Monday, July 1, 2019

Cultural evolution conceived dynamically as an interplay of forces.

Lorenzo Baravalle, Cultural evolutionary theory as a theory of forces, Synthese, May 2019, DOI: 10.1007/s11229-019-02247-0. Downloadable Preprint.
Abstract: Cultural evolutionary theory has been alternatively compared to a theory of forces, such as Newtonian mechanics, or the kinetic theory of gases. In this article, I clarify the scope and significance of these metatheoretical characterisations. First, I discuss the kinetic analogy, which has been recently put forward by Tim Lewens. According to it, cultural evolutionary theory is grounded on a bottom-up methodology, which highlights the additive effects of social learning biases on the emergence of large-scale cultural phenomena. Lewens supports this claim by arguing that it is a consequence of cultural evolutionists’ widespread commitment to population thinking. While I concur with Lewens that cultural evolutionists often actually conceive cultural change in aggregative terms, I think that the kinetic framework does not properly account for the explanatory import of population-level descriptions in cultural evolutionary theory. Starting from a criticism of Lewens’ interpretation of population thinking, I argue that the explanatory role of such descriptions is best understood within a dynamical framework—that is, a framework according to which cultural evolutionary theory is a theory of forces. After having spelled out the main features of this alternative interpretation, I elucidate in which respects it helps to outline a more accurate characterisation of the overarching structure of cultural evolutionary theory.
Note: I have, for some time know, been thinking of cultural evolution as a force in history; indeed, as perhaps the single strongest force in history. The thrust of this article is a bit different, but I welcome its formulation of cultural evolution as a theory of forces.

5 comments:

  1. If it's a force metaphor, you have to have mass and acceleration analogs, and a product operation, since f = ma. Even electromagnetic force fields have them.

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    Replies
    1. Hmmm... And "hmmm..." again. I'm thinking (just off the top of my head):

      f = cultural change
      m = ambient anxiety
      a = diversity of cultural variants

      Maybe it's the other way around, who knows:

      m = diversity of cultural variants
      a = ambient anxiety

      Do I actually believe that? Of course not, I just made it up. The trick, obviously, is to put numbers to all of that.

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  2. This is the way sound symbolism in natural languages appears to work, with the bits and pieces of words acting like terms in physical equations summing to vectors in a complex multidimensional vector space, or even a tensor space.

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  3. Also check out Michael Tomasello's Becoming Human: A Theory of Ontogeny. http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674980853. I found it the most exciting review and addition to developmental psychology in recent years.

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