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Cultural Science A Natural History Of Stories Demes Knowledge And Innovation John Hartley Jason Potts

  • SKU: BELL-50229354
Cultural Science A Natural History Of Stories Demes Knowledge And Innovation John Hartley Jason Potts
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Cultural Science A Natural History Of Stories Demes Knowledge And Innovation John Hartley Jason Potts instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.57 MB
Author: John Hartley; Jason Potts
ISBN: 9781849666022, 9781849666053, 1849666024, 1849666059
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

Cultural Science A Natural History Of Stories Demes Knowledge And Innovation John Hartley Jason Potts by John Hartley; Jason Potts 9781849666022, 9781849666053, 1849666024, 1849666059 instant download after payment.

Cultural Science introduces a new way of thinking about culture. Adopting an evolutionary and systems approach, the authors argue that culture is the population-wide source of newness and innovation; it faces the future, not the past. Its chief characteristic is the formation of groups or ‘demes’ (organised and productive subpopulation; ‘demos’). Demes are the means for creating, distributing and growing knowledge. However, such groups are competitive and knowledge-systems are adversarial.
Starting from a rereading of Darwinian evolutionary theory, the book utilises multidisciplinary resources: Raymond Williams’s ‘culture is ordinary’ approach; evolutionary science (e.g. Mark Pagel and Herbert Gintis); semiotics (Yuri Lotman); and economic theory (from Schumpeter to McCloskey).
Successive chapters argue that:
–Culture and knowledge need to be understood from an externalist (‘linked brains’) perspective, rather than through the lens of individual behaviour;
–Demes are created by culture, especially storytelling, which in turn constitutes both politics and economics;
–The clash of systems – including demes – is productive of newness, meaningfulness and successful reproduction of culture;
–Contemporary urban culture and citizenship can best be explained by investigating how culture is used, and how newness and innovation emerge from unstable and contested boundaries between different meaning systems;
–The evolution of culture is a process of technologically enabled ‘demic concentration’ of knowledge, across overlapping meaning-systems or semiospheres; a process where the number of demes accessible to any individual has increased at an accelerating rate, resulting in new problems of scale and coordination for cultural science to address.
The book argues for interdisciplinary ‘consilience’, linking evolutionary and complexity theory in the natural sciences, economics and anthropology in the social sciences, and cultural, communication and media studies in the humanities and creative arts. It describes what is needed for a new 'modern synthesis' for the cultural sciences. It combines analytical and historical methods, to provide a framework for a general reconceptualisation of the theory of culture – one that is focused not on its political or customary aspects but rather its evolutionary significance as a generator of newness and innovation.

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