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Radek Kundt compares the notion of evolution in cultural
evolutionary theories with neo-Darwinian evolutionary theory to
determine the value of the biological concept for studying culture.
Contemporary Evolutionary Theories of Culture and the Study of
Religion surveys the historical background of cultural evolution as
used in the study of religion, pinpointing major objections to
classical nineteenth-century theories. Radek Kundt argues that
contemporary theories of cultural evolution do not repeat the same
mistakes but that when they are evaluated in terms of fitting the
core requirements of neo-Darwinian natural selection, it is clear
that they are not legitimate extensions of neo-Darwinian theory.
Rather, they are poor metaphors and misleading analogies which add
little to conventional cause-and-effect historiographical work.
This book also introduces an alternative evolutionary approach to
the study of culture which does not claim that the principles of
neo-Darwinian evolution should be applicable outside the biological
domain. Radek Kundt shows that this alternative evolutionary
approach nevertheless provides a deeply enriching line of enquiry
that incorporates both biological evolutionary history as shaping
cultural change and culture as a force acting on the gene.
Radek Kundt compares the notion of evolution in cultural
evolutionary theories with neo-Darwinian evolutionary theory to
determine the value of the biological concept for studying culture.
Contemporary Evolutionary Theories of Culture and the Study of
Religion surveys the historical background of cultural evolution as
used in the study of religion, pinpointing major objections to
classical nineteenth-century theories. Radek Kundt argues that
contemporary theories of cultural evolution do not repeat the same
mistakes but that when they are evaluated in terms of fitting the
core requirements of neo-Darwinian natural selection, it is clear
that they are not legitimate extensions of neo-Darwinian theory.
Rather, they are poor metaphors and misleading analogies which add
little to conventional cause-and-effect historiographical work.
This book also introduces an alternative evolutionary approach to
the study of culture which does not claim that the principles of
neo-Darwinian evolution should be applicable outside the biological
domain. Radek Kundt shows that this alternative evolutionary
approach nevertheless provides a deeply enriching line of enquiry
that incorporates both biological evolutionary history as shaping
cultural change and culture as a force acting on the gene.
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