The Imagined World Made Real: Towards a Natural Science of Culture

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Rutgers University Press, 2003 - 300 páginas

Can the insights of science provide a proper understanding of human culture, or must we leave the analysis of culture to the so-called humanities?

The ability to share knowledge and beliefs is the preeminent characteristic of our species. Science itself is a product of culture and the natural sciences are the most powerful forms of knowledge we have. From explanations of the origins of the universe to descriptions of the molecular structure of life, science has a spectacular record of achievement. Yet it has mostly failed to provide an understanding of human culture.

The Imagined World Made Real changes this by showing how a grasp of human evolution extends the reach of science. Henry Plotkin recognizes that at the heart of human culture are social constructs, such as justice and money, and that collective beliefs, values, and actions are essential to their formation and maintenance. Only when these constructs are integrated into an accepted biological framework will there be a true synthesis between the social and natural sciences.

This book describes the beginnings of a comprehensive natural science of culture, and with it, an understanding of why people do what they do. Culture can now be thought of as a natural process that is actually a billion years old.

 

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Contenido

Marrying the Biological and Social Sciences
1
The Evolution of Intelligence
47
The Emergence of Culture
95
Naturalizing Culture the Process Way
120
Causal Mechanisms
161
What those mechanisms may be
171
Individuals Groups and Culture
213
selection
231
The Strangeness of Culture
248
A tentative conclusion
283
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Acerca del autor (2003)

Henry Plotkin is a professor of psychobiology at University College London.

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