• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Zooming out the microscope on cumulative cultural evolution: ‘Trajectory B’ from animal to human culture
  • Beteiligte: Andersson, Claes; Tennie, Claudio
  • Erschienen: Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023
  • Erschienen in: Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.1057/s41599-023-01878-6
  • ISSN: 2662-9992
  • Schlagwörter: General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ; General Psychology ; General Social Sciences ; General Arts and Humanities ; General Business, Management and Accounting
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  • Beschreibung: <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>It is widely believed that human culture originated in the appearance of Oldowan stone-tool production (circa 2.9 Mya) and a primitive but effective ability to copy detailed know-how. Cumulative cultural evolution is then believed to have led to modern humans and human culture via self-reinforcing gene-culture co-evolution. This outline evolutionary trajectory has come to be seen as all but self-evident, but dilemmas have appeared as it has been explored in increasing detail. Can we attribute even a minimally effective know-how copying capability to Oldowan hominins? Do Oldowan tools really demand know-how copying? Is there any other evidence that know-how copying was present? We here argue that this account, which we refer to as “Trajectory A”, may be a red herring, and formulate an alternative “Trajectory B” that resolves these dilemmas. Trajectory B invokes an overlooked group-level channel of cultural inheritance (the Social Protocell) whereby <jats:italic>networks</jats:italic> of cultural traits can be faithfully inherited and potentially undergo cumulative evolution, also when the underpinning cultural traits are apelike in not being transmitted via know-how copying (Latent Solutions). Since most preconditions of Trajectory B are present in modern-day <jats:italic>Pan</jats:italic>, Trajectory B may even have its roots considerably <jats:italic>before</jats:italic> Oldowan toolmaking. The cumulative build-up of networks of non-cumulative cultural traits is then argued to have produced conditions that both called for and afforded a gradual appearance of the ability to copy know-how, but considerably later than the Oldowan.</jats:p>
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