Does Biology Constrain Culture?
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Anthropologist
- Vol. 90 (4) , 819-831
- https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1988.90.4.02a00030
Abstract
Most social scientists would agree that the capacity for human culture was probably fashioned by natural selection, but they disagree about the implications of this supposition. Some believe that natural selection imposes important constraints on the ways in which culture can vary, while others believe that any such constraints must be negligible. This article employs a “thought experiment” to demonstrate that neither of these positions can be justified by appeal to general properties of culture or of evolution. Natural selection can produce mechanisms of cultural transmission that are neither adaptive nor consistent with the predictions of acultural evolutionary models (those ignoring cultural evolution). On the other hand, natural selection can also produce mechanisms of cultural transmission that are highly consistent with acultural models. Thus, neither side of the sociobiology debate is justified in dismissing the arguments of the other. Natural selection may impose significant constraints on some human behaviors, but negligible constraints on others. Models of simultaneous genetic/cultural evolution will be useful in identifying domains in which acultural evolutionary models are, and are not, likely to be useful.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Folk psychologyversuspop sociobiologyBehavioral and Brain Sciences, 1987
- Human sociobiologyAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1987
- The Evolution of the Capacity for Culture: Sociobiology, Structuralism, and Cultural Selectionism [and Comments and Replies]Current Anthropology, 1986
- Cultural versus genetic adaptation.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1983
- why hunters gather: optimal foraging and the Aché of eastern ParaguayAmerican Ethnologist, 1982
- The adaptive significance of cultural behavior: Comments and replyHuman Ecology, 1977
- The adaptive significance of cultural behaviorHuman Ecology, 1976
- Dialogue. The Critique: Sociobiology: Another Biological DeterminismBioScience, 1976
- THE ROLE OF PLASTICITY IN BIOLOGICAL AND CULTURAL EVOLUTION*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1974
- A Primer of Population Biology.Published by JSTOR ,1972