Innovation in Cultural Systems: Contributions from Evolutionary Anthropology (Vienna Series in Theoretical Biology)

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In recent years an interest in applying the principles of evolution to the study of culture emerged in the social sciences. Archaeologists and anthropologists reconsidered the role of innovation in particular, and have moved toward characterizing innovation in cultural systems not only as a product but also as an evolutionary process. This distinction was familiar to biology but new to the social sciences; cultural evolutionists from the nineteenth to the twentieth century had tended to see innovation as a preprogrammed change that occurred when a cultural group "needed" to overcome environmental problems. In this volume, leading researchers from a variety of disciplines—including anthropology, archaeology, evolutionary biology, philosophy, and psychology—offer their perspectives on cultural innovation. The book provides not only a range of views but also an integrated account, with the chapters offering an orderly progression of thought. The contributors consider innovation in biological terms, discussing epistemology, animal studies, systematics and phylogeny, phenotypic plasticity and evolvability, and Evo Devo; they discuss modern insights into innovation, including simulation, the random-copying model, diffusion, and demographic analysis; and they offer case studies of innovation from archaeological and ethnographic records, examining developmental, behavioral, and social patterns. Contributors: André Ariew, R. Alexander Bentley, Werner Callebaut, Joseph Henrich, Anne Kandler, Kevin N. Laland, Daniel O. Larson, Alex Mesoudi, Michael J. O’Brien, Craig T. Palmer, Adam Powell, Simon M. Reader, Valentine Roux, Chet Savage, Michael Brian Schiffer, Jeffrey H. Schwartz, Stephen J. Shennan, James Steele, Mark G. Thomas, Todd L. VanPool Vienna Series in Theoretical Biology

Author(s): Michael J. O'Brien, Stephen J. Shennan
Series: Vienna Series in Theoretical Biology
Publisher: The MIT Press
Year: 2009

Language: English
Pages: 297

Contents......Page 6
Series Foreword......Page 8
Preface and Acknowledgments......Page 10
I Introduction......Page 14
1 Issues in Anthropological Studies of Innovation......Page 16
II The Biological Substrate......Page 32
2 Innovation and Invention from a Logical Point of View......Page 34
3 Comparative Perspectives on Human Innovation......Page 50
4 Organismal Innovation......Page 66
5 Innovation, Replicative Behavior, and Evolvability......Page 82
6 Innovation from EvoDevo to Human Culture......Page 94
III Cultural Inheritance......Page 110
7 The Evolution of Innovation-Enhancing Institutions......Page 112
8 Fashion versus Reason in the Creative Industries......Page 134
9 Demography and Variation in the Accumulation of Culturally Inherited Skills......Page 150
10 Cultural Traditions and the Evolutionary Advantages of Noninnovation......Page 174
11 The Experimental Study of Cultural Innovation......Page 188
12 Social Learning, Economic Inequality, and Innovation Diffusion......Page 206
IV Patterns in the Anthropological Record......Page 228
13 Technological Innovations and Developmental Trajectories......Page 230
14 Can Archaeologists Study Processes of Invention?......Page 248
15 War, Women, and Religion......Page 264
Contributors......Page 280
Index......Page 282