The New Culturology and Why It's a Big Deal

The New Culturology and Why It's a Big Deal

A synthetic summary of books/henrich-2017-secret-our-success and books/henrich-2020-weirdest-people-world plus why its a milestone in the development of a new scientific culturology.

image

These are notes i wrote for myself in April 2022. Sharing as may be of value to others and will motivate me to tidy them!

Why do I consider Henrich and co's work to be so significant?

  • First, unified "scientific" anthropology / culturology
    • (Long-awaited) Unification of anthropology with economics, sociology, evolutionary biology, cognitive science
    • First version of "culturology" e.g. a rigorous, study of culture with evolutionary structure
  • Coherent, plausible, well-evidenced hypothesis about cultural evolution
  • Answers to big questions like …
    • What's different about homo sapiens (why "us" vs great apes, why so "successful")
    • Why the "west"? (why did west take-off with industrial revolution etc)
  • Support for hypotheses / key debates e.g.
    • Primacy of being
    • Ontology and ontogeny
  • Ecosystem-ic model (with both examples and data) in which ontology, structure and technology interact

2022-04-20

Converging synthesis of various disciplines:

  • Psychology, cognitive science, neuroscience etc
  • Anthropology, economics, (archaeology), (sociology)
  • Biology and evolution

Massive advances (and interconnection) in all of these in last 50y (i.e. since 1970) and especially last 20-30y e.g.

  • Sociobiology and evolutionary psychology in 70s and new life in 90s and 2000s
  • Cognitive science (since 70s/80s) which itself is a convergent discipline
  • Economics and anthropology which have connected (and with psychology) and both become much more empirical

Out of this grand synthesis we are starting to be able to convincingly answer (or at least have strong hypotheses) related to a major array of questions

  • Why "us" (versus other species)? Why did homo sapiens become the dominant species? What is "special" about us?
    • Are we just smarter, more cooperative, or what?
  • Why the "west"? Why did the "west" (i.e. western europe plus) become the dominant societies/cultures today?

Many more related to human behaviour and/or the structure of our societies …

  • Why are we racist? Is it genetic, cultural, some mixture etc? (Ans: we culturally learn from "people like us" and prepare ourselves for lives with "people like us". Hence, we have evolved to identify "people like us" based on a variety of ethnic and other markers e.g. do they speak same dialect, dress the same)
  • How do we scale (human cooperation)? We face huge collective challenges (e.g. climate crisis) that require action at unprecedented global scale. How could we expand our sense of the collective so that we can work together to address these? How have we grown this in the past?
  • How did we go from almost entirely nomadic gatherer-hunter 10k+ years ago (and as we had been for 10s of thousands of years before) to the technologically advanced, socially complex societies we have today?
  • Why do we have patriarchy? Why has it been so common? Why could we overcome it?
  • Is culture somewhat arbitrary or is it canalized in important ways? (whether by our genes, or by principles or organization etc)
  • Why has every known human society had religion? Is it genetically programmed?
  • How does culture influence genes and vice versa?
  • How does culture evolve? How does it co-evolve with our biology?
  • How does ontology (individual and collective), structure and technology co-evolve? What has primacy?
  • How does culture spread?

Key Ideas

  • (Good) Cultural learning as the distinctive homo feature
    • We aren't smarter (than say apes)
    • But we're (much) better imitators and hence cultural learners
    • Cultural learning does happen in other species. Just pretty limited.
      • Some evidence in apes
      • Evidence in elephants (or is it just evidence for learning and memory?)
  • Why "homo" (vs other apes or whales or elephants)? Why did "we" start down this evolutionary trajectory and why haven't other done it, if so powerful?
    • Cultural learning is hard (to evolve as evolutionary feature) … and hence only homo have managed this (even if once evolved it provides exceptional benefits)
  • Culture-gene co-evolution.
    • Examples:
      • water-carrying with endurance hunting (long-distance running)
      • pastoralism/animal domestication with lactose tolerance
  • Social scaling and cultural complexity
    • Pro-sociality (explanation thereof in dynamic culture-gene evolutionary terms)

To integrate

  • What is culture

Secret of Our Success in a Nutshell

Question: why have "we" (i.e. homo sapiens) been so successful*?

* successful simply means in terms of being dominant in ecosystem and implies no moral or positive (or negative) connotation.

Ans: because we are truly a cultural species i.e. we are able to learn rapidly, richly and reliably from others. As a result we are collectively intelligent: we have shared knowledge that is collectively embodied and transmitted. More specifically we have the ability to develop and transmit culture i.e. not just knowledge, but social norms and rules, beliefs etc. … And underlying that the capacity for cultural learning.

This contrasts with various other explanations e.g.

  • We are smarter
  • We are more cooperative
  • We are stronger
  • We have language

© 2024 All rights reservedBuilt with DataHub Cloud

Built with DataHub CloudDataHub Cloud