
Of All The Things We Do And Say, Most Will Never Be Repeated Or Reproduced. Once In A While, However, An Idea Or A Practice Generates A Chain Of Transmission That Covers More Distance Through Space And Time Than Any Individual Person Ever Could. What Makes Such Transmission Chains Possible? For Two Centuries, The Dominant View (from Psychology To Anthropology) Was That Humans Owe Their Cultural Prosperity To Their Powers Of Imitation. In This View, Modern Cultures Exist Because The People Who Carry Them Are Gifted At Remembering, Storing And Reproducing Information. How Traditions Live And Die Proposes An Alternative To This Standard View. What Makes Traditions Live Is Not A General-purpose Imitation Capacity. Cultural Transmission Is Partial, Selective, Often Unfaithful. Some Traditions Live On In Spite Of This, Because They Tap Into Widespread And Basic Cognitive Preferences. These Attractive Traditions Spread, Not By Being Better Retained Or More Accurately Transferred, But Because They Are Transmitted Over And Over. This Theory Is Used To Shed Light On Various Puzzles Of Cultural Change (from The Distribution Of Bird Songs To The Staying Power Of Children's Rhymes) And To Explain The Special Relation That Links The Human Species To Its Cultures. Morin Combines Recent Work In Cognitive Anthropology With New Advances In Quantitative Cultural History, To Map And Predict The Diffusion Of Traditions. This Book Is Both An Introduction And An Accessible Alternative To Contemporary Theories Of Cultural Evolution.
This book investigates the mechanisms that allow specific cultural traditions to persist and propagate across space and time. Olivier Morin, a researcher in cognitive anthropology, challenges the long-standing academic consensus that human culture relies primarily on high-fidelity imitation. Instead, he proposes that traditions survive by aligning with fundamental human cognitive preferences, arguing that cultural transmission is inherently selective and often unfaithful rather than a process of perfect replication.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in cognitive anthropology recognize this work as a significant challenge to traditional imitation-based theories of cultural evolution. Readers frequently note that the prose balances academic rigor with accessible explanations, making it a useful resource for those interested in the intersection of psychology and cultural history.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190210516
ISBN-13:
9780190210519
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