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Darwinian Sociocultural Evolution

Solutions to Dilemmas in Cultural and Social Theory
  • Marion Blute, University of Toronto
  • Hardback

  • ISBN:9780521768931
  • Publication date:January 2010
  • 250pages
  • 5 b/w illus. 5 tables
    • Dimensions: 228 x 152 mm
    • Weight: 0.53kg
      63.0097805217689310GB0en_GBGBP£

    Social scientists can learn a lot from evolutionary biology - from systematics and principles of evolutionary ecology to theories of social interaction including competition, conflict and cooperation, as well as niche construction, complexity, eco-evo-devo, and the role of the individual in evolutionary processes. Darwinian sociocultural evolutionary theory applies the logic of Darwinism to social-learning based cultural and social change. With a multidisciplinary approach for graduate biologists, philosophers, sociologists, anthropologists, social psychologists, archaeologists, linguists, economists, political scientists and science and technology specialists, the author presents this model of evolution drawing on a number of sophisticated aspects of biological evolutionary theory. The approach brings together a broad and inclusive theoretical framework for understanding the social sciences which addresses many of the dilemmas at their forefront - the relationship between history and necessity, conflict and cooperation, the ideal and the material and the problems of agency, subjectivity and the nature of social structure.

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