---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Kingsley Purdam <kingsley.pur...@manchester.ac.uk>
Date: Mon, May 18, 2009 at 2:44 AM
Subject: [CCSR-SEMINARS] Social Instincts - CCSR Seminar
To: ccsr-semin...@listserv.manchester.ac.uk


Dear all, the CCSR seminar series concludes on Tuesday with Professor Colin
Talbot (MBS)

Editor-in-Chief, International Journal of Public Administration and
Specialist Adviser, Treasury Select Committee.
http://whitehallwatch.wordpress.com/

Title: Homo Janus - between Homo Economicus and The Blank Slate

Abstract
Economics made enormous strides in colonizing other social sciences during
the past 3 decades - whether explicit or not many social scientists use
economic concepts of human behavior is shaping their theories. Economics
posits a fairly simple model of humans as rational utility maximisers – H.
Economicus. At the other end of the spectrum lies Standard Social Science
Model (SSSM - see Barkow, Tooby and Cosmides 1995) or what Steven Pinker
memorably calls the ‘Blank Slate’ model (Pinker 2002). This approach has
been the more traditional underlying principle of much of sociology,
anthropology, social psychology and political science. It assumes humans are
infinitely malleable and shaped by experience and culture.
Both the above models – although their adherents would probably deny it –
are by implication evolutionary. If H. Economicus were everywhere,
regardless of culture, institutions, experience and the behavior of others a
‘rational utility maximiser’ then the only plausible explanation for this
would be – we evolved that way. A similar argument applies to the ‘Blank
Slate’.

This seminar will offer an alternative view of human evolution – that we do
have an evolved set of social behaviors that are complemented by
cultural/institutional expressions of these underlying traits. A whole host
of modern approaches – from theories about altruism and its origins through
to cultural theory (Wildavsky, Thompson and Ellis 1990), relational models
theory (Fiske 1991) and competing values theory (Quinn 1988; Quinn and
Cameron 1988) point in this direction – some more explicitly than others.
These suggest a small of set of social “instincts’ that are contradictory,
or paradoxical (Talbot 2005). This seminar will explore these ideas.

Seminars are held on Tuesdays from 4pm - 5.30pm. This final seminar is in a
new venue - 1.69 Humanities Bridgeford Street building. Tea and coffee is
available from 3.45pm.

All are welcome and no booking is necessary. Queries to  0161-275-4721.

See www.ccsr.ac.uk/seminars/ for up to date details.

Kingsley

Dr. Kingsley Purdam
kingsley.pur...@manchester.ac.uk
CCSR
University of Manchester
M13 9PL
UK



-- 
George T. Duncan
Professor of Statistics, Emeritus
Heinz College
Carnegie Mellon University
(505) 983-6895

Life must be understood backwards; but... it must be lived forward.
Soren Kierkegaard
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