Cultural History programme

Activities

19 October 2017
16:00 - 17:15
Kromme Nieuwegracht 80, room 1.06

Cultural History Seminar Series: Steije Hofhuis (UU), ‘Darwinian cultural evolution: problems and prospects of a theory’

Abstract
The last decades have witnesses a remarkable growth of the idea of Darwinian cultural evolution. It is in particular in disciplines such as economics, archeology, linguistics and anthropology that the field of cultural evolution has led to a whole new range of research programs. However, most social scientists and scholars of the humanities remain highly skeptical of the applicability of Darwinian theory to the socio-cultural realm. The idea is often criticized as either fundamentally mistaken, or a fancy re-description of things we know all along.
In this talk I will argue that cultural Darwinism may actually resolve a crucial problem in sociological and historical thought, namely how socio-cultural adaptations, or functions, can evolve beyond people’s conscious or even unconscious knowledge. This argument will be illustrated through an analysis of sociological and anthropological functionalism, its critics, and a few classic case studies such as the Hopi rain dance, the holy cow, and Aztec human sacrifice. Eventually, I will also address why this bears upon cultural history, and why cultural historians have an important role to play in the debate, as they are amongst those best able to test some of the new Darwinian hypotheses.

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