Cultural evolution

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    Cultural Evolution vs. Technological Innovation Historically, in the relationship between human culture and technology, cultural evolution has lagged behind the pace of technological innovation. Technology is the human solution to fulfilling human needs. As these needs change, new technologies will supplement the old ones; inevitably changing the culture which created it, resulting in a co-evolution of technology and culture; and impacting the future of their culture. The disparate rate of

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    In Dr. Swanson’s lecture, his segment on “cultural goggles” and the evolution of myth stood out to me. Cultural goggles were defined as a way of seeing the world, usually influenced by the culture someone grows up in. Everything that person sees and thinks is a result of the “goggles” they wear or the environment in which they were taught. Any thought or action that goes against the group is usually pushed out as a means of survival. I believe that cultural goggles do have a large influence on how

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    may affect many things. According to Bowles and Kaplan, “Einstein’s theories disseminated quickly through revolutionary scientific person relativity, with compelling thought experiments and ultimately iconic equations such as E=MC2 that burst into cultural consciousness and reshaped Newtonian physics” (Bowles and Kaplan, 2012, paragraph 1). Because

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    The question of evolution, being unilinear is a much debated question. Many modern day anthropologist still study and debate, if evolution of mankind has been unilinear or of another route. An online article mentioned that Edward B. Tylor and Henry L. Morgan were the two founders on progressive cultural evolution, meaning cultures were thought to progress from simple to complex states ("Genealogy of Religion"). From this idea stemmed the idea of unilineal evolution, the thought that most societies

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    adaption and cultural adaption. While both of these help us grow, they do so in very different ways. Biological adaption is the ways in which for example we adapt to harsher weather conditions. For example, shivering when we get cold or sweating when we are hot are examples of biological adaption (Kottak). Cultural adaption is when people create culture to further society. Creating tools and technology in order to further propel society as

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    as a good connoisseur of the work of his predecessors in the field of anthropology through this essay, he opposes their work about unilinear social evolutionism theory. Boas accepts the Darwinian theory of evolution, but only in biological terms and doubts whether it is valid even in cultural terms.

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    the idea of biological evolution and cultural evolution that results to social and global structure, system, and perspective. In his introduction, Wright tells the readers about the concept of biological evolution where he argues that the human destiny begins with a chaotic formation of the society that aims to build a concrete structure in order to establish proper social, political, and moral culmination of sorts. Wright moves further into the idea of biological evolution in his discussion of the

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    Scopes Trial was an eight day court case brought up around the issue of teaching evolution within schools, and the morality of it, which ultimately led to the defendant, John Scopes, to be pronounced guilty of teaching evolution within schools. Although it would seem that the Scopes Trial was an issue of legality, it was chiefly a religious conflict between the old generation’s way of thinking, and the new generation’s cultural rebellion. Because of the major focus on William Jennings Bryan’s knowledge

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    Charles Darwin believes in the theory of evolution, meaning animals need to survive in the environment they are given. According to another famous scientist named Richard Dawkins, he believed in memes which is a copy of biological genes that are passed on. Charles Darwin and Richard Dawkins have very different and similar connections due to the change of environment and culture. Charles Darwin came up with the theory of evolution because he noticed that animals need to survive due to natural selection

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    To study the evolution of human behavior, we must first understand the evolutionary foundation of modern human behavior. Using the knowledge we have about human behavior while observing for patterns that are consistent with evolutionary models. Taking advantage of natural experiments that produce different combinations of variables that can allows us to obtain new approach on human behavior. This chapter will focus on various aspects of human behavior from an evolutionary viewpoint. These involve

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