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A problem in theory

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2019-02-11

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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Muthukrishna, Michael, Joseph Henrich. "A problem in theory." Nat Hum Behav 3, no. 3 (2019): 221-229. DOI: 10.1038/s41562-018-0522-1

Abstract

A growing body of evidence suggests that humans are a new kind of animal—a product of genetic information from our parents and cultural information from our societies. This “Dual Inheritance Theory”, grounded in the biological sciences, offers a deeper understanding of human origins and a formal theoretical framework for unifying the social sciences. Such a theory has remained elusive with attempts dismissed as “physics envy”. We argue that if social scientists are to envy or emulate another science, that science ought to be biology, whose staggering success is in large part due to its synthesis under a formal evolutionary theoretical framework. Dual Inheritance Theory makes several predictions for the psychological foundations of cultural evolution, with implications for our psychology and behaviour more broadly. These foundations give us the mechanisms of cultural evolutionary theory, which offers a formal framework for understanding the evolution of institutions and the co-evolving cultural norms. These often-invisible cultural pillars on which institutions rest are the key to understanding why institutions, such as democracy, often succeed in one cultural context, but fail in another, with implications for economics, politics, and law. An understanding of how cultural traits interact with other cultural traits combined with large databases of historical knowledge may offer new approaches to the study of history. The general approach of deriving and testing these predictions with tools from the biological and social sciences is a crucial, but ignored aspect of the replication crisis and a model for how to move toward a more general theory of human behaviour.

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Behavioral Neuroscience, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Social Psychology

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