Imitation and culture: what gives?

What is the relationship between imitation and culture? This article charts how definitions of imitation have changed in the last century, distinguishes three senses of “culture” used by contemporary evolutionists (Culture1–Culture3), and summarises current disagreement about the relationship betwee...

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Bibliografische gegevens
Hoofdauteur: Heyes, C
Formaat: Journal article
Taal:English
Gepubliceerd in: Wiley 2021
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author Heyes, C
author_facet Heyes, C
author_sort Heyes, C
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description What is the relationship between imitation and culture? This article charts how definitions of imitation have changed in the last century, distinguishes three senses of “culture” used by contemporary evolutionists (Culture1–Culture3), and summarises current disagreement about the relationship between imitation and culture. The disagreement arises from ambiguities in the distinction between imitation and emulation, and confusion between two explanatory projects—the anthropocentric project and the cultural selection project. I argue that imitation gives cultural evolution an inheritance mechanism for communicative and gestural skills (but not technological skills), and cultural selection yields the cognitive mechanisms that make imitation possible.
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spelling oxford-uuid:427446cc-7c57-4065-82e7-5ce410ea42b92023-02-27T09:24:48ZImitation and culture: what gives?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:427446cc-7c57-4065-82e7-5ce410ea42b9EnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2021Heyes, CWhat is the relationship between imitation and culture? This article charts how definitions of imitation have changed in the last century, distinguishes three senses of “culture” used by contemporary evolutionists (Culture1–Culture3), and summarises current disagreement about the relationship between imitation and culture. The disagreement arises from ambiguities in the distinction between imitation and emulation, and confusion between two explanatory projects—the anthropocentric project and the cultural selection project. I argue that imitation gives cultural evolution an inheritance mechanism for communicative and gestural skills (but not technological skills), and cultural selection yields the cognitive mechanisms that make imitation possible.
spellingShingle Heyes, C
Imitation and culture: what gives?
title Imitation and culture: what gives?
title_full Imitation and culture: what gives?
title_fullStr Imitation and culture: what gives?
title_full_unstemmed Imitation and culture: what gives?
title_short Imitation and culture: what gives?
title_sort imitation and culture what gives
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