not within the individual. • Omnis cultura ex cultura: The claim that cultural ‘facts’ as consequences, or effects, are invariably preceded by cultural antecedents, or causes. Given this relation, culture is (at the very least from a methodological point of view) independent of human nature. • Conclusion: Given that culture is the cause of behaviour and mental content, it is culture that must be studied if an account is to be given of its effects.

  6. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture The general argument of evolutionary sociology • Natural and/or Sexual Selection should be discernible in cognitive functioning. • Culture is enabled by cognitive functions • i.e. where there is no thought there is no culture. • Therefore the biological imperatives selected for by NS/SS should be discernible in culture • i.e. culture should be about what we are about: it should reflect what is important from an evolutionary point of view.

  7. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture What is meant by ‘culture’ or ‘society’? Rules & rituals • Of exchange and/or organisation. Stories about the past, present and future • Myths, histories, prophecy. Tools • Artefacts made to perform a task. Art • Artefacts made to depict and/or represent.

  8. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture The Adapted Mind Approach: 3 forms of culture Metaculture Culture • The enduring dispositions and goals of sapien. • The universality allows for any kind of cultural unity and transmission. Evoked Culture • What happens when the adapted mind is place in variable contexts? • The similarities and differences in environment explain within group similarities and between group differences. Epidemiological Culture • The habits we adopt: We adopt them because the tried and tested is less expensive to learn than trial and error. • Innovations & novelty are introduced by few & copied by many.

  9. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture Evolutionary explanation of art What is new is old Soap Operas • gossip and social knowledge. Novels & films: five plots • love, sex, social threat, revenge, money. Decomposition of music • language, auditory scene analysis, emotional calls, tempo & motor control. Decomposition of pictorial art • shape, colour, primary cues, invocation.

  10. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture Memetics: Viruses of the Mind In what way are memes like genes? • Genetic fitness and Memetic fitness. • Variation – heredity – differential transmission. • Polymorphism and memeplexes • Classical concepts and prototypes. • Infectiousness, susceptibility & social climate. • Memes are not particulate and ‘clean’. • Memes can blend & are Lamarckian.

  11. Evolutionary Psychology Week 11 - Evolution & Culture Recap • EP argues that the SSSM is flawed because humans have native endowment. • EP extends the link from genes to minds to genes to culture. • The Adaptive Mind approach argues that cultures are group level adaptations. • The Adapted mind approach argues that all transient forms of culture can be seen as metacultural. • Memetics argues ideas are also subject to selection.

More Related