The role of population thinking in dual inheritance theory

Authors

  • Lorenzo Baravalle Universidade Federal do ABC. Centro de Ciências Naturais e Humanas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/51678-31662017000200005

Keywords:

Cultural evolution. Double inheritance theory. Population thinking. Models. Evolutionary explanations.

Abstract

Dual inheritance theory is possibly the most promising research programme nowadays available about cultural evolution. However, many misunderstandings still surround its goals and the means to achieve them. In this article, I shall discuss the explicit engagement with population thinking displayed by many supporters of this programme. This, supposedly innocent, engagement actually hides an ambiguity with respect to a set of metaphysical and explanatory commitments. I shall show, by taking into account the two most common interpretations of population thinking – those of Mayr and Sober –, that they lead to two substantially different approaches to many topics, like the causal structure of populations and the best way to model it. The compatibility between both interpretations and dual inheritance theory reveals that there exist, in it, two distinct explanatory projects, whose difference is rarely stressed.

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Published

2018-04-03

Issue

Section

Artigos

How to Cite

The role of population thinking in dual inheritance theory. (2018). Scientiae Studia, 15(2), 283-305. https://doi.org/10.11606/51678-31662017000200005