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paleoanthropology, genetics and evolution

Culture evolves.

Mon, 2012-05-21 12:10 -- John Hawks
TitleCulture evolves.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsWhiten, A, Hinde, RA, Laland, KN, Stringer, CB
JournalPhilosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
Volume366
Issue1567
Pagination938-48
Date Published2011 Apr 12
ISSN1471-2970
Keywordsbehavior, culture, evolutionism
Abstract

Culture pervades human lives and has allowed our species to create niches all around the world and its oceans, in ways quite unlike any other primate. Indeed, our cultural nature appears so distinctive that it is often thought to separate humanity from the rest of nature and the Darwinian forces that shape it. A contrary view arises through the recent discoveries of a diverse range of disciplines, here brought together to illustrate the scope of a burgeoning field of cultural evolution and to facilitate cross-disciplinary fertilization. Each approach emphasizes important linkages between culture and evolutionary biology rather than quarantining one from the other. Recent studies reveal that processes important in cultural transmission are more widespread and significant across the animal kingdom than earlier recognized, with important implications for evolutionary theory. Recent archaeological discoveries have pushed back the origins of human culture to much more ancient times than traditionally thought. These developments suggest previously unidentified continuities between animal and human culture. A third new array of discoveries concerns the later diversification of human cultures, where the operations of Darwinian-like processes are identified, in part, through scientific methods borrowed from biology. Finally, surprising discoveries have been made about the imprint of cultural evolution in the predispositions of human minds for cultural transmission.

DOI10.1098/rstb.2010.0372
Alternate JournalPhilos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., B, Biol. Sci.
Citation KeyWhiten:2011
PubMed ID21357216

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