Tuesday 5 May 2015

Tim Lewens: Cultural Evolution: Conceptual Challenges

Tim Lewens has a book on cultural evolution coming out later this year: Cultural Evolution: Conceptual Challenges. For Google's preview of the book, see here.

His 2004 book - Organisms and Artifacts: Design in Nature and Elsewhere - also related to the topic.

I have generally dismissed Tim Lewens in the past as a feeble-minded meme critic who doesn't know what he is talking about. However the blurb to this book weakly suggests that he is in the process coming round to a sympathetic understanding of cultural evolution. Or maybe not, we will see. Here is the blurb:

Tim Lewens aims to understand what it means to take an evolutionary approach to cultural change, and why it is that this approach is often treated with suspicion. Convinced of the exceptional power of natural selection, many thinkers - typically working in biological anthropology, cognitive psychology, and evolutionary biology - have suggested it should be freed from the confines of biology, and applied to cultural change in humans and other animals. At the same time, others - typically with backgrounds in disciplines like social anthropology and history - have been just as vocal in dismissing the evolutionary approach to culture. What drives these disputes over Darwinism in the social sciences?

While making a case for the value of evolutionary thinking for students of culture, Lewens shows why the concerns of sceptics should not dismissed as mere prejudice, confusion, or ignorance. Indeed, confusions about what evolutionary approaches entail are propagated by their proponents, as well as by their detractors. By taking seriously the problems faced by these approaches to culture, Lewens shows how such approaches can be better formulated, where their most significant limitations lie, and how the tools of cultural evolutionary thinking might become more widely accepted.


Update 2016-02-08: C. Heyes review. From this polite review, the book doesn't sound to me as though it is going to be much good.

Here's a 2011 critical essay, showing Tim's perspective.

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