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A Brief History of Cultural Evolution: Stages, Agents, and Tinkering

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Author Info
Jonathan Haas
Abstract

The study of the evolution of cultural systems has undergone a series of permutations in the course of the past century. Studies of cultural evolution began in earnest with the work of two of the most important anthopological figures in the 19th century: Lewis Henry Morgan (1877) and Edward B. Tylor (1871, 1881). Both Morgan and Tylor recognized that there were broad patterns of similarity that could be recognized in many different cultures around the world, and developed parallel typologies for categorizing these crosscultural patterns. The typological system used by Morgan and Tylor broke cultures down into three basic evolutionary stages: savagery, barbarism and civilization. Both believed that all societies at the "civilization" stage had gone through the other two stages and those at the "savagery" or "barbarian" stages were, presumably, on their way to "civilization." These three stages were characterized by specific supposedly shared attributes. Tylor looked at different aspects of culture, such as language, mythology, "the arts of life," or "the arts of pleasure." In his discussion of each of these, he considered the traits and conditions that prevailed under the different stages and how later characteristics evolved out of earlier ones.

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by Santa Fe Institute in its series Working Papers with number 96-05-025.

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Date of creation: May 1996
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Handle: RePEc:wop:safiwp:96-05-025

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Related research
Keywords: Cultural evolution; anthropology; crosscultural patterns; complex cultural systems;

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This page was last updated on 2009-12-16.


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