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Using Coculture to Detect Chemically Mediated Interspecies Interactions
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Is cultural group selection enough?

Dwight Read1

  • 1Department of Anthropology and Department of Statistics, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095. dread@anthro.ucla.edu https://ucla.academia.edu/DwightRead

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Cultural group selection (CGS) may not fully explain cultural evolution because it overlooks how cultural ideas form at an organizational level, not just individual. This is exemplified by Netsilik Inuit sealing practices.

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Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary anthropology
  • Cultural evolution studies
  • Social organization

Background:

  • Cultural group selection (CGS) is a proposed framework for understanding cultural evolution.
  • Existing models may not adequately address the organizational basis of cultural idea systems.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critique the cultural group selection (CGS) model.
  • To highlight the importance of organizational levels in cultural idea systems.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis of cultural evolution theories.
  • Case study examination of Netsilik Inuit sealing practices.

Main Results:

  • The cultural group selection (CGS) model may be insufficient.
  • Cultural idea systems are constituted at an organizational level.
  • Netsilik Inuit sealing partners illustrate limitations in current CGS accounts.

Conclusions:

  • A revised understanding of cultural evolution is needed.
  • Organizational structure is crucial for analyzing cultural idea systems.
  • Further research should integrate organizational perspectives into CGS frameworks.