Memes, and Related Ideas about the Evolution of Culture
31 Dec 2009 16:57
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Thoughts, like fleas, jump from man to man. But they don't bite everybody.
---Attrib. Stanislaw Lem
Just what is a meme? Dawkins calls it an imitable behavior, but most
people who use the notion are more concerned with ideology than how to
lay the table, and even Dawkins cites religion as a bundle of memes
--- "viruses of the mind," is his phrase. Which brings me to:
Metaphorical uses, as opposed genuine research. Spread of the
meme-meme (just the other year I saw in the cultural studies section
of the local bookstore a tract called Media Viruses whose palpitating
dust-jacket makes it appear as though the secret workings of the world
are to be laid bare by the author using the magic tool of "viruses of
the mind"; and whose index and bibliography don't even mention
Dawkins.) And thought-cliches. And pseudo-events. And propaganda. Is
the reputation of The Selfish Gene as a piece of crude Social
Darwinism a meme?
How far back does the contagion analogy for ideas go?

Can one have a "memetic illness," the same way some people have
genetic illnesses? What would it look like? Organized religion? A
millenarian movement?

See also: Archaeology; Evolution; Evolutionary Economics; Evolutionary
Epistemology; Historical Materialism; Religion; Sociology; Universal
Darwinism.

Recommended:
J. M. Balkin, Cultural Software: A Theory of Ideology [Full text free online]
Raymond Boudon [Studies of the mechanisms which make people receptive
to ideas, especially bad ideas, by giving them what seem like good
reasons to believe them --- sometimes they even are good reasons.]
The Analysis of Ideology
The Art of Self-Persuasion
Richard Dawkins, The Selfish Gene, ch. 11
Daniel Dennett
Darwin's Dangerous Idea
"The Evolution of Evaluators"
"Memes and the Exploitation of the Imagination"
"Memes: Myths, Misunderstandings and Misgivings"
Herbert Gintis, Game Theory Evolving
The on-line Journal of Memetics
Stanley Lieberson, A Matter of Taste: How Names, Fashions, and Culture
Change [See under sociology.]
Aaron Lynch
Thought Contagion: How Belief Spreads throug Society [This would be
one of the best books on memetics, even if there were more than, oh,
say, five of them. Review: The Case for the Meme's Eye View]
"Units, Events and Dynamics in Memetic Evolution," Journal of Memetics
2 [Lots of sound math, few metaphors]
Franco Moretti
"On Literary Evolution," the last essay in Signs Taken for Wonders
(2nd ed. only) [Interesting things to say about how literary forms
evolve, but some of his ideas about organic evolution are strange,
e.g., that natural selection does not act during radiations.]
"The Slaughterhouse of Literature", Modern Language Quarterly 61
(2000): 207--227
Graphs, Maps, Trees: Abstract Models for Literary History
W. G. Runciman
The Social Animal [Primer on sociology, from an evolutionary/memetic
point of view. Summary and revision of the highlights of his Treatise
on Social Theory.]
WGR, "On the Tendency of Human Societies to Form Varieties,"
Proceedings of the British Academy 72 (1986): 149--165 [The 1986
Radcliffe-Brown Lecture in Social Anthropology. An early version of
his general theory. The title, of course, deliberately echoes that of
the paper by Darwin and Wallace announcing natural selection.]
WGR, "The 'Triumph' of Capitalism as a Topic in the Theory of Social
Selection," New Left Review 210 (March-April 1995): 33--47
[Application of the theory to the classic problem of historical
sociology (see: Marx, Weber).]
Michael Rustin, "A New Social Evolutionism?," New Left Review 234
(May-June 1999): 106--126 [Exposition and critique, from the
standpoint of the weird mix of Marx, Nietzsche and Althusser that NLR
is into these days]
WGR, "Social Evolutionism: A Reply to Michael Rustin," New Left Review
236 (July-August 1999): 145--153
"Socialising Darwin," Prospect, April 1998 [Summary of The Social
Animal; no longer available online to non-subscribers]
"The Diffusion of Christianity in the Third Century AD as a Case-Study
in the Theory of Cultural Selection", European Journal of Sociology 45
(2004): 3--21 [Nice illustration of one of Runciman's goals, in that
it "eschews any attempt at" "law-like cross-cultural generalizations
... in favour of a selectionist analysis explicitly focused on the
particular historical environment", while in no way doubting "the
existence of universal psychological capacities and dispositions".]
Dan Sperber, Explaining Culture: A Naturalistic Approach [Review: How
to Catch Insanity from Your Kids (Among Others); or, Histoire
naturelle de l'infame. Though Sperber would disclaim being a
memeticists, this is one of the two best books on memetics. Sperber
also ties all this in neatly to evolutionary psychology.]
Stephen Toulmin, Human Understanding, vol. 1, The Collective Use and
Evolution of Concepts [Genuinely evolutionist --- as in,
variation-plus-selection --- picture of how science works and
scientific method develops; ditto for other intellectual disciplines
worthy of the name work. Excellent, and pre-dates Dawkins by five
years.]
Adam Westoby, "The Ecology of Intentions: How to Make Memes and
Influence People: Culturology" [Westoby was a political scientist and
historian who wrote an excellent book on The Evolution of Communism,
but that, despite the title, was before he really became interested in
memetics. "The Ecology of Intentions" was the manuscript he was
working on at the time of his death. Since it is, in its incomplete
form, one of the most sophisticated examinations of what a real
science of memes would have to be like, one can only regret Westoby's
death all the more strongly.]
Damían H. Zanette and Susanna C. Manrubia, "Vertical Transmission of
Culture and the Distribution of Family Names," nlin.AO/0009046
To read:
Auger (ed.), Darwinizing Culture: The Status of Memetics as a Science
[Auger's own book got a really annihilating review by Bill Benzon]
Walter Bagehot, Physics and Politics: Thoughts on the Application of
the Principles of "Natural Selection" and "Inheritance" to Political
Society. [1873; would pre-date James, if it really delivers what the
title promises]
Basalla, Evolution of Technology
Susan Blackmore, The Meme Machine [Review by Runciman]
Robert Boyd and Peter J. Richerson
Culture and the Evolutionary Process
The Origin and Evolution of Cultures
Pascal Boyer, Tradition as Truth and Communication: A Cognitive
Description of Traditional Discourse
Pascal Boyer and James V. Wertsch (eds.), Memory in Mind and Culture [blurb]
Melissa J. Brown and Marcus W. Feldman, "Sociocultural epistasis and
cultural exaptation in footbinding, marriage form, and religious
practices in early 20th-century Taiwan", Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (USA) 106 (2009): 22139--22144
Alan Carling [Attempt at selectionist Marxism. Thanks to Jim Farmelant
for the pointer]
The Proof of the Pudding: Reason and Value in Social Evolution
[Unpublished. Synopsis]
Abstract of a talk on "Darwin and Marx"
Robert L. Carneiro, Evolutionism in Cultural Anthropology: A Critical History
Michael Carrithers, Why Humans Have Cultures: Explaining Anthropology
and Social Diversity
Laureano Castro and Miguel A. Toro, "The evolution of culture: From
primate social learning to human culture", Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (USA) 101 (2004): 10235--10240
Cavalli-Sforza and Feldman, Cultural Transmission and Evolution: A
Quantitative Approach
David Chavalarias and Paul Bourgine, "Metamimetic and the Spatial
Prisoner's Dilemna," nlin.AO/0301005
Andrew Chesterman, Memes of Translation: The Spread of Ideas in
Translation Theory
Kersten Dautenhahn and Chrystopher L. Nehaniv (eds.), Imitation in
Animals and Artifacts
Kate Distin, The Selfish Meme
Lee Alan Dugatkin, The Imitation Factor: Evolution beyond the Gene
R. I. M. Dunbar (ed.), The Evolution of Culture
Durham, Coevolution: Genes, Culture, and Human Diversity
N. J. Enfield, Linguistic Epidemiology: Semantics and Grammar of
Language Contact in Mainland Southeast Asia
Gabor Fath and Miklos Sarvary, "A renormalization group theory of
cultural evolution", nlin.AO/0312070 [Abstract: "We present a theory
of cultural evolution based upon a renormalization group scheme. We
consider rational but cognitively limited agents who optimize their
decision making process by iteratively updating and refining the
mental representation of their natural and social environment. These
representations are built around the most important degrees of freedom
of their world. Cultural coherence among agents is defined as the
overlap of mental representations and is characterized using an
adequate order parameter. As the importance of social interactions
increases or agents become more intelligent, we observe and quantify a
series of dynamical phase transitions by which cultural coherence
advances in the society."]
Dorothy M. Fragazy and Susan Perry (eds.), The Biology of Traditions:
Models and Evidence [Blurb]
D. Gatherer and N. R. McEwan, "On Units of Selection in Cultural
Evolution," Journal of Theoretical Biology, 192 (1998) 409--413
Francisco Gil-White, "Common misunderstandings of memes (and genes)"
Oliver Goodenough, "Cultural Replication Theory and Law" [PDF]
Jürgen Habermas, Communications and the Evolution of Society
J. Richard Harrison and Glenn R. Carroll, Culture and Demography in
Organizations [Blurb, ch. 1]
Chip Heath [Gave a great talk at the ICOS seminar at Ann Arbor; see
the papers linked to off the seminar website (scroll down to "5 March
2004")]
Dorothy Holland, William Lachicotte, Debra Skinner and Carole Cain,
Identity and Agency in Cultural Worlds [Blurb]
Susan Hurley and Nick Chater (eds.), Perspectives on Imitation: From
Neuroscience to Social Science [2 vol. set, "A state-of-the-art view
of imitation from leading researchers in neuroscience and brain
imaging, animal and developmental psychology, primatology, ethology,
philosophy, anthropology, media studies, economics, sociology,
education, and law." Blurb]
Eva Jablonka and Marion J. Lamb, Evolution in Four Dimensions:
Genetic, Epigenetic, Behavioral, and Symbolic Variation in the History
of Life [Blurb]
David Kaiser, Kenji Ito and Karl Hall, "Spreading the Tools of Theory:
Feynman Diagrams in the USA, Japan, and the Soviet Union", Social
Studies of Science 34 (2004): 879--922 [JSTOR]
Jason Kaufman, "Endogenous Explanation in the Sociology of Culture",
Annual Review of Sociology 30 (2004): 335--357 [Link]
Laland, Odling-Smee and Feldman, Niche Construction, Biological
Evolution and Cultural Change [Also a book by the same name]
Susanna C. Manrubia and Damian H. Zanette, "At the boundary between
biological and cultural evolution: The origin of surname
distributions," cond-mat/0201559
Herbert Donald Graham Maschner (ed.), Darwinian Archaeologies
Ian McFadyen, Mindwars
Meltzoff and Prinz (eds.), The Imitative Mind
Salikoko S. Mufwene, The Ecology of Language Evolution [Review by Danny Yee]
Richard R. Nelson, "Evolutionary Theories of Cultural Change: An
Empirical Perspective" ["the standard articulations of a Universal
Darwinism put forth by biologists and philosophers tends to be too
narrow, in particular too much linked to the details of evolution in
biology, to fit with what is known about cultural evolution." PDF
preprint.]
Partha Niyogi, The Computational Nature of Language Learning and
Evolution [Blurb]
Michael J. O'Brien and Stephen J. Shennan (eds.), Innovation in
Cultural Systems: Contributions from Evolutionary Anthropology [blurb]
Pierre-Yves Oudeyer, "How Phonological Structures Can Be Culturally
Selected for Learnability", Adaptive Behavior 13 (2005): 269--280 [PDF
preprint, related publications]
Duane Quiatt and Vernon Reynolds, Primate Behaviour: Information,
Social Knowledge, and the Evolution of Culture [Blurb]
Luke Rendell and Hal Whitehead, "Culture in Whales and Dolphins"
Peter J. Richerson and Robert Boyd, Not by Genes Alone: How Culture
Transformed Human Evolution
Nikolaus Ritt, Selfish Sounds and Linguistic Evolution: A Darwinian
Approach to Language Change
W. G. Runciman
Treatise on Social Theory [esp. vol. II]
The Theory of Cultural and Social Selection [blurb]
W. G. Runciman, John Maynard Smith and R. I. M. Dunbar (eds.),
Evolution of Social Behaviour Patterns in Primates and Man
Donald A. Schon, Invention and the Evolution of Ideas [a.k.a.
Displacement of Concepts]
Ute Schöpflug (ed.), Cultural transmission : psychological,
developmental, social, and methodological aspects [blurb]
A. B. Schmookler, Parable of the Tribes
Stephen Shennan, Genes, Memes and Human History: Darwinian Archaeology
and Cultural Evolution
Stephen Shennan (ed.), Pattern and Process in Cultural Evolution [blurb]
Shils, Tradition
Randolph M. Siverson and Harvey Starr, The Diffusion of War: A Study
of Opportunity and Willingness
Strauss and Quinn, A Cognitive Theory of Cultural Meaning
Gary Taylor, Cultural Selection [a view from the cultural studies side
of the bookshelf, which also doesn't seem to mention Dawkins, but
whose author does seem to have read Darwin, if not necessarily any
more modern biologists]
William R. Thompson (ed.), Evolutionary Interpretations of World Politics
Bruce G. Trigger, Sociocultural Evolution: Calculation and Contingency [Blurb]
John Ziman (ed.), Technological Innovation as an Evolutionary Process
Jack Zipes, Why Fairy Tales Stick: The Evolution and Relevance of a Genre
Misc. on-line references:
Ander's Meme Page
Agner Fog, Cultural Selection
Memetic Algorithms

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