What is a meme? First coined by Richard Dawkins in The Selfish Gene, a meme is any idea, behavior, or skill that can be transferred from one person to another by imitation: stories, fashions, inventions, recipes, songs, ways of plowing a field or throwing a baseball or making a sculpture. The meme is also one of the most important--and controversial--concepts to emerge since The Origin of the Species appeared nearly 150 years ago. In The Meme Machine Susan Blackmore boldly asserts: "Just as the design of our bodies can be understood only in terms of natural selection, so the design of our minds can be understood only in terms of memetic selection." Indeed, Blackmore shows that once our distant ancestors acquired the crucial ability to imitate, a second kind of natural selection began, a survival of the fittest amongst competing ideas and behaviors. Ideas and behaviors that proved most adaptive--making tools, for example, or using language--survived and flourished, replicating themselves in as many minds as possible. These memes then passed themselves on from generation to generation by helping to ensure that the genes of those who acquired them also survived and reproduced. Applying this theory to many aspects of human life, Blackmore offers brilliant explanations for why we live in cities, why we talk so much, why we can't stop thinking, why we behave altruistically, how we choose our mates, and much more. With controversial implications for our religious beliefs, our free will, our very sense of "self," The Meme Machine offers a provocative theory everyone will soon be talking about.
Author(s): Susan Blackmore
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 1999
Language: English
Pages: 274
Contents......Page 3
Foreword - Richard Dawkins......Page 4
Preface......Page 15
CHAPTER 1 Strange Creatures......Page 17
CHAPTER 2 Universal Darwinism......Page 26
CHAPTER 3 The evolution of culture......Page 40
CHAPTER 4 Taking the meme’s eye view......Page 53
CHAPTER 5 Three problems with memes......Page 69
CHAPTER 6 The big brain......Page 83
CHAPTER 7 The origins of language......Page 98
CHAPTER 8 Meme–gene coevolution......Page 109
CHAPTER 9 The limits of sociobiology......Page 124
CHAPTER 10 ‘An orgasm saved my life’......Page 137
CHAPTER 11Sex in the modern world......Page 148
CHAPTER 12 A memetic theory of altruism......Page 163
CHAPTER 13 The altruism trick......Page 178
CHAPTER 14 Memes of the new age......Page 191
CHAPTER 15 Religions as memeplexes......Page 203
CHAPTER 16 Into the Internet......Page 220
CHAPTER 17 The ultimate memeplex......Page 235
CHAPTER 18 Out of the meme race......Page 251
References......Page 263