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Sociocultural evolution

Sociocultural evolution, sociocultural evolutionism or social evolution are theories of sociobiology and cultural evolution that describe how societies and culture change over time. Whereas sociocultural development traces processes that tend to increase the complexity of a society or culture, sociocultural evolution also considers process that can lead to decreases in complexity (degeneration) or that can produce variation or proliferation without any seemingly significant changes in complexity (cladogenesis).[1] Sociocultural evolution is "the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time, eventually producing a form or structure that is qualitatively different from the ancestral form".[2]

Most of the 19th-century and some 20th-century approaches to socioculture aimed to provide models for the evolution of humankind as a whole, arguing that different societies have reached different stages of social development. The most comprehensive attempt to develop a general theory of social evolution centering on the development of sociocultural systems, the work of Talcott Parsons (1902–1979), operated on a scale which included a theory of world history. Another attempt, on a less systematic scale, originated from the 1970s with the world-systems approach of Immanuel Wallerstein (1930-2019) and his followers.

More recent approaches focus on changes specific to individual societies and reject the idea that cultures differ primarily according to how far each one has moved along some presumed linear scale of social progress. Most[quantify] modern archaeologists and cultural anthropologists work within the frameworks of neoevolutionism, sociobiology, and modernization theory.

Introduction edit

Anthropologists and sociologists often assume that human beings have natural social tendencies but that particular human social behaviours have non-genetic causes and dynamics (i.e. people learn them in a social environment and through social interaction).[citation needed]

Societies exist in complex social environments (for example: with differing natural resources and constraints) and adapt themselves to these environments. It is thus inevitable that all societies change.

Specific theories of social or cultural evolution often attempt to explain differences between coeval societies by positing that different societies have reached different stages of development. Although such theories typically provide models for understanding the relationship between technologies, social structure or the values of a society, they vary as to the extent to which they describe specific mechanisms of variation and change.

While the history of evolutionary thinking with regard to humans can be traced back at least to Aristotle and other Greek philosophers, early sociocultural-evolution theories  – the ideas of Auguste Comte (1798–1857), Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) and Lewis Henry Morgan (1818–1881)  – developed simultaneously with, but independently of, the work of Charles Darwin (1809-1882) and were popular from late in the 19th century to the end of World War I. The 19th-century unilineal evolution theories claimed that societies start out in a primitive state and gradually become more civilized over time; they equated the culture and technology of Western civilization with progress. Some forms of early sociocultural-evolution theories (mainly unilineal ones) have led to much-criticised theories like social Darwinism and scientific racism, sometimes used in the past by European imperial powers to justify existing policies of colonialism and slavery and to justify new policies such as eugenics.[3]

Most 19th-century and some 20th-century approaches aimed to provide models for the evolution of humankind as a single entity. However, most 20th-century approaches, such as multilineal evolution, focused on changes specific to individual societies. Moreover, they rejected directional change (i.e. orthogenetic, teleological or progressive change). Most archaeologists work within the framework of multilineal evolution.[citation needed] Other contemporary approaches to social change include neoevolutionism, sociobiology, dual inheritance theory, modernisation theory and postindustrial theory.[citation needed]

In his seminal 1976 book The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkins wrote that "there are some examples of cultural evolution in birds and monkeys, but ... it is our own species that really shows what cultural evolution can do".[4]

Stadial theory edit

Enlightenment and later thinkers often speculated that societies progressed through stages: in other words, they saw history as stadial. While expecting humankind to show increasing development, theorists looked for what determined the course of human history. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831), for example, saw social development as an inevitable process.[citation needed] It was assumed that societies start out primitive, perhaps in a state of nature, and could progress toward something resembling industrial Europe.

While earlier authors such as Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592) had discussed how societies change through time, the Scottish Enlightenment of the 18th century proved key in the development of the idea of sociocultural evolution.[citation needed] In relation to Scotland's union with England in 1707, several Scottish thinkers pondered the relationship between progress and the affluence brought about by increased trade with England. They understood the changes Scotland was undergoing as involving transition from an agricultural to a mercantile society. In "conjectural histories", authors such as Adam Ferguson (1723–1816), John Millar (1735–1801) and Adam Smith (1723–1790) argued that societies all pass through a series of four stages: hunting and gathering, pastoralism and nomadism, agriculture, and finally a stage of commerce.

 
Auguste Comte (1798–1857)

Philosophical concepts of progress, such as that of Hegel, developed as well during this period. In France, authors such as Claude Adrien Helvétius (1715–1771) and other philosophes were influenced by the Scottish tradition. Later thinkers such as Comte de Saint-Simon (1760–1825) developed these ideas.[citation needed] Auguste Comte (1798–1857) in particular presented a coherent view of social progress and a new discipline to study it: sociology.

These developments took place in a context of wider processes. The first process was colonialism. Although imperial powers settled most differences of opinion with their colonial subjects through force, increased awareness of non-Western peoples raised new questions for European scholars about the nature of society and of culture. Similarly, effective colonial administration required some degree of understanding of other cultures. Emerging theories of sociocultural evolution allowed Europeans to organise their new knowledge in a way that reflected and justified their increasing political and economic domination of others: such systems saw colonised people as less evolved, and colonising people as more evolved. Modern civilization (understood as the Western civilization), appeared the result of steady progress from a state of barbarism, and such a notion was common to many thinkers of the Enlightenment, including Voltaire (1694–1778).

The second process was the Industrial Revolution and the rise of capitalism, which together allowed and promoted continual revolutions in the means of production. Emerging theories of sociocultural evolution reflected a belief that the changes in Europe brought by the Industrial Revolution and capitalism were improvements. Industrialisation, combined with the intense political change brought about by the French Revolution of 1789 and the U.S. Constitution, which paved the way for the dominance of democracy, forced European thinkers to reconsider some of their assumptions about how society was organised.

Eventually, in the 19th century three major classical theories of social and historical change emerged:

These theories had a common factor: they all agreed that the history of humanity is pursuing a certain fixed path, most likely that of social progress. Thus, each past event is not only chronologically, but causally tied to present and future events. The theories postulated that by recreating the sequence of those events, sociology could discover the "laws" of history.[5]

Sociocultural evolutionism and the idea of progress edit

While sociocultural evolutionists agree that an evolution-like process leads to social progress, classical social evolutionists have developed many different theories, known as theories of unilineal evolution. Sociocultural evolutionism became the prevailing theory of early sociocultural anthropology and social commentary, and is associated with scholars like Auguste Comte, Edward Burnett Tylor, Lewis Henry Morgan, Benjamin Kidd, L. T. Hobhouse and Herbert Spencer. Such stage models and ideas of linear models of progress had a great influence not only on future evolutionary approaches in the social sciences and humanities,[6] but also shaped public, scholarly, and scientific discourse surrounding the rising individualism and population thinking.[7] Sociocultural evolutionism attempted to formalise social thinking along scientific lines, with the added influence from the biological theory of evolution. If organisms could develop over time according to discernible, deterministic laws, then it seemed reasonable that societies could as well. Human society was compared to a biological organism, and social science equivalents of concepts like variation, natural selection, and inheritance were introduced as factors resulting in the progress of societies. The idea of progress led to that of a fixed "stages" through which human societies progress, usually numbering three – savagery, barbarism, and civilization – but sometimes many more. At that time, anthropology was rising as a new scientific discipline, separating from the traditional views of "primitive" cultures that was usually based on religious views.[8]

Already in the 18th century, some authors began to theorize on the evolution of humans. Montesquieu (1689–1755) wrote about the relationship laws have with climate in particular and the environment in general, specifically how different climatic conditions cause certain characteristics to be common among different people.[9] He likens the development of laws, the presence or absence of civil liberty, differences in morality, and the whole development of different cultures to the climate of the respective people,[10] concluding that the environment determines whether and how a people farms the land, which determines the way their society is built and their culture is constituted, or, in Montesquieu's words, the "general spirit of a nation".[11] Also Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778) presents a conjectural stage-model of human sociocultural evolution:[12] first, humans lived solitarily and only grouped when mating or raising children. Later, men and women lived together and shared childcare, thus building families, followed by tribes as the result of inter-family interactions, which lived in "the happiest and the most lasting epoch" of human history, before the corruption of civil society degenerated the species again in a developmental stage-process.[13] In the late 18th century, the Marquis de Condorcet (1743–1794) listed ten stages, or "epochs", each advancing the rights of man and perfecting the human race.

Erasmus Darwin (1731-1802), Charles Darwin's grandfather, was an enormously influential natural philosopher, physiologist and poet whose remarkably insightful ideas included a statement of transformism and the interconnectedness of all forms of life. His works, which are enormously wide-ranging, also advance a theory of cultural transformation: his famous The Temple of Nature is subtitled 'the Origin of Society'.[14] This work, rather than proposing in detail a strict transformation of humanity between different stages, instead dwells on Erasmus Darwin's evolutionary mechanism: Erasmus Darwin does not explain each stage one-by-one, trusting his theory of universal organic development, as articulated in the Zoonomia, to illustrate cultural development as well.[15] Erasmus Darwin therefore flits with abandon through his chronology: Priestman notes that it jumps from the emergence of life onto land, the development of opposable thumbs, and the origin of sexual reproduction directly to modern historical events.[14]

Another more complex theorist was Richard Payne Knight (1751-1824), an influential amateur archeologist and universal theologian. Knight's The Progress of Civil Society: A Didactic Poem in Six Books (1796) fits precisely into the tradition of triumphant historical stages, beginning with Lucretius and reaching Adam Smith––but just for the first four books.[16] In his final books, Knight then grapples with the French revolution and wealthy decadence. Confronted with these twin issues, Knight's theory ascribes progress to conflict: 'partial discord lends its aid, to tie the complex knots of general harmony'.[16] Competition in Knight's mechanism spurs development from any one stage to the next: the dialectic of class, land and gender creates growth.[17] Thus, Knight conceptualised a theory of history founded in inevitable racial conflict, with Greece representing 'freedom' and Egypt 'cold inactive stupor'.[18] Buffon, Linnaeus, Camper and Monboddo variously forward diverse arguments about racial hierarchy, grounded in early theories of species change––though many thought that environmental changes could create dramatic changes in form without permanently altering the species or causing species transformation. However, their arguments still bear on race: Rousseau, Buffon and Monboddo cite orangutans as evidence of an earlier prelinguistic human type, and Monboddo even insisted Orangutans and certain African and South Asian races were identical.

Other than Erasmus Darwin, the other pre-eminent scientific text with a theory of cultural transformation was advanced by Robert Chambers (1802-1871). Chambers was a Scottish evolutionary thinker and philosopher who, though he was then and now perceived as scientifically inadequate and criticized by prominent contemporaries, is important because he was so widely read. There are records of everyone from Queen Victoria to individual dockworkers enjoying his Robert Chambers' Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation (1844), including future generations of scientists. That The Vestiges did not establish itself as the scientific cutting edge is precisely the point, since the Vestiges's influence means it was both the concept of evolution the Victorian public was most likely to experience, and the scientific presupposition laid earliest in the minds of bright young scholars.[19]

Chambers propounded a 'principle of development' whereby everything evolved by the same mechanism and towards higher order structure or meaning. In his theory, life advanced through different 'classes', and within each class animals began at the lowest form and then advanced to more complex forms in the same class.[20] In short, the progress of animals was like the development of a foetus. More than just an indistinct analogy, this parallel between embryology and species development had the status of a genuine causal mechanism in Chambers' theory: more advanced species developed longer as embryos into all their complexity.[21] Motivated by this comparison, Chambers ascribed development to the 'laws of creation', though he also supposed that the whole development of species was in some way preordained: it was just that the preordination of the creator acted through establishing those laws.[21] This, as discussed above, is similar to Spencer's later concept of development. Thus Chambers believed in a sophisticated theory of progress driven by a developmental analogy.

 
Herbert Spencer

In the mid-19th century, a "revolution in ideas about the antiquity of the human species" took place "which paralleled, but was to some extent independent of, the Darwinian revolution in biology."[22] Especially in geology, archaeology, and anthropology, scholars began to compare "primitive" cultures to past societies and "saw their level of technology as parallel with that of Stone Age cultures, and thus used these peoples as models for the early stages of human evolution." A developmental model of the evolution of the mind, culture, and society was the result, paralleling the evolution of the human species:[23] "Modern savages [sic] became, in effect, living fossils left behind by the march of progress, relics of the Paleolithic still lingering on into the present."[24] Classical social evolutionism is most closely associated with the 19th-century writings of Auguste Comte and of Herbert Spencer (coiner of the phrase "survival of the fittest").[25] In many ways, Spencer's theory of "cosmic evolution" has much more in common with the works of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and Auguste Comte than with contemporary works of Charles Darwin. Spencer also developed and published his theories several years earlier than Darwin. In regard to social institutions, however, there is a good case that Spencer's writings might be classified as social evolutionism. Although he wrote that societies over time progressed – and that progress was accomplished through competition – he stressed that the individual rather than the collectivity is the unit of analysis that evolves; that, in other words, evolution takes place through natural selection and that it affects social as well as biological phenomenon. Nonetheless, the publication of Darwin's works[which?] proved a boon to the proponents of sociocultural evolution, who saw the ideas of biological evolution as an attractive explanation for many questions about the development of society.[26]

Both Spencer and Comte view society as a kind of organism subject to the process of growth—from simplicity to complexity, from chaos to order, from generalisation to specialisation, from flexibility to organisation. They agree that the process of societal growth can be divided into certain stages, have[clarification needed] their beginning and eventual end, and that this growth is in fact social progress: each newer, more-evolved society is "better". Thus progressivism became one of the basic ideas underlying the theory of sociocultural evolutionism.[25]

However, Spencer's theories were more complex than just a romp up the great chain of being. Spencer based his arguments on an analogy between the evolution of societies and the ontogeny of an animal. Accordingly, he searched for "general principles of development and structure" or "fundamental principles of organization", rather than being content simply ascribing progress between social stages to the direct intervention of some beneficent deity.[27] Moreover, he accepted that these conditions are "far less specific, far more modifiable, far more dependent on conditions that are variable": in short, that they are a messy biological process.[28]

Though Spencer's theories transcended the label of 'stagism' and appreciate biological complexity, they still accepted a strongly fixed direction and morality to natural development.[29] For Spencer, interference with the natural process of evolution was dangerous and had to be avoided at all costs. Such views were naturally coupled to the pressing political and economic questions of the time. Spencer clearly thought society's evolution brought about a racial hierarchy with Caucasians at the top and Africans at the bottom.[29] This notion is deeply linked to the colonial projects European powers were pursuing at the time, and the idea of European superiority used paternalistically to justify those projects. The influential German zoologist Ernst Haeckel even wrote that 'natural men are closer to the higher vertebrates than highly civilized Europeans', including not just a racial hierarchy but a civilizational one.[30] Likewise, Spencer's evolutionary argument advanced a theory of statehood: "until spontaneously fulfilled a public want should not be fulfilled at all" sums up Spencer's notion about limited government and the free operation of market forces.[31]

This is not to suggest that stagism was useless or entirely motivated by colonialism and racism. Stagist theories were first proposed in contexts where competing epistemologies were largely static views of the world. Hence "progress" had in some sense to be invented, conceptually: the idea that human society would move through stages was a triumphant invention. Moreover, stages were not always static entities. In Buffon's theories, for example, it was possible to regress between stages, and physiological changes were species' reversibly adapting to their environment rather than irreversibly transforming.[32]

In addition to progressivism, economic analyses influenced classical social evolutionism. Adam Smith (1723–1790), who held a deeply evolutionary view of human society,[33] identified the growth of freedom as the driving force in a process of stadial societal development.[34] According to him, all societies pass successively through four stages: the earliest humans lived as hunter-gatherers, followed by pastoralists and nomads, after which society evolved to agriculturalists and ultimately reached the stage of commerce.[35] With the strong emphasis on specialisation and the increased profits stemming from a division of labour, Smith's thinking also exerted some direct influence on Darwin himself.[36] Both in Darwin's theory of the evolution of species and in Smith's accounts of political economy, competition between selfishly functioning units plays an important and even dominating rôle.[37] Similarly occupied with economic concerns as Smith, Thomas R. Malthus (1766–1834) warned that given the strength of the sex drive inherent in all animals, Malthus argued, populations tend to grow geometrically, and population growth is only checked by the limitations of economic growth, which, if there would be growth at all, would quickly be outstripped by population growth, causing hunger, poverty, and misery.[38] Far from being the consequences of economic structures or social orders, this "struggle for existence" is an inevitable natural law, so Malthus.[39]

Auguste Comte, known as "the father of sociology", formulated the law of three stages: human development progresses from the theological stage, in which nature was mythically conceived and man sought the explanation of natural phenomena from supernatural beings; through a metaphysical stage in which nature was conceived of as a result of obscure forces and man sought the explanation of natural phenomena from them; until the final positive stage in which all abstract and obscure forces are discarded, and natural phenomena are explained by their constant relationship.[40] This progress is forced through the development of human mind, and through increasing application of thought, reasoning and logic to the understanding of the world.[41] Comte saw the science-valuing society as the highest, most developed type of human organization.[40]

Herbert Spencer, who argued against government intervention as he believed that society should evolve toward more individual freedom,[42] followed Lamarck in his evolutionary thinking,[43] in that he believed that humans do over time adapt to their surroundings.[44] He differentiated between two phases of development as regards societies' internal regulation:[40] the "military" and "industrial" societies.[40] The earlier (and more primitive) military society has the goal of conquest and defense, is centralised, economically self-sufficient, collectivistic, puts the good of a group over the good of an individual, uses compulsion, force and repression, and rewards loyalty, obedience and discipline.[40] The industrial society, in contrast, has a goal of production and trade, is decentralised, interconnected with other societies via economic relations, works through voluntary cooperation and individual self-restraint, treats the good of individual as of the highest value, regulates the social life via voluntary relations; and values initiative, independence and innovation.[40][45] The transition process from the military to industrial society is the outcome of steady evolutionary processes within the society.[40] Spencer "imagined a kind of feedback loop between mental and social evolution: the higher the mental powers the greater the complexity of the society that the individuals could create; the more complex the society, the greater the stimulus it provided for further mental development. Everything cohered to make progress inevitable or to weed out those who did not keep up."[46]

Regardless of how scholars of Spencer interpret his relation to Darwin, Spencer became an incredibly popular figure in the 1870s, particularly in the United States. Authors such as Edward L. Youmans, William Graham Sumner, John Fiske, John W. Burgess, Lester Frank Ward, Lewis H. Morgan (1818–1881) and other thinkers of the gilded age all developed theories of social evolutionism as a result of their exposure to Spencer as well as to Darwin.

 
Lewis H. Morgan

In his 1877 classic Ancient Societies, Lewis H. Morgan, an anthropologist whose ideas have had much impact on sociology, differentiated between three eras:[47] savagery, barbarism and civilization, which are divided by technological inventions, like fire, bow, pottery in the savage era, domestication of animals, agriculture, metalworking in the barbarian era and alphabet and writing in the civilization era.[48] Thus Morgan drew a link between social progress and technological progress. Morgan viewed technological progress as a force behind social progress, and held that any social change—in social institutions, organizations or ideologies—has its beginnings in technological change.[48][49] Morgan's theories were popularized by Friedrich Engels, who based his famous work The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State on them.[48] For Engels and other Marxists this theory was important, as it supported their conviction that materialistic factors—economic and technological—are decisive in shaping the fate of humanity.[48]

Edward Burnett Tylor (1832–1917), a pioneer of anthropology, focused on the evolution of culture worldwide, noting that culture is an important part of every society and that it is also subject to a process of evolution. He believed that societies were at different stages of cultural development and that the purpose of anthropology was to reconstruct the evolution of culture, from primitive beginnings to the modern state.

 
Edward Burnett Tylor

Anthropologists Sir E.B. Tylor in England and Lewis Henry Morgan in the United States worked with data from indigenous people, who (they claimed) represented earlier stages of cultural evolution that gave insight into the process and progression of evolution of culture. Morgan would later[when?] have a significant influence on Karl Marx and on Friedrich Engels, who developed a theory of sociocultural evolution in which the internal contradictions in society generated a series of escalating stages that ended in a socialist society (see Marxism). Tylor and Morgan elaborated the theory of unilinear evolution, specifying criteria for categorising cultures according to their standing within a fixed system of growth of humanity as a whole and examining the modes and mechanisms of this growth. Theirs was often a concern with culture in general, not with individual cultures.

Their analysis of cross-cultural data was based on three assumptions:

  1. contemporary societies may be classified and ranked as more "primitive" or more "civilized"
  2. there are a determinate number of stages between "primitive" and "civilized" (e.g. band, tribe, chiefdom, and state)
  3. all societies progress through these stages in the same sequence, but at different rates

Theorists usually measured progression (that is, the difference between one stage and the next) in terms of increasing social complexity (including class differentiation and a complex division of labour), or an increase in intellectual, theological, and aesthetic sophistication. These 19th-century ethnologists used these principles primarily to explain differences in religious beliefs and kinship terminologies among various societies.

 
Lester Frank Ward

Lester Frank Ward (1841–1913), sometimes referred to[by whom?] as the "father" of American sociology, rejected many of Spencer's theories regarding the evolution of societies. Ward, who was also a botanist and a paleontologist, believed that the law of evolution functioned much differently in human societies than it did in the plant and animal kingdoms, and theorized that the "law of nature" had been superseded by the "law of the mind".[50] He stressed that humans, driven by emotions, create goals for themselves and strive to realize them (most effectively with the modern scientific method) whereas there is no such intelligence and awareness guiding the non-human world.[51] Plants and animals adapt to nature; man shapes nature. While Spencer believed that competition and "survival of the fittest" benefited human society and sociocultural evolution, Ward regarded competition as a destructive force, pointing out that all human institutions, traditions and laws were tools invented by the mind of man and that that mind designed them, like all tools, to "meet and checkmate" the unrestrained competition of natural forces.[50] Ward agreed with Spencer that authoritarian governments repress the talents of the individual, but he believed that modern democratic societies, which minimized the role of religion and maximized that of science, could effectively support the individual in his or her attempt to fully utilize their talents and achieve happiness. He believed that the evolutionary processes have four stages:

  • First comes cosmogenesis, creation and evolution of the world.
  • Then, when life arises, there is biogenesis.[51]
  • Development of humanity leads to anthropogenesis, which is influenced by the human mind.[51]
  • Finally there arrives sociogenesis, which is the science of shaping the evolutionary process itself to optimize progress, human happiness and individual self-actualization.[51]

While Ward regarded modern societies as superior to "primitive" societies (one need only look to the impact of medical science on health and lifespan[citation needed]) he rejected theories of white supremacy; he supported the Out-of-Africa theory of human evolution and believed that all races and social classes were equal in talent.[52] However, Ward did not think that evolutionary progress was inevitable and he feared the degeneration of societies and cultures, which he saw as very evident in the historical record.[53] Ward also did not favor the radical reshaping of society as proposed by the supporters of the eugenics movement or by the followers of Karl Marx; like Comte, Ward believed that sociology was the most complex of the sciences and that true sociogenesis was impossible without considerable research and experimentation.[52]

 
Émile Durkheim

Émile Durkheim, another of the "fathers" of sociology, developed a dichotomal view of social progress.[54] His key concept was social solidarity, as he defined social evolution in terms of progressing from mechanical solidarity to organic solidarity.[54] In mechanical solidarity, people are self-sufficient, there is little integration and thus there is the need for the use of force and repression to keep society together.[54] In organic solidarity, people are much more integrated and interdependent and specialisation and cooperation are extensive.[54] Progress from mechanical to organic solidarity is based firstly on population growth and increasing population density, secondly on increasing "morality density" (development of more complex social interactions) and thirdly on increasing specialisation in the workplace.[54] To Durkheim, the most important factor in social progress is the division of labour.[54] This[clarification needed] was later used in the mid-1900s by the economist Ester Boserup (1910–1999) to attempt to discount some aspects of Malthusian theory.

Ferdinand Tönnies (1855–1936) describes evolution as the development from informal society, where people have many liberties and there are few laws and obligations, to modern, formal rational society, dominated by traditions and laws, where people are restricted from acting as they wish.[55] He also notes that there is a tendency to standardisation and unification, when all smaller societies are absorbed into a single, large, modern society.[55] Thus Tönnies can be said to describe part of the process known today as globalization. Tönnies was also one of the first sociologists to claim that the evolution of society is not necessarily going in the right direction, that social progress is not perfect, and it can even be called a regression as the newer, more evolved societies are obtained only after paying a high cost, resulting in decreasing satisfaction of the individuals making up that society.[55] Tönnies' work became the foundation of neoevolutionism.[55]

Although Max Weber is not usually counted[by whom?] as a sociocultural evolutionist, his theory of tripartite classification of authority can be viewed[by whom?] as an evolutionary theory as well. Weber distinguishes three ideal types of political leadership, domination and authority:

  1. charismatic domination
  2. traditional domination (patriarchs, patrimonialism, feudalism)
  3. legal (rational) domination (modern law and state, bureaucracy)

Weber also notes that legal domination is the most advanced, and that societies evolve from having mostly traditional and charismatic authorities to mostly rational and legal ones.

Critique and impact on modern theories edit

The early 20th-century inaugurated a period of systematic critical examination, and rejection of the sweeping generalisations of the unilineal theories of sociocultural evolution. Cultural anthropologists such as Franz Boas (1858–1942), along with his students, including Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead, are regarded[by whom?] as the leaders of anthropology's rejection of classical social evolutionism.

However, the school of Boas ignore some of the complexity in evolutionary theories that emerged outside Herbert Spencer's influence. Darwin's On the Origin of Species gave a mechanistic account of the origins and development of animals, quite apart from Spencer's theories that emphasized the inevitable human development through stages. Consequently, many scholars developed more sophisticated understandings of how cultures evolve, relying on deep cultural analogies, than the theories in Herbert Spencer's tradition.[56] Walter Bagehot (1872) applied selection and inheritance to the development of human political institutions. Samuel Alexander (1892) discusses the natural selection of moral principles in society.[57] William James (1880) considered the 'natural selection' of ideas in learning and scientific development. In fact, he identified a 'remarkable parallel […] between the facts of social evolution on the one hand, and of zoological evolution as expounded by Mr Darwin on the other'.[57] Charles Sanders Pierce (1898) even proposed that the current laws of nature we have exist because they have evolved over time.[57] Darwin himself, in Chapter 5 of the Descent of Man, proposed that human moral sentiments were subject to group selection: "A tribe including many members who, from possessing in a high degree the spirit of patriotism, fidelity, obedience, courage, and sympathy, were always ready to aid one another, and to sacrifice themselves for the common good, would be victorious over most other tribes; and this would be natural selection."[58] Through the mechanism of imitation, cultures as well as individuals could be subject to natural selection.

While these theories involved evolution applied to social questions, except for Darwin's group selection the theories reviewed above did not advance a precise understanding of how Darwin's mechanism extended and applied to cultures beyond a vague appeal to competition.[59] Ritchie's Darwinism and Politics (1889) breaks this trend, holding that "language and social institutions make it possible to transmit experience quite independently of the continuity of race."[60] Hence Ritchie saw cultural evolution as a process that could operate independently of and on different scales to the evolution of species, and gave it precise underpinnings: he was 'extending its range', in his own words, to ideas, cultures and institutions.[61]

Thorstein Veblen, around the same time, came to a similar insight: that humans evolve to their social environment, but their social environment in turn also evolves.[62] Veblen's mechanism for human progress was the evolution of human intentionality: Veblen labelled men 'a creature of habit' and thought that habits were 'mentally digested' from those who influenced him.[56] In short, as Hodgson and Knudsen point out, Veblen thinks: "the changing institutions in their turn make for a further selection of individuals endowed with the fittest temperament, and a further adaptation of individual temperament and habits to the changing environment through the formation of new institutions." Thus, Veblen represented an extension of Ritchie's theories, where evolution operates at multiple levels, to a sophisticated appreciation of how each level interacts with the other.[63]

This complexity notwithstanding, Boas and Benedict used sophisticated ethnography and more rigorous empirical methods to argue that Spencer, Tylor, and Morgan's theories were speculative and systematically misrepresented ethnographic data. Theories regarding "stages" of evolution were especially criticised as illusions. Additionally, they rejected the distinction between "primitive" and "civilized" (or "modern"), pointing out that so-called primitive contemporary societies have just as much history, and were just as evolved, as so-called civilized societies. They therefore argued that any attempt to use this theory to reconstruct the histories of non-literate (i.e. leaving no historical documents) peoples is entirely speculative and unscientific.

They observed that the postulated progression, which typically ended with a stage of civilization identical to that of modern Europe, is ethnocentric. They also pointed out that the theory assumes that societies are clearly bounded and distinct, when in fact cultural traits and forms often cross social boundaries and diffuse among many different societies (and are thus an important mechanism of change). Boas in his culture-history approach focused on anthropological fieldwork in an attempt to identify factual processes instead of what he criticized as speculative stages of growth. His approach greatly influenced American anthropology in the first half of the 20th century, and marked a retreat from high-level generalization and from "systems building".

Later critics observed that the assumption of firmly bounded societies was proposed precisely at the time when European powers were colonising non-Western societies, and was thus self-serving. Many anthropologists and social theorists now consider unilineal cultural and social evolution a Western myth seldom based on solid empirical grounds. Critical theorists argue that notions of social evolution are simply justifications for power by the élites of society. Finally, the devastating World Wars that occurred between 1914 and 1945 crippled Europe's self-confidence. After millions of deaths, genocide, and the destruction of Europe's industrial infrastructure, the idea of progress seemed dubious at best.

Thus modern sociocultural evolutionism rejects most of classical social evolutionism due to various theoretical problems:

  1. The theory was deeply ethnocentric—it makes heavy value judgments about different societies, with Western civilization seen as the most valuable.
  2. It assumed all cultures follow the same path or progression and have the same goals.
  3. It equated civilization with material culture (technology, cities, etc.)

Because social evolution was posited as a scientific theory, it was often used to support unjust and often racist social practices – particularly colonialism, slavery, and the unequal economic conditions present within industrialized Europe. Social Darwinism is especially criticised, as it purportedly led to some philosophies used by the Nazis.

Max Weber, disenchantment, and critical theory edit

 
Max Weber in 1917

Weber's major works in economic sociology and the sociology of religion dealt with the rationalization, secularisation, and so called "disenchantment" which he associated with the rise of capitalism and modernity.[64] In sociology, rationalization is the process whereby an increasing number of social actions become based on considerations of teleological efficiency or calculation rather than on motivations derived from morality, emotion, custom, or tradition. Rather than referring to what is genuinely "rational" or "logical", rationalization refers to a relentless quest for goals that might actually function to the detriment of a society. Rationalization is an ambivalent aspect of modernity, manifested especially in Western society – as a behaviour of the capitalist market, of rational administration in the state and bureaucracy, of the extension of modern science, and of the expansion of modern technology.[citation needed]

Weber's thought regarding the rationalizing and secularizing tendencies of modern Western society (sometimes described as the "Weber Thesis") would blend with Marxism to facilitate critical theory, particularly in the work of thinkers such as Jürgen Habermas (born 1929). Critical theorists, as antipositivists, are critical of the idea of a hierarchy of sciences or societies, particularly with respect to the sociological positivism originally set forth by Comte. Jürgen Habermas has critiqued the concept of pure instrumental rationality as meaning that scientific-thinking becomes something akin to ideology itself. For theorists such as Zygmunt Bauman (1925–2017), rationalization as a manifestation of modernity may be most closely and regrettably associated with the events of the Holocaust.

Modern theories edit

 
Composite image of the Earth at night in 2012, created by NASA and NOAA. The brightest areas of the Earth are the most urbanized, but not necessarily the most populated. Even more than 100 years after the invention of the electric light, most regions remain thinly populated or unlit.

When the critique of classical social evolutionism became widely accepted, modern anthropological and sociological approaches changed respectively. Modern theories are careful to avoid unsourced, ethnocentric speculation, comparisons, or value judgments; more or less regarding individual societies as existing within their own historical contexts. These conditions provided the context for new theories such as cultural relativism and multilineal evolution.

In the 1920s and 1930s, Gordon Childe revolutionized the study of cultural evolutionism. He conducted a comprehensive pre-history account that provided scholars with evidence for African and Asian cultural transmission into Europe. He combated scientific racism by finding the tools and artifacts of the indigenous people from Africa and Asia and showed how they influenced the technology of European culture. Evidence from his excavations countered the idea of Aryan supremacy and superiority. Adopting "Kosinna's basic concept of the archaeological culture and his identification of such cultures as the remains of prehistoric peoples" and combining it with the detailed chronologies of European prehistory developed by Gustaf Oscar Montelius, Childe argued that each society needed to be delineated individually on the basis of constituent artefacts which were indicative of their practical and social function.[65] Childe explained cultural evolution by his theory of divergence with modifications of convergence. He postulated that different cultures form separate methods that meet different needs, but when two cultures were in contact they developed similar adaptations, solving similar problems. Rejecting Spencer's theory of parallel cultural evolution, Childe found that interactions between cultures contributed to the convergence of similar aspects most often attributed to one culture. Childe placed emphasis on human culture as a social construct rather than products of environmental or technological contexts. Childe coined the terms "Neolithic Revolution", and "Urban Revolution" which are still used today in the branch of pre-historic anthropology.

In 1941 anthropologist Robert Redfield wrote about a shift from 'folk society' to 'urban society'. By the 1940s cultural anthropologists such as Leslie White and Julian Steward sought to revive an evolutionary model on a more scientific basis, and succeeded in establishing an approach known as neoevolutionism. White rejected the opposition between "primitive" and "modern" societies but did argue that societies could be distinguished based on the amount of energy they harnessed, and that increased energy allowed for greater social differentiation (White's law). Steward on the other hand rejected the 19th-century notion of progress, and instead called attention to the Darwinian notion of "adaptation", arguing that all societies had to adapt to their environment in some way.

The anthropologists Marshall Sahlins and Elman Service prepared an edited volume, Evolution and Culture, in which they attempted to synthesise White's and Steward's approaches.[66] Other anthropologists, building on or responding to work by White and Steward, developed theories of cultural ecology and ecological anthropology. The most prominent examples are Peter Vayda and Roy Rappaport. By the late 1950s, students of Steward such as Eric Wolf and Sidney Mintz turned away from cultural ecology to Marxism, World Systems Theory, Dependency theory and Marvin Harris's Cultural materialism.

Today most anthropologists reject 19th-century notions of progress and the three assumptions of unilineal evolution. Following Steward, they take seriously the relationship between a culture and its environment to explain different aspects of a culture. But most modern cultural anthropologists have adopted a general systems approach, examining cultures as emergent systems and arguing that one must consider the whole social environment, which includes political and economic relations among cultures. As a result of simplistic notions of "progressive evolution", more modern, complex cultural evolution theories (such as Dual Inheritance Theory, discussed below) receive little attention in the social sciences, having given way in some cases to a series of more humanist approaches. Some reject the entirety of evolutionary thinking and look instead at historical contingencies, contacts with other cultures, and the operation of cultural symbol systems. In the area of development studies, authors such as Amartya Sen have developed an understanding of 'development' and 'human flourishing' that also question more simplistic notions of progress, while retaining much of their original inspiration.

Neoevolutionism edit

Neoevolutionism was the first in a series of modern multilineal evolution theories. It emerged in the 1930s and extensively developed in the period following the Second World War and was incorporated into both anthropology and sociology in the 1960s. It bases its theories on empirical evidence from areas of archaeology, palaeontology, and historiography and tries to eliminate any references to systems of values, be it moral or cultural, instead trying to remain objective and simply descriptive.[67]

While 19th-century evolutionism explained how culture develops by giving general principles of its evolutionary process, it was dismissed by the Historical Particularists as unscientific in the early 20th century. It was the neo-evolutionary thinkers who brought back evolutionary thought and developed it to be acceptable to contemporary anthropology.

Neo-evolutionism discards many ideas of classical social evolutionism, namely that of social progress, so dominant in previous sociology evolution-related theories.[67] Then neo-evolutionism discards the determinism argument and introduces probability, arguing that accidents and free will greatly affect the process of social evolution.[67] It also supports counterfactual history—asking "what if" and considering different possible paths that social evolution may take or might have taken, and thus allows for the fact that various cultures may develop in different ways, some skipping entire stages others have passed through.[67] Neo-evolutionism stresses the importance of empirical evidence. While 19th-century evolutionism used value judgments and assumptions for interpreting data, neo-evolutionism relies on measurable information for analysing the process of sociocultural evolution.

Leslie White, author of The Evolution of Culture: The Development of Civilization to the Fall of Rome (1959), attempted to create a theory explaining the entire history of humanity.[67] The most important factor in his theory is technology.[67] Social systems are determined by technological systems, wrote White in his book,[68] echoing the earlier theory of Lewis Henry Morgan. He proposes a society's energy consumption as a measure of its advancement.[67] He differentiates between five stages of human development.[67] In the first, people use the energy of their own muscles.[67] In the second, they use the energy of domesticated animals.[67] In the third, they use the energy of plants (so White refers to agricultural revolution here).[67] In the fourth, they learn to use the energy of natural resources: coal, oil, gas.[67] In the fifth, they harness nuclear energy.[67] White introduced a formula, P=E·T, where E is a measure of energy consumed, and T is the measure of efficiency of technical factors utilising the energy.[67] This theory is similar to Russian astronomer Nikolai Kardashev's later theory of the Kardashev scale.

Julian Steward, author of Theory of Culture Change: The Methodology of Multilinear Evolution (1955, reprinted 1979), created the theory of "multilinear" evolution which examined the way in which societies adapted to their environment. This approach was more nuanced than White's theory of "unilinear evolution." Steward rejected the 19th-century notion of progress, and instead called attention to the Darwinian notion of "adaptation", arguing that all societies had to adapt to their environment in some way. He argued that different adaptations could be studied through the examination of the specific resources a society exploited, the technology the society relied on to exploit these resources, and the organization of human labour. He further argued that different environments and technologies would require different kinds of adaptations, and that as the resource base or technology changed, so too would a culture. In other words, cultures do not change according to some inner logic, but rather in terms of a changing relationship with a changing environment. Cultures therefore would not pass through the same stages in the same order as they changed—rather, they would change in varying ways and directions. He called his theory "multilineal evolution". He questioned the possibility of creating a social theory encompassing the entire evolution of humanity; however, he argued that anthropologists are not limited to describing specific existing cultures. He believed that it is possible to create theories analysing typical common culture, representative of specific eras or regions. As the decisive factors determining the development of given culture he pointed to technology and economics, but noted that there are secondary factors, like political system, ideologies and religion. All those factors push the evolution of a given society in several directions at the same time; hence the application of the term "multilinear" to his theory of evolution.

Marshall Sahlins, co-editor with Elman Service of Evolution and Culture (1960), divided the evolution of societies into 'general' and 'specific'.[69] General evolution is the tendency of cultural and social systems to increase in complexity, organization and adaptiveness to environment.[69] However, as the various cultures are not isolated, there is interaction and a diffusion of their qualities (like technological inventions).[69] This leads cultures to develop in different ways (specific evolution), as various elements are introduced to them in different combinations and at different stages of evolution.[69]

In his Power and Prestige (1966) and Human Societies: An Introduction to Macrosociology (1974), Gerhard Lenski expands on the works of Leslie White and Lewis Henry Morgan,[69] developing the ecological-evolutionary theory. He views technological progress as the most basic factor in the evolution of societies and cultures.[69] Unlike White, who defined technology as the ability to create and utilise energy, Lenski focuses on information—its amount and uses.[69] The more information and knowledge (especially allowing the shaping of natural environment) a given society has, the more advanced it is.[69] He distinguishes four stages of human development, based on advances in the history of communication.[69] In the first stage, information is passed by genes.[69] In the second, when humans gain sentience, they can learn and pass information through by experience.[69] In the third, humans start using signs and develop logic.[69] In the fourth, they can create symbols and develop language and writing.[69] Advancements in the technology of communication translate into advancements in the economic system and political system, distribution of goods, social inequality and other spheres of social life. He also differentiates societies based on their level of technology, communication and economy: (1) hunters and gatherers, (2) agricultural, (3) industrial, and (4) special (like fishing societies).[69]

Talcott Parsons, author of Societies: Evolutionary and Comparative Perspectives (1966) and The System of Modern Societies (1971) divided evolution into four subprocesses: (1) division, which creates functional subsystems from the main system; (2) adaptation, where those systems evolve into more efficient versions; (3) inclusion of elements previously excluded from the given systems; and (4) generalization of values, increasing the legitimization of the ever more complex system.[70] He shows those processes on 4 stages of evolution: (I) primitive or foraging, (II) archaic agricultural, (III) classical or "historic" in his terminology, using formalized and universalizing theories about reality and (IV) modern empirical cultures. However, these divisions in Parsons' theory are the more formal ways in which the evolutionary process is conceptualized, and should not be mistaken for Parsons' actual theory. Parsons develops a theory where he tries to reveal the complexity of the processes which take form between two points of necessity, the first being the cultural "necessity," which is given through the values-system of each evolving community; the other is the environmental necessities, which most directly is reflected in the material realities of the basic production system and in the relative capacity of each industrial-economical level at each window of time. Generally, Parsons highlights that the dynamics and directions of these processes is shaped by the cultural imperative embodied in the cultural heritage, and more secondarily, an outcome of sheer "economic" conditions.

Michel Foucault's recent, and very much misunderstood, concepts such as Biopower, Biopolitics and Power-knowledge has been cited as breaking free from the traditional conception of man as cultural animal. Foucault regards both the terms "cultural animal" and "human nature"as misleading abstractions, leading to a non-critical exemption of man and anything can be justified when regarding social processes or natural phenomena (social phenomena).[71] Foucault argues these complex processes are interrelated, and difficult to study for a reason so those 'truths' cannot be topled or disrupted. For Foucault, the many modern concepts and practices that attempt to uncover "the truth" about human beings (either psychologically, sexually, religion or spiritually) actually create the very types of people they purport to discover. Requiring trained "specialists" and knowledge codes and know how, rigorous pursuit is "put off" or delayed which makes any kind of study not only a 'taboo' subject but deliberately ignored. He cites the concept of 'truth'[72] within many human cultures and the ever flowing dynamics between truth, power, and knowledge as a resultant complex dynamics (Foucault uses the term regimes of truth) and how they flow with ease like water which make the concept of 'truth' impervious to any further rational investigation. Some of the West's most powerful social institutions are powerful for a reason, not because they exhibit powerful structures which inhibit investigation or it is illegal to investigate there historical foundation. It is the very notion of "legitimacy" Foucault cites as examples of "truth" which function as a "Foundationalism" claims to historical accuracy. Foucault argues, systems such as Medicine, Prisons,[73][74] and Religion, as well as groundbreaking works on more abstract theoretical issues of power are suspended or buried into oblivion.[75] He cites as further examples the 'Scientific study' of Population biology and Population genetics[76] as both examples of this kind of "Biopower" over the vast majority of the human population giving the new founded political population their 'politics' or polity. With the advent of biology and genetics teamed together as new scientific innovations notions of study of knowledge regarding truth belong to the realm of experts who will never divulge their secrets openly, while the bulk of the population do not know their own biology or genetics this is done for them by the experts. This functions as a truth ignorance mechanism: "where the "subjugated knowledge's", as those that have been both written out of history and submerged in it in a masked form produces what we now know as truth. He calls them "Knowledge's from below" and a "historical knowledge of struggles".Genealogy, Foucault suggests, is a way of getting at these knowledge's and struggles; "they are about the insurrection of knowledge's." Foucault tries to show with the added dimension of "Milieu"(derived from Newtonian mechanics) how this Milieu from the 17th century with the development of the Biological and Physical sciences managed to be interwoven into the political, social and biological relationship of men with the arrival of the concept Work placed upon the industrial population. Foucault uses the term Umwelt, borrowed from Jakob von Uexküll, meaning environment within. Technology, production, cartography the production of Nation states and Government making the efficiency of the Body politic, Law, Heredity and Consanguine[75] not only sound genuine and beyond historical origin and foundation it can be turned into 'exact truth' where the individual and the societal body are not only subjugated and nullified but dependent upon it. Foucault is not denying that genetic or biological study is inaccurate or is simply not telling the truth what he means is that notions of this newly discovered sciences were extended to include the vast majority (or whole populations) of populations as an exercise in "regimes change". Foucault argues that the conceptual meaning from the Middle ages and Canon law period, the Geocentric model, later superseded by the Heliocentrism model placing the position of the law of right in the Middle ages (Exclusive right or its correct legal term Sui generis) was the Divine right of kings and Absolute monarchy where the previous incarnation of truth and rule of political sovereignty was considered absolute and unquestioned by political philosophy (monarchs, popes and emperors). However, Foucault noticed that this Pharaonic version of political power was transversed and it was with 18th-century emergence of capitalism and liberal democracy that these terms began to be "democratized". The modern Pharaonic version represented by the president, the monarch, the pope and the prime minister all became propagandized versions or examples of symbol agents all aimed at towards a newly discovered phenomenon, the population.[77] As symbolic symbol agents of power making the mass population having to sacrifice itself all in the name of the newly formed voting franchise we now call Democracy. However, this was all turned on its head (when the Medieval rulers were thrown out and replaced by a more exact apparatus now called the state) when the human sciences suddenly discovered: "The set of mechanisms through which the basic biological features of the human species became an object of a political strategy and took on board the fundamental facts that humans were now a biological species."[78]

Sociobiology edit

Sociobiology departs perhaps the furthest from classical social evolutionism.[79] It was introduced by Edward Wilson in his 1975 book Sociobiology: The New Synthesis and followed his adaptation of evolutionary theory to the field of social sciences. Wilson pioneered the attempt to explain the evolutionary mechanics behind social behaviours such as altruism, aggression, and nurturance.[79] In doing so, Wilson sparked one of the greatest scientific controversies of the 20th century by introducing and rejuvenating neo-Darwinian modes of thinking in many social sciences and the humanities, leading to reactions ranging from fundamental opposition, not only from social scientists and humanists but also from Darwinists who see it as "excessively simplistic in its approach",[80] to calls for a radical restructuring of the respective disciplines on an evolutionary basis.[81]

The current theory of evolution, the modern evolutionary synthesis (or neo-darwinism), explains that evolution of species occurs through a combination of Darwin's mechanism of natural selection and Gregor Mendel's theory of genetics as the basis for biological inheritance and mathematical population genetics.[79] Essentially, the modern synthesis introduced the connection between two important discoveries; the units of evolution (genes) with the main mechanism of evolution (selection).[79]

Due to its close reliance on biology, sociobiology is often considered a branch of the biology, although it uses techniques from a plethora of sciences, including ethology, evolution, zoology, archaeology, population genetics, and many others. Within the study of human societies, sociobiology is closely related to the fields of human behavioral ecology and evolutionary psychology.

Sociobiology has remained highly controversial as it contends genes explain specific human behaviours, although sociobiologists describe this role as a very complex and often unpredictable interaction between nature and nurture. The most notable critics of the view that genes play a direct role in human behaviour have been biologists Richard Lewontin Steven Rose and Stephen Jay Gould. Given the convergence of much of sociobiology's claims with right-wing politics, this approach has seen severe opposition both with regard to its research results as well as its basic tenets;[82] this has led even Wilson himself to revisit his claims and state his opposition to some elements of modern sociobiology.[83]

Since the rise of evolutionary psychology, another school of thought, Dual Inheritance Theory, has emerged in the past 25 years that applies the mathematical standards of Population genetics to modeling the adaptive and selective principles of culture. This school of thought was pioneered by Robert Boyd at UCLA and Peter Richerson at UC Davis and expanded by William Wimsatt, among others. Boyd and Richerson's book, Culture and the Evolutionary Process (1985), was a highly mathematical description of cultural change, later published in a more accessible form in Not by Genes Alone (2004). In Boyd and Richerson's view, cultural evolution, operating on socially learned information, exists on a separate but co-evolutionary track from genetic evolution, and while the two are related, cultural evolution is more dynamic, rapid, and influential on human society than genetic evolution. Dual Inheritance Theory has the benefit of providing unifying territory for a "nature and nurture" paradigm and accounts for more accurate phenomenon in evolutionary theory applied to culture, such as randomness effects (drift), concentration dependency, "fidelity" of evolving information systems, and lateral transmission through communication.[84] Nicholas Christakis also advances similar ideas about "evolutionary sociology" in his 2019 book, Blueprint: The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society, emphasizing the relevance of underlying evolutionary forces that have helped to shape all societies, whatever their cultural differences.[85]

Theory of modernization edit

Theories of modernization are closely related to the dependency theory and development theory.[86] While they have been developed and popularized in the 1950s and 1960s, their ideological and epistemic ancestors can be traced back until at least the early 20th century when progressivist historians and social scientists, building upon Darwinian ideas that the roots of economic success in the US had to be found in its population structure, which, as an immigrant society, was composed of the strongest and fittest individuals of their respective countries of origin, had started to supply the national myth of US-American manifest destiny with evolutionary reasoning. Explicitly and implicitly, the US became the yardstick of modernisation, and other societies could be measured in the extent of their modernity by how closely they adhered to the US-American example.[87] Modernization Theories combine the previous theories of sociocultural evolution with practical experiences and empirical research, especially those from the era of decolonization. The theory states that:

  • Western countries are the most developed, and the rest of the world (mostly former colonies) is in the earlier stages of development, and will eventually reach the same level as the Western world.[86]
  • Development stages go from the traditional societies to developed ones.[86]
  • Third World countries have fallen behind with their social progress and need to be directed on their way to becoming more advanced.[86]

Developing from classical social evolutionism theories, the theory of modernization stresses the modernization factor: many societies are simply trying (or need) to emulate the most successful societies and cultures.[86] It also states that it is possible to do so, thus supporting the concepts of social engineering and that the developed countries can and should help those less developed, directly or indirectly.[86]

Among the scientists who contributed much to this theory are Walt Rostow, who in his The Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist Manifesto (1960) concentrates on the economic system side of the modernization, trying to show factors needed for a country to reach the path to modernization in his Rostovian take-off model.[86] David Apter concentrated on the political system and history of democracy, researching the connection between democracy, good governance and efficiency and modernization.[86] David McClelland (The Achieving Society, 1967) approached this subject from the psychological perspective, with his motivations theory, arguing that modernization cannot happen until given society values innovation, success and free enterprise.[86] Alex Inkeles (Becoming Modern, 1974) similarly creates a model of modern personality, which needs to be independent, active, interested in public policies and cultural matters, open to new experiences, rational and able to create long-term plans for the future.[86] Some works of Jürgen Habermas are also connected with this subfield.

The theory of modernization has been subject to some criticism similar to that levied against classical social evolutionism, especially for being too ethnocentric, one-sided and focused on the Western world and its culture.

Contemporary perspectives edit

Political perspectives edit

The Cold War period was marked by rivalry between two superpowers, both of which considered themselves to be the most highly evolved cultures on the planet. The USSR painted itself as a socialist society which emerged from class struggle, destined to reach the state of communism, while sociologists in the United States (such as Talcott Parsons) argued that the freedom and prosperity of the United States were a proof of a higher level of sociocultural evolution of its culture and society. At the same time, decolonization created newly independent countries who sought to become more developed—a model of progress and industrialization which was itself a form of sociocultural evolution.

Technological perspectives edit

 
Schematic timeline of information and replicators in the biosphere: major evolutionary transitions in information processing[88]

Many[who?] argue that the next stage of sociocultural evolution consists of a merger with technology, especially information processing technology. Several cumulative major transitions of evolution have transformed life through key innovations in information storage and replication, including RNA, DNA, multicellularity, and also language and culture as inter-human information processing systems.[89][90] in this sense it can be argued that the carbon-based biosphere has generated a cognitive system (humans) capable of creating technology that will result in a comparable evolutionary transition. "Digital information has reached a similar magnitude to information in the biosphere. It increases exponentially, exhibits high-fidelity replication, evolves through differential fitness, is expressed through artificial intelligence (AI), and has facility for virtually limitless recombination. Like previous evolutionary transitions, the potential symbiosis between biological and digital information will reach a critical point where these codes could compete via natural selection. Alternatively, this fusion could create a higher-level superorganism employing a low-conflict division of labor in performing informational tasks...humans already embrace fusions of biology and technology. We spend most of our waking time communicating through digitally mediated channels, ...most transactions on the stock market are executed by automated trading algorithms, and our electric grids are in the hands of artificial intelligence. With one in three marriages in America beginning online, digital algorithms are also taking a role in human pair bonding and reproduction".[88]

Anthropological perspectives edit

Current political theories of the new tribalists consciously mimic ecology and the life-ways of indigenous peoples, augmenting them with modern sciences. Ecoregional Democracy attempts to confine the "shifting groups", or tribes, within "more or less clear boundaries" that a society inherits from the surrounding ecology, to the borders of a naturally occurring ecoregion. Progress can proceed by competition between but not within tribes, and it is limited by ecological borders or by Natural Capitalism incentives which attempt to mimic the pressure of natural selection on a human society by forcing it to adapt consciously to scarce energy or materials. Gaians argue that societies evolve deterministically to play a role in the ecology of their biosphere, or else die off as failures due to competition from more efficient societies exploiting nature's leverage.

Thus, some have appealed to theories of sociocultural evolution to assert that optimizing the ecology and the social harmony of closely knit groups is more desirable or necessary than the progression to "civilization." A 2002 poll of experts on Neoarctic and Neotropic indigenous peoples (reported in Harper's magazine)[citation needed] revealed that all of them would have preferred to be a typical New World person in the year 1491, prior to any European contact, rather than a typical European of that time. This approach has been criticised by pointing out that there are a number of historical examples of indigenous peoples doing severe environmental damage (such as the deforestation of Easter Island and the extinction of mammoths in North America) and that proponents of the goal have been trapped by the European stereotype of the noble savage.

The role of war in the development of states and societies edit

Particularly since the end of the Cold War, there has been a growing number of scholars in the social sciences and humanities who came to complement the more presentist neo-evolutionary research with studies into the more distant past and its human inhabitants. A key element in many of these analyses and theories is warfare, which Robert L. Carneiro called the "prime mover in the origin of the state".[91] He theorizes that given the limited availability of natural resources, societies will compete against each other, with the losing group either moving out of the area now dominated by the victorious one, or, if the area is circumscribed by an ocean or a mountain range and re-settlement is thus impossible, will be either subjugated or killed. Thus, societies become larger and larger, but, facing the constant threat of extinction or assimilation, they were also forced to become more complex in their internal organisation both in order to remain competitive as well as to administer a growing territory and a larger population.[92]

Carneiro's ideas have inspired great number of subsequent research into the role of war in the process of political, social, or cultural evolution. An example of this is Ian Morris who argues that given the right geographic conditions, war not only drove much of human culture by integrating societies and increasing material well-being, but paradoxically also made the world much less violent. Large-scale states, so Morris, evolved because only they provided enough stability both internally and externally to survive the constant conflicts which characterise the early history of smaller states, and the possibility of war will continue to force humans to invent and evolve.[93] War drove human societies to adapt in a step-wise process, and each development in military technology either requires or leads to comparable developments in politics and society.[94]

Many of the underlying assumptions of Morris's thinking can be traced back in some form or another not only to Carneiro but also to Jared Diamond, and particularly his 1997 book Guns, Germs, and Steel. Diamond, who explicitly opposes racist evolutionary tales,[95] argues that the ultimate explanation of why different human development on different continents is the presence or absence of domesticable plants and animals as well as the fact that the east-west orientation of Eurasia made migration within similar climates much easier than the south-north orientation of Africa and the Americas.[96] Nevertheless, he also stresses the importance of conflict and warfare as a proximate explanation for how Europeans managed to conquer much of the world,[97] given how societies who fail to innovate will "tend to be eliminated by competing societies".[98]

Similarly, Charles Tilly argues that what drove the political, social, and technological change which, after centuries of great variation with regard to states, lead to the European states ultimately all converging on the national state was coercion and warfare: "War wove the European network of national states, and preparation for war created the internal structures of states within it."[99] He describes how war became more expensive and complex due to the introduction of gunpowder and large armies and thus required significantly large states in order to provide the capital and manpower to sustain these, which at the same time were forced to develop new means of extraction and administration.[100]

However, Norman Yoffee has criticised such theorists who, based on general evolutionary frameworks, came to formulate theories of the origins of states and their evolution. He claimed that in no small part due to the prominence of neoevolutionary explanations which group different societies into groups in order to compare them and their progress both to themselves and to modern ethnographic examples, while focusing mostly on political systems and a despotic élite who held together a territorial state by force, "much of what has been said of the earliest states, both in the professional literature as well as in popular writings, is not only factually wrong but also is implausible in the logic of social evolutionary theory".[101]

See also edit

References edit

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  5. ^ Sztompka, p. 491
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Cited sources edit

Bibliography edit

  • The Philosophy of Positivism
  • Jared Diamond, The World until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies?, Penguin Books, 2012 (ISBN 978-0-141-02448-6).
  • Sztompka, Piotr, The Sociology of Social Change, Blackwell Publishers, 1994, ISBN 0-631-18206-3
  • Trigger, Bruce, Sociocultural Evolution: Calculation and Contingency (New Perspectives on the Past), Blackwell Publishers, 1998, ISBN 1-55786-977-4
  • Stocking, George, Victorian Anthropology, Free Press, 1991, ISBN 0-02-931551-4
  • Evans-Pritchard, Sir Edward, A History of Anthropological Thought, 1981, Basic Books, Inc., New York.
  • Graber, Robert B., A Scientific Model of Social and Cultural Evolution, 1995, Thomas Jefferson University Press, Kirksville, MO.
  • Harris, Marvin, The Rise of Anthropological Theory: A History of Theories of Culture, 1968, Thomas Y. Crowell, New York.
  • Hatch, Elvin, Theories of Man and Culture, 1973, Columbia University Press, New York.
  • Hays, H. R., From Ape to Angel: An Informal History of Social Anthropology, 1965, Alfred A. Knopf, New York.
  • Johnson, Allen W. and Earle, Timothy, The Evolution of Human Societies: From Foraging Group to Agrarian State, 1987, Stanford University Press.
  • Kaplan, David and Manners, Robert, Culture Theory, 1972, Waveland Press, Inc., Prospect Heights, Illinois.
  • Kuklick, Henrika, The Savage Within: The Social History of British Anthropology, 1885–1945, 1991, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  • McGilchrist, Iain, The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World, 2009, Yale University Press, US and London.
  • Mesoudi, A. (2007). Using the methods of experimental social psychology to study cultural evolution. Journal of Social, Evolutionary & Cultural Psychology, 1(2), 35–58.
  • Mesoudi, A. Cultural Evolution: How Darwinian Theory Can Explain Human Culture and Synthesize the Social Sciences, 2011, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-52044-5
  • Morgan, John Henry, In the Beginning: The Paleolithic Origins of Religious Consciousness 2007 Cloverdale Books, South Bend. ISBN 978-1-929569-41-0
  • Raoul Naroll and William T. Divale. 1976. Natural Selection in Cultural Evolution: Warfare versus Peaceful Diffusion. American Ethnologist 3: 97–128.
  • Segal, Daniel (2000) Western Civ" and the Staging of History in American Higher Education The American Historical Review, Vol. 105, No. 3 (Jun., 2000), pp. 770–805 doi:10.2307/2651809
  • Seymour-Smith, Charlotte, Macmillan Dictionary of Anthropology, 1986, Macmillan, New York.
  • Stocking Jr., George W., Race, Culture, and Evolution: Essays in the History of Anthropology, 1968, The Free Press, New York.
  • Stocking Jr., George W., After Tylor: British Social Anthropology 1888–1951, 1995, The University of Wisconsin Press.
  • Winthrop, Robert H., Dictionary of Concepts in Cultural Anthropology, 1991, Greenwood Press, New York.

Readings from an evolutionary anthropological perspective edit

  • Two special issues on the evolution of culture:
    • Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 57–108 (April 2003)
      • The evolution of culture: New perspectives and evidence (p 57–60) Charles H. Janson, Eric A. Smith
      • Making space for traditions (p 61–70) Dorothy Fragaszy
      • Traditions in monkeys (p 71–81) Susan Perry, Joseph H. Manson
      • Is culture a golden barrier between human and chimpanzee? (p 82–91) Christophe Boesch
      • Cultural panthropology (p 92–105) Andrew Whiten, Victoria Horner, Sarah Marshall-Pescini
      • (p 106–108) Eric Delson
    • Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages 109–159 (2003)

External links edit

  • Sociocultural evolution on Principia Cybernetica Web
  • Classical Sociological Theory: Comte and Spencer
  • Secular Cycles and Millennial Trends

sociocultural, evolution, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, f. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sociocultural evolution news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sociocultural evolution sociocultural evolutionism or social evolution are theories of sociobiology and cultural evolution that describe how societies and culture change over time Whereas sociocultural development traces processes that tend to increase the complexity of a society or culture sociocultural evolution also considers process that can lead to decreases in complexity degeneration or that can produce variation or proliferation without any seemingly significant changes in complexity cladogenesis 1 Sociocultural evolution is the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time eventually producing a form or structure that is qualitatively different from the ancestral form 2 Most of the 19th century and some 20th century approaches to socioculture aimed to provide models for the evolution of humankind as a whole arguing that different societies have reached different stages of social development The most comprehensive attempt to develop a general theory of social evolution centering on the development of sociocultural systems the work of Talcott Parsons 1902 1979 operated on a scale which included a theory of world history Another attempt on a less systematic scale originated from the 1970s with the world systems approach of Immanuel Wallerstein 1930 2019 and his followers More recent approaches focus on changes specific to individual societies and reject the idea that cultures differ primarily according to how far each one has moved along some presumed linear scale of social progress Most quantify modern archaeologists and cultural anthropologists work within the frameworks of neoevolutionism sociobiology and modernization theory Contents 1 Introduction 2 Stadial theory 2 1 Sociocultural evolutionism and the idea of progress 2 2 Critique and impact on modern theories 2 3 Max Weber disenchantment and critical theory 3 Modern theories 3 1 Neoevolutionism 3 2 Sociobiology 3 3 Theory of modernization 4 Contemporary perspectives 4 1 Political perspectives 4 2 Technological perspectives 4 3 Anthropological perspectives 4 4 The role of war in the development of states and societies 5 See also 6 References 7 Cited sources 8 Bibliography 8 1 Readings from an evolutionary anthropological perspective 9 External linksIntroduction editAnthropologists and sociologists often assume that human beings have natural social tendencies but that particular human social behaviours have non genetic causes and dynamics i e people learn them in a social environment and through social interaction citation needed Societies exist in complex social environments for example with differing natural resources and constraints and adapt themselves to these environments It is thus inevitable that all societies change Specific theories of social or cultural evolution often attempt to explain differences between coeval societies by positing that different societies have reached different stages of development Although such theories typically provide models for understanding the relationship between technologies social structure or the values of a society they vary as to the extent to which they describe specific mechanisms of variation and change While the history of evolutionary thinking with regard to humans can be traced back at least to Aristotle and other Greek philosophers early sociocultural evolution theories the ideas of Auguste Comte 1798 1857 Herbert Spencer 1820 1903 and Lewis Henry Morgan 1818 1881 developed simultaneously with but independently of the work of Charles Darwin 1809 1882 and were popular from late in the 19th century to the end of World War I The 19th century unilineal evolution theories claimed that societies start out in a primitive state and gradually become more civilized over time they equated the culture and technology of Western civilization with progress Some forms of early sociocultural evolution theories mainly unilineal ones have led to much criticised theories like social Darwinism and scientific racism sometimes used in the past by European imperial powers to justify existing policies of colonialism and slavery and to justify new policies such as eugenics 3 Most 19th century and some 20th century approaches aimed to provide models for the evolution of humankind as a single entity However most 20th century approaches such as multilineal evolution focused on changes specific to individual societies Moreover they rejected directional change i e orthogenetic teleological or progressive change Most archaeologists work within the framework of multilineal evolution citation needed Other contemporary approaches to social change include neoevolutionism sociobiology dual inheritance theory modernisation theory and postindustrial theory citation needed In his seminal 1976 book The Selfish Gene Richard Dawkins wrote that there are some examples of cultural evolution in birds and monkeys but it is our own species that really shows what cultural evolution can do 4 Stadial theory editEnlightenment and later thinkers often speculated that societies progressed through stages in other words they saw history as stadial While expecting humankind to show increasing development theorists looked for what determined the course of human history Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 1770 1831 for example saw social development as an inevitable process citation needed It was assumed that societies start out primitive perhaps in a state of nature and could progress toward something resembling industrial Europe While earlier authors such as Michel de Montaigne 1533 1592 had discussed how societies change through time the Scottish Enlightenment of the 18th century proved key in the development of the idea of sociocultural evolution citation needed In relation to Scotland s union with England in 1707 several Scottish thinkers pondered the relationship between progress and the affluence brought about by increased trade with England They understood the changes Scotland was undergoing as involving transition from an agricultural to a mercantile society In conjectural histories authors such as Adam Ferguson 1723 1816 John Millar 1735 1801 and Adam Smith 1723 1790 argued that societies all pass through a series of four stages hunting and gathering pastoralism and nomadism agriculture and finally a stage of commerce nbsp Auguste Comte 1798 1857 Philosophical concepts of progress such as that of Hegel developed as well during this period In France authors such as Claude Adrien Helvetius 1715 1771 and other philosophes were influenced by the Scottish tradition Later thinkers such as Comte de Saint Simon 1760 1825 developed these ideas citation needed Auguste Comte 1798 1857 in particular presented a coherent view of social progress and a new discipline to study it sociology These developments took place in a context of wider processes The first process was colonialism Although imperial powers settled most differences of opinion with their colonial subjects through force increased awareness of non Western peoples raised new questions for European scholars about the nature of society and of culture Similarly effective colonial administration required some degree of understanding of other cultures Emerging theories of sociocultural evolution allowed Europeans to organise their new knowledge in a way that reflected and justified their increasing political and economic domination of others such systems saw colonised people as less evolved and colonising people as more evolved Modern civilization understood as the Western civilization appeared the result of steady progress from a state of barbarism and such a notion was common to many thinkers of the Enlightenment including Voltaire 1694 1778 The second process was the Industrial Revolution and the rise of capitalism which together allowed and promoted continual revolutions in the means of production Emerging theories of sociocultural evolution reflected a belief that the changes in Europe brought by the Industrial Revolution and capitalism were improvements Industrialisation combined with the intense political change brought about by the French Revolution of 1789 and the U S Constitution which paved the way for the dominance of democracy forced European thinkers to reconsider some of their assumptions about how society was organised Eventually in the 19th century three major classical theories of social and historical change emerged sociocultural evolutionism the social cycle theory the Marxist theory of historical materialism These theories had a common factor they all agreed that the history of humanity is pursuing a certain fixed path most likely that of social progress Thus each past event is not only chronologically but causally tied to present and future events The theories postulated that by recreating the sequence of those events sociology could discover the laws of history 5 Sociocultural evolutionism and the idea of progress edit Main article Unilineal evolution While sociocultural evolutionists agree that an evolution like process leads to social progress classical social evolutionists have developed many different theories known as theories of unilineal evolution Sociocultural evolutionism became the prevailing theory of early sociocultural anthropology and social commentary and is associated with scholars like Auguste Comte Edward Burnett Tylor Lewis Henry Morgan Benjamin Kidd L T Hobhouse and Herbert Spencer Such stage models and ideas of linear models of progress had a great influence not only on future evolutionary approaches in the social sciences and humanities 6 but also shaped public scholarly and scientific discourse surrounding the rising individualism and population thinking 7 Sociocultural evolutionism attempted to formalise social thinking along scientific lines with the added influence from the biological theory of evolution If organisms could develop over time according to discernible deterministic laws then it seemed reasonable that societies could as well Human society was compared to a biological organism and social science equivalents of concepts like variation natural selection and inheritance were introduced as factors resulting in the progress of societies The idea of progress led to that of a fixed stages through which human societies progress usually numbering three savagery barbarism and civilization but sometimes many more At that time anthropology was rising as a new scientific discipline separating from the traditional views of primitive cultures that was usually based on religious views 8 Already in the 18th century some authors began to theorize on the evolution of humans Montesquieu 1689 1755 wrote about the relationship laws have with climate in particular and the environment in general specifically how different climatic conditions cause certain characteristics to be common among different people 9 He likens the development of laws the presence or absence of civil liberty differences in morality and the whole development of different cultures to the climate of the respective people 10 concluding that the environment determines whether and how a people farms the land which determines the way their society is built and their culture is constituted or in Montesquieu s words the general spirit of a nation 11 Also Jean Jacques Rousseau 1712 1778 presents a conjectural stage model of human sociocultural evolution 12 first humans lived solitarily and only grouped when mating or raising children Later men and women lived together and shared childcare thus building families followed by tribes as the result of inter family interactions which lived in the happiest and the most lasting epoch of human history before the corruption of civil society degenerated the species again in a developmental stage process 13 In the late 18th century the Marquis de Condorcet 1743 1794 listed ten stages or epochs each advancing the rights of man and perfecting the human race Erasmus Darwin 1731 1802 Charles Darwin s grandfather was an enormously influential natural philosopher physiologist and poet whose remarkably insightful ideas included a statement of transformism and the interconnectedness of all forms of life His works which are enormously wide ranging also advance a theory of cultural transformation his famous The Temple of Nature is subtitled the Origin of Society 14 This work rather than proposing in detail a strict transformation of humanity between different stages instead dwells on Erasmus Darwin s evolutionary mechanism Erasmus Darwin does not explain each stage one by one trusting his theory of universal organic development as articulated in the Zoonomia to illustrate cultural development as well 15 Erasmus Darwin therefore flits with abandon through his chronology Priestman notes that it jumps from the emergence of life onto land the development of opposable thumbs and the origin of sexual reproduction directly to modern historical events 14 Another more complex theorist was Richard Payne Knight 1751 1824 an influential amateur archeologist and universal theologian Knight s The Progress of Civil Society A Didactic Poem in Six Books 1796 fits precisely into the tradition of triumphant historical stages beginning with Lucretius and reaching Adam Smith but just for the first four books 16 In his final books Knight then grapples with the French revolution and wealthy decadence Confronted with these twin issues Knight s theory ascribes progress to conflict partial discord lends its aid to tie the complex knots of general harmony 16 Competition in Knight s mechanism spurs development from any one stage to the next the dialectic of class land and gender creates growth 17 Thus Knight conceptualised a theory of history founded in inevitable racial conflict with Greece representing freedom and Egypt cold inactive stupor 18 Buffon Linnaeus Camper and Monboddo variously forward diverse arguments about racial hierarchy grounded in early theories of species change though many thought that environmental changes could create dramatic changes in form without permanently altering the species or causing species transformation However their arguments still bear on race Rousseau Buffon and Monboddo cite orangutans as evidence of an earlier prelinguistic human type and Monboddo even insisted Orangutans and certain African and South Asian races were identical Other than Erasmus Darwin the other pre eminent scientific text with a theory of cultural transformation was advanced by Robert Chambers 1802 1871 Chambers was a Scottish evolutionary thinker and philosopher who though he was then and now perceived as scientifically inadequate and criticized by prominent contemporaries is important because he was so widely read There are records of everyone from Queen Victoria to individual dockworkers enjoying his Robert Chambers Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation 1844 including future generations of scientists That The Vestiges did not establish itself as the scientific cutting edge is precisely the point since the Vestiges s influence means it was both the concept of evolution the Victorian public was most likely to experience and the scientific presupposition laid earliest in the minds of bright young scholars 19 Chambers propounded a principle of development whereby everything evolved by the same mechanism and towards higher order structure or meaning In his theory life advanced through different classes and within each class animals began at the lowest form and then advanced to more complex forms in the same class 20 In short the progress of animals was like the development of a foetus More than just an indistinct analogy this parallel between embryology and species development had the status of a genuine causal mechanism in Chambers theory more advanced species developed longer as embryos into all their complexity 21 Motivated by this comparison Chambers ascribed development to the laws of creation though he also supposed that the whole development of species was in some way preordained it was just that the preordination of the creator acted through establishing those laws 21 This as discussed above is similar to Spencer s later concept of development Thus Chambers believed in a sophisticated theory of progress driven by a developmental analogy nbsp Herbert SpencerIn the mid 19th century a revolution in ideas about the antiquity of the human species took place which paralleled but was to some extent independent of the Darwinian revolution in biology 22 Especially in geology archaeology and anthropology scholars began to compare primitive cultures to past societies and saw their level of technology as parallel with that of Stone Age cultures and thus used these peoples as models for the early stages of human evolution A developmental model of the evolution of the mind culture and society was the result paralleling the evolution of the human species 23 Modern savages sic became in effect living fossils left behind by the march of progress relics of the Paleolithic still lingering on into the present 24 Classical social evolutionism is most closely associated with the 19th century writings of Auguste Comte and of Herbert Spencer coiner of the phrase survival of the fittest 25 In many ways Spencer s theory of cosmic evolution has much more in common with the works of Jean Baptiste Lamarck and Auguste Comte than with contemporary works of Charles Darwin Spencer also developed and published his theories several years earlier than Darwin In regard to social institutions however there is a good case that Spencer s writings might be classified as social evolutionism Although he wrote that societies over time progressed and that progress was accomplished through competition he stressed that the individual rather than the collectivity is the unit of analysis that evolves that in other words evolution takes place through natural selection and that it affects social as well as biological phenomenon Nonetheless the publication of Darwin s works which proved a boon to the proponents of sociocultural evolution who saw the ideas of biological evolution as an attractive explanation for many questions about the development of society 26 Both Spencer and Comte view society as a kind of organism subject to the process of growth from simplicity to complexity from chaos to order from generalisation to specialisation from flexibility to organisation They agree that the process of societal growth can be divided into certain stages have clarification needed their beginning and eventual end and that this growth is in fact social progress each newer more evolved society is better Thus progressivism became one of the basic ideas underlying the theory of sociocultural evolutionism 25 However Spencer s theories were more complex than just a romp up the great chain of being Spencer based his arguments on an analogy between the evolution of societies and the ontogeny of an animal Accordingly he searched for general principles of development and structure or fundamental principles of organization rather than being content simply ascribing progress between social stages to the direct intervention of some beneficent deity 27 Moreover he accepted that these conditions are far less specific far more modifiable far more dependent on conditions that are variable in short that they are a messy biological process 28 Though Spencer s theories transcended the label of stagism and appreciate biological complexity they still accepted a strongly fixed direction and morality to natural development 29 For Spencer interference with the natural process of evolution was dangerous and had to be avoided at all costs Such views were naturally coupled to the pressing political and economic questions of the time Spencer clearly thought society s evolution brought about a racial hierarchy with Caucasians at the top and Africans at the bottom 29 This notion is deeply linked to the colonial projects European powers were pursuing at the time and the idea of European superiority used paternalistically to justify those projects The influential German zoologist Ernst Haeckel even wrote that natural men are closer to the higher vertebrates than highly civilized Europeans including not just a racial hierarchy but a civilizational one 30 Likewise Spencer s evolutionary argument advanced a theory of statehood until spontaneously fulfilled a public want should not be fulfilled at all sums up Spencer s notion about limited government and the free operation of market forces 31 This is not to suggest that stagism was useless or entirely motivated by colonialism and racism Stagist theories were first proposed in contexts where competing epistemologies were largely static views of the world Hence progress had in some sense to be invented conceptually the idea that human society would move through stages was a triumphant invention Moreover stages were not always static entities In Buffon s theories for example it was possible to regress between stages and physiological changes were species reversibly adapting to their environment rather than irreversibly transforming 32 In addition to progressivism economic analyses influenced classical social evolutionism Adam Smith 1723 1790 who held a deeply evolutionary view of human society 33 identified the growth of freedom as the driving force in a process of stadial societal development 34 According to him all societies pass successively through four stages the earliest humans lived as hunter gatherers followed by pastoralists and nomads after which society evolved to agriculturalists and ultimately reached the stage of commerce 35 With the strong emphasis on specialisation and the increased profits stemming from a division of labour Smith s thinking also exerted some direct influence on Darwin himself 36 Both in Darwin s theory of the evolution of species and in Smith s accounts of political economy competition between selfishly functioning units plays an important and even dominating role 37 Similarly occupied with economic concerns as Smith Thomas R Malthus 1766 1834 warned that given the strength of the sex drive inherent in all animals Malthus argued populations tend to grow geometrically and population growth is only checked by the limitations of economic growth which if there would be growth at all would quickly be outstripped by population growth causing hunger poverty and misery 38 Far from being the consequences of economic structures or social orders this struggle for existence is an inevitable natural law so Malthus 39 Auguste Comte known as the father of sociology formulated the law of three stages human development progresses from the theological stage in which nature was mythically conceived and man sought the explanation of natural phenomena from supernatural beings through a metaphysical stage in which nature was conceived of as a result of obscure forces and man sought the explanation of natural phenomena from them until the final positive stage in which all abstract and obscure forces are discarded and natural phenomena are explained by their constant relationship 40 This progress is forced through the development of human mind and through increasing application of thought reasoning and logic to the understanding of the world 41 Comte saw the science valuing society as the highest most developed type of human organization 40 Herbert Spencer who argued against government intervention as he believed that society should evolve toward more individual freedom 42 followed Lamarck in his evolutionary thinking 43 in that he believed that humans do over time adapt to their surroundings 44 He differentiated between two phases of development as regards societies internal regulation 40 the military and industrial societies 40 The earlier and more primitive military society has the goal of conquest and defense is centralised economically self sufficient collectivistic puts the good of a group over the good of an individual uses compulsion force and repression and rewards loyalty obedience and discipline 40 The industrial society in contrast has a goal of production and trade is decentralised interconnected with other societies via economic relations works through voluntary cooperation and individual self restraint treats the good of individual as of the highest value regulates the social life via voluntary relations and values initiative independence and innovation 40 45 The transition process from the military to industrial society is the outcome of steady evolutionary processes within the society 40 Spencer imagined a kind of feedback loop between mental and social evolution the higher the mental powers the greater the complexity of the society that the individuals could create the more complex the society the greater the stimulus it provided for further mental development Everything cohered to make progress inevitable or to weed out those who did not keep up 46 Regardless of how scholars of Spencer interpret his relation to Darwin Spencer became an incredibly popular figure in the 1870s particularly in the United States Authors such as Edward L Youmans William Graham Sumner John Fiske John W Burgess Lester Frank Ward Lewis H Morgan 1818 1881 and other thinkers of the gilded age all developed theories of social evolutionism as a result of their exposure to Spencer as well as to Darwin nbsp Lewis H MorganIn his 1877 classic Ancient Societies Lewis H Morgan an anthropologist whose ideas have had much impact on sociology differentiated between three eras 47 savagery barbarism and civilization which are divided by technological inventions like fire bow pottery in the savage era domestication of animals agriculture metalworking in the barbarian era and alphabet and writing in the civilization era 48 Thus Morgan drew a link between social progress and technological progress Morgan viewed technological progress as a force behind social progress and held that any social change in social institutions organizations or ideologies has its beginnings in technological change 48 49 Morgan s theories were popularized by Friedrich Engels who based his famous work The Origin of the Family Private Property and the State on them 48 For Engels and other Marxists this theory was important as it supported their conviction that materialistic factors economic and technological are decisive in shaping the fate of humanity 48 Edward Burnett Tylor 1832 1917 a pioneer of anthropology focused on the evolution of culture worldwide noting that culture is an important part of every society and that it is also subject to a process of evolution He believed that societies were at different stages of cultural development and that the purpose of anthropology was to reconstruct the evolution of culture from primitive beginnings to the modern state nbsp Edward Burnett TylorAnthropologists Sir E B Tylor in England and Lewis Henry Morgan in the United States worked with data from indigenous people who they claimed represented earlier stages of cultural evolution that gave insight into the process and progression of evolution of culture Morgan would later when have a significant influence on Karl Marx and on Friedrich Engels who developed a theory of sociocultural evolution in which the internal contradictions in society generated a series of escalating stages that ended in a socialist society see Marxism Tylor and Morgan elaborated the theory of unilinear evolution specifying criteria for categorising cultures according to their standing within a fixed system of growth of humanity as a whole and examining the modes and mechanisms of this growth Theirs was often a concern with culture in general not with individual cultures Their analysis of cross cultural data was based on three assumptions contemporary societies may be classified and ranked as more primitive or more civilized there are a determinate number of stages between primitive and civilized e g band tribe chiefdom and state all societies progress through these stages in the same sequence but at different ratesTheorists usually measured progression that is the difference between one stage and the next in terms of increasing social complexity including class differentiation and a complex division of labour or an increase in intellectual theological and aesthetic sophistication These 19th century ethnologists used these principles primarily to explain differences in religious beliefs and kinship terminologies among various societies nbsp Lester Frank WardLester Frank Ward 1841 1913 sometimes referred to by whom as the father of American sociology rejected many of Spencer s theories regarding the evolution of societies Ward who was also a botanist and a paleontologist believed that the law of evolution functioned much differently in human societies than it did in the plant and animal kingdoms and theorized that the law of nature had been superseded by the law of the mind 50 He stressed that humans driven by emotions create goals for themselves and strive to realize them most effectively with the modern scientific method whereas there is no such intelligence and awareness guiding the non human world 51 Plants and animals adapt to nature man shapes nature While Spencer believed that competition and survival of the fittest benefited human society and sociocultural evolution Ward regarded competition as a destructive force pointing out that all human institutions traditions and laws were tools invented by the mind of man and that that mind designed them like all tools to meet and checkmate the unrestrained competition of natural forces 50 Ward agreed with Spencer that authoritarian governments repress the talents of the individual but he believed that modern democratic societies which minimized the role of religion and maximized that of science could effectively support the individual in his or her attempt to fully utilize their talents and achieve happiness He believed that the evolutionary processes have four stages First comes cosmogenesis creation and evolution of the world Then when life arises there is biogenesis 51 Development of humanity leads to anthropogenesis which is influenced by the human mind 51 Finally there arrives sociogenesis which is the science of shaping the evolutionary process itself to optimize progress human happiness and individual self actualization 51 While Ward regarded modern societies as superior to primitive societies one need only look to the impact of medical science on health and lifespan citation needed he rejected theories of white supremacy he supported the Out of Africa theory of human evolution and believed that all races and social classes were equal in talent 52 However Ward did not think that evolutionary progress was inevitable and he feared the degeneration of societies and cultures which he saw as very evident in the historical record 53 Ward also did not favor the radical reshaping of society as proposed by the supporters of the eugenics movement or by the followers of Karl Marx like Comte Ward believed that sociology was the most complex of the sciences and that true sociogenesis was impossible without considerable research and experimentation 52 nbsp Emile DurkheimEmile Durkheim another of the fathers of sociology developed a dichotomal view of social progress 54 His key concept was social solidarity as he defined social evolution in terms of progressing from mechanical solidarity to organic solidarity 54 In mechanical solidarity people are self sufficient there is little integration and thus there is the need for the use of force and repression to keep society together 54 In organic solidarity people are much more integrated and interdependent and specialisation and cooperation are extensive 54 Progress from mechanical to organic solidarity is based firstly on population growth and increasing population density secondly on increasing morality density development of more complex social interactions and thirdly on increasing specialisation in the workplace 54 To Durkheim the most important factor in social progress is the division of labour 54 This clarification needed was later used in the mid 1900s by the economist Ester Boserup 1910 1999 to attempt to discount some aspects of Malthusian theory Ferdinand Tonnies 1855 1936 describes evolution as the development from informal society where people have many liberties and there are few laws and obligations to modern formal rational society dominated by traditions and laws where people are restricted from acting as they wish 55 He also notes that there is a tendency to standardisation and unification when all smaller societies are absorbed into a single large modern society 55 Thus Tonnies can be said to describe part of the process known today as globalization Tonnies was also one of the first sociologists to claim that the evolution of society is not necessarily going in the right direction that social progress is not perfect and it can even be called a regression as the newer more evolved societies are obtained only after paying a high cost resulting in decreasing satisfaction of the individuals making up that society 55 Tonnies work became the foundation of neoevolutionism 55 Although Max Weber is not usually counted by whom as a sociocultural evolutionist his theory of tripartite classification of authority can be viewed by whom as an evolutionary theory as well Weber distinguishes three ideal types of political leadership domination and authority charismatic domination traditional domination patriarchs patrimonialism feudalism legal rational domination modern law and state bureaucracy Weber also notes that legal domination is the most advanced and that societies evolve from having mostly traditional and charismatic authorities to mostly rational and legal ones Critique and impact on modern theories edit The early 20th century inaugurated a period of systematic critical examination and rejection of the sweeping generalisations of the unilineal theories of sociocultural evolution Cultural anthropologists such as Franz Boas 1858 1942 along with his students including Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead are regarded by whom as the leaders of anthropology s rejection of classical social evolutionism However the school of Boas ignore some of the complexity in evolutionary theories that emerged outside Herbert Spencer s influence Darwin s On the Origin of Species gave a mechanistic account of the origins and development of animals quite apart from Spencer s theories that emphasized the inevitable human development through stages Consequently many scholars developed more sophisticated understandings of how cultures evolve relying on deep cultural analogies than the theories in Herbert Spencer s tradition 56 Walter Bagehot 1872 applied selection and inheritance to the development of human political institutions Samuel Alexander 1892 discusses the natural selection of moral principles in society 57 William James 1880 considered the natural selection of ideas in learning and scientific development In fact he identified a remarkable parallel between the facts of social evolution on the one hand and of zoological evolution as expounded by Mr Darwin on the other 57 Charles Sanders Pierce 1898 even proposed that the current laws of nature we have exist because they have evolved over time 57 Darwin himself in Chapter 5 of the Descent of Man proposed that human moral sentiments were subject to group selection A tribe including many members who from possessing in a high degree the spirit of patriotism fidelity obedience courage and sympathy were always ready to aid one another and to sacrifice themselves for the common good would be victorious over most other tribes and this would be natural selection 58 Through the mechanism of imitation cultures as well as individuals could be subject to natural selection While these theories involved evolution applied to social questions except for Darwin s group selection the theories reviewed above did not advance a precise understanding of how Darwin s mechanism extended and applied to cultures beyond a vague appeal to competition 59 Ritchie s Darwinism and Politics 1889 breaks this trend holding that language and social institutions make it possible to transmit experience quite independently of the continuity of race 60 Hence Ritchie saw cultural evolution as a process that could operate independently of and on different scales to the evolution of species and gave it precise underpinnings he was extending its range in his own words to ideas cultures and institutions 61 Thorstein Veblen around the same time came to a similar insight that humans evolve to their social environment but their social environment in turn also evolves 62 Veblen s mechanism for human progress was the evolution of human intentionality Veblen labelled men a creature of habit and thought that habits were mentally digested from those who influenced him 56 In short as Hodgson and Knudsen point out Veblen thinks the changing institutions in their turn make for a further selection of individuals endowed with the fittest temperament and a further adaptation of individual temperament and habits to the changing environment through the formation of new institutions Thus Veblen represented an extension of Ritchie s theories where evolution operates at multiple levels to a sophisticated appreciation of how each level interacts with the other 63 This complexity notwithstanding Boas and Benedict used sophisticated ethnography and more rigorous empirical methods to argue that Spencer Tylor and Morgan s theories were speculative and systematically misrepresented ethnographic data Theories regarding stages of evolution were especially criticised as illusions Additionally they rejected the distinction between primitive and civilized or modern pointing out that so called primitive contemporary societies have just as much history and were just as evolved as so called civilized societies They therefore argued that any attempt to use this theory to reconstruct the histories of non literate i e leaving no historical documents peoples is entirely speculative and unscientific They observed that the postulated progression which typically ended with a stage of civilization identical to that of modern Europe is ethnocentric They also pointed out that the theory assumes that societies are clearly bounded and distinct when in fact cultural traits and forms often cross social boundaries and diffuse among many different societies and are thus an important mechanism of change Boas in his culture history approach focused on anthropological fieldwork in an attempt to identify factual processes instead of what he criticized as speculative stages of growth His approach greatly influenced American anthropology in the first half of the 20th century and marked a retreat from high level generalization and from systems building Later critics observed that the assumption of firmly bounded societies was proposed precisely at the time when European powers were colonising non Western societies and was thus self serving Many anthropologists and social theorists now consider unilineal cultural and social evolution a Western myth seldom based on solid empirical grounds Critical theorists argue that notions of social evolution are simply justifications for power by the elites of society Finally the devastating World Wars that occurred between 1914 and 1945 crippled Europe s self confidence After millions of deaths genocide and the destruction of Europe s industrial infrastructure the idea of progress seemed dubious at best Thus modern sociocultural evolutionism rejects most of classical social evolutionism due to various theoretical problems The theory was deeply ethnocentric it makes heavy value judgments about different societies with Western civilization seen as the most valuable It assumed all cultures follow the same path or progression and have the same goals It equated civilization with material culture technology cities etc Because social evolution was posited as a scientific theory it was often used to support unjust and often racist social practices particularly colonialism slavery and the unequal economic conditions present within industrialized Europe Social Darwinism is especially criticised as it purportedly led to some philosophies used by the Nazis Max Weber disenchantment and critical theory edit nbsp Max Weber in 1917Main articles Max Weber and Critical theory Weber s major works in economic sociology and the sociology of religion dealt with the rationalization secularisation and so called disenchantment which he associated with the rise of capitalism and modernity 64 In sociology rationalization is the process whereby an increasing number of social actions become based on considerations of teleological efficiency or calculation rather than on motivations derived from morality emotion custom or tradition Rather than referring to what is genuinely rational or logical rationalization refers to a relentless quest for goals that might actually function to the detriment of a society Rationalization is an ambivalent aspect of modernity manifested especially in Western society as a behaviour of the capitalist market of rational administration in the state and bureaucracy of the extension of modern science and of the expansion of modern technology citation needed Weber s thought regarding the rationalizing and secularizing tendencies of modern Western society sometimes described as the Weber Thesis would blend with Marxism to facilitate critical theory particularly in the work of thinkers such as Jurgen Habermas born 1929 Critical theorists as antipositivists are critical of the idea of a hierarchy of sciences or societies particularly with respect to the sociological positivism originally set forth by Comte Jurgen Habermas has critiqued the concept of pure instrumental rationality as meaning that scientific thinking becomes something akin to ideology itself For theorists such as Zygmunt Bauman 1925 2017 rationalization as a manifestation of modernity may be most closely and regrettably associated with the events of the Holocaust Modern theories editMain article multilineal evolution nbsp Composite image of the Earth at night in 2012 created by NASA and NOAA The brightest areas of the Earth are the most urbanized but not necessarily the most populated Even more than 100 years after the invention of the electric light most regions remain thinly populated or unlit When the critique of classical social evolutionism became widely accepted modern anthropological and sociological approaches changed respectively Modern theories are careful to avoid unsourced ethnocentric speculation comparisons or value judgments more or less regarding individual societies as existing within their own historical contexts These conditions provided the context for new theories such as cultural relativism and multilineal evolution In the 1920s and 1930s Gordon Childe revolutionized the study of cultural evolutionism He conducted a comprehensive pre history account that provided scholars with evidence for African and Asian cultural transmission into Europe He combated scientific racism by finding the tools and artifacts of the indigenous people from Africa and Asia and showed how they influenced the technology of European culture Evidence from his excavations countered the idea of Aryan supremacy and superiority Adopting Kosinna s basic concept of the archaeological culture and his identification of such cultures as the remains of prehistoric peoples and combining it with the detailed chronologies of European prehistory developed by Gustaf Oscar Montelius Childe argued that each society needed to be delineated individually on the basis of constituent artefacts which were indicative of their practical and social function 65 Childe explained cultural evolution by his theory of divergence with modifications of convergence He postulated that different cultures form separate methods that meet different needs but when two cultures were in contact they developed similar adaptations solving similar problems Rejecting Spencer s theory of parallel cultural evolution Childe found that interactions between cultures contributed to the convergence of similar aspects most often attributed to one culture Childe placed emphasis on human culture as a social construct rather than products of environmental or technological contexts Childe coined the terms Neolithic Revolution and Urban Revolution which are still used today in the branch of pre historic anthropology In 1941 anthropologist Robert Redfield wrote about a shift from folk society to urban society By the 1940s cultural anthropologists such as Leslie White and Julian Steward sought to revive an evolutionary model on a more scientific basis and succeeded in establishing an approach known as neoevolutionism White rejected the opposition between primitive and modern societies but did argue that societies could be distinguished based on the amount of energy they harnessed and that increased energy allowed for greater social differentiation White s law Steward on the other hand rejected the 19th century notion of progress and instead called attention to the Darwinian notion of adaptation arguing that all societies had to adapt to their environment in some way The anthropologists Marshall Sahlins and Elman Service prepared an edited volume Evolution and Culture in which they attempted to synthesise White s and Steward s approaches 66 Other anthropologists building on or responding to work by White and Steward developed theories of cultural ecology and ecological anthropology The most prominent examples are Peter Vayda and Roy Rappaport By the late 1950s students of Steward such as Eric Wolf and Sidney Mintz turned away from cultural ecology to Marxism World Systems Theory Dependency theory and Marvin Harris s Cultural materialism Today most anthropologists reject 19th century notions of progress and the three assumptions of unilineal evolution Following Steward they take seriously the relationship between a culture and its environment to explain different aspects of a culture But most modern cultural anthropologists have adopted a general systems approach examining cultures as emergent systems and arguing that one must consider the whole social environment which includes political and economic relations among cultures As a result of simplistic notions of progressive evolution more modern complex cultural evolution theories such as Dual Inheritance Theory discussed below receive little attention in the social sciences having given way in some cases to a series of more humanist approaches Some reject the entirety of evolutionary thinking and look instead at historical contingencies contacts with other cultures and the operation of cultural symbol systems In the area of development studies authors such as Amartya Sen have developed an understanding of development and human flourishing that also question more simplistic notions of progress while retaining much of their original inspiration Neoevolutionism edit Main article Neoevolutionism Neoevolutionism was the first in a series of modern multilineal evolution theories It emerged in the 1930s and extensively developed in the period following the Second World War and was incorporated into both anthropology and sociology in the 1960s It bases its theories on empirical evidence from areas of archaeology palaeontology and historiography and tries to eliminate any references to systems of values be it moral or cultural instead trying to remain objective and simply descriptive 67 While 19th century evolutionism explained how culture develops by giving general principles of its evolutionary process it was dismissed by the Historical Particularists as unscientific in the early 20th century It was the neo evolutionary thinkers who brought back evolutionary thought and developed it to be acceptable to contemporary anthropology Neo evolutionism discards many ideas of classical social evolutionism namely that of social progress so dominant in previous sociology evolution related theories 67 Then neo evolutionism discards the determinism argument and introduces probability arguing that accidents and free will greatly affect the process of social evolution 67 It also supports counterfactual history asking what if and considering different possible paths that social evolution may take or might have taken and thus allows for the fact that various cultures may develop in different ways some skipping entire stages others have passed through 67 Neo evolutionism stresses the importance of empirical evidence While 19th century evolutionism used value judgments and assumptions for interpreting data neo evolutionism relies on measurable information for analysing the process of sociocultural evolution Leslie White author of The Evolution of Culture The Development of Civilization to the Fall of Rome 1959 attempted to create a theory explaining the entire history of humanity 67 The most important factor in his theory is technology 67 Social systems are determined by technological systems wrote White in his book 68 echoing the earlier theory of Lewis Henry Morgan He proposes a society s energy consumption as a measure of its advancement 67 He differentiates between five stages of human development 67 In the first people use the energy of their own muscles 67 In the second they use the energy of domesticated animals 67 In the third they use the energy of plants so White refers to agricultural revolution here 67 In the fourth they learn to use the energy of natural resources coal oil gas 67 In the fifth they harness nuclear energy 67 White introduced a formula P E T where E is a measure of energy consumed and T is the measure of efficiency of technical factors utilising the energy 67 This theory is similar to Russian astronomer Nikolai Kardashev s later theory of the Kardashev scale Julian Steward author of Theory of Culture Change The Methodology of Multilinear Evolution 1955 reprinted 1979 created the theory of multilinear evolution which examined the way in which societies adapted to their environment This approach was more nuanced than White s theory of unilinear evolution Steward rejected the 19th century notion of progress and instead called attention to the Darwinian notion of adaptation arguing that all societies had to adapt to their environment in some way He argued that different adaptations could be studied through the examination of the specific resources a society exploited the technology the society relied on to exploit these resources and the organization of human labour He further argued that different environments and technologies would require different kinds of adaptations and that as the resource base or technology changed so too would a culture In other words cultures do not change according to some inner logic but rather in terms of a changing relationship with a changing environment Cultures therefore would not pass through the same stages in the same order as they changed rather they would change in varying ways and directions He called his theory multilineal evolution He questioned the possibility of creating a social theory encompassing the entire evolution of humanity however he argued that anthropologists are not limited to describing specific existing cultures He believed that it is possible to create theories analysing typical common culture representative of specific eras or regions As the decisive factors determining the development of given culture he pointed to technology and economics but noted that there are secondary factors like political system ideologies and religion All those factors push the evolution of a given society in several directions at the same time hence the application of the term multilinear to his theory of evolution Marshall Sahlins co editor with Elman Service of Evolution and Culture 1960 divided the evolution of societies into general and specific 69 General evolution is the tendency of cultural and social systems to increase in complexity organization and adaptiveness to environment 69 However as the various cultures are not isolated there is interaction and a diffusion of their qualities like technological inventions 69 This leads cultures to develop in different ways specific evolution as various elements are introduced to them in different combinations and at different stages of evolution 69 In his Power and Prestige 1966 and Human Societies An Introduction to Macrosociology 1974 Gerhard Lenski expands on the works of Leslie White and Lewis Henry Morgan 69 developing the ecological evolutionary theory He views technological progress as the most basic factor in the evolution of societies and cultures 69 Unlike White who defined technology as the ability to create and utilise energy Lenski focuses on information its amount and uses 69 The more information and knowledge especially allowing the shaping of natural environment a given society has the more advanced it is 69 He distinguishes four stages of human development based on advances in the history of communication 69 In the first stage information is passed by genes 69 In the second when humans gain sentience they can learn and pass information through by experience 69 In the third humans start using signs and develop logic 69 In the fourth they can create symbols and develop language and writing 69 Advancements in the technology of communication translate into advancements in the economic system and political system distribution of goods social inequality and other spheres of social life He also differentiates societies based on their level of technology communication and economy 1 hunters and gatherers 2 agricultural 3 industrial and 4 special like fishing societies 69 Talcott Parsons author of Societies Evolutionary and Comparative Perspectives 1966 and The System of Modern Societies 1971 divided evolution into four subprocesses 1 division which creates functional subsystems from the main system 2 adaptation where those systems evolve into more efficient versions 3 inclusion of elements previously excluded from the given systems and 4 generalization of values increasing the legitimization of the ever more complex system 70 He shows those processes on 4 stages of evolution I primitive or foraging II archaic agricultural III classical or historic in his terminology using formalized and universalizing theories about reality and IV modern empirical cultures However these divisions in Parsons theory are the more formal ways in which the evolutionary process is conceptualized and should not be mistaken for Parsons actual theory Parsons develops a theory where he tries to reveal the complexity of the processes which take form between two points of necessity the first being the cultural necessity which is given through the values system of each evolving community the other is the environmental necessities which most directly is reflected in the material realities of the basic production system and in the relative capacity of each industrial economical level at each window of time Generally Parsons highlights that the dynamics and directions of these processes is shaped by the cultural imperative embodied in the cultural heritage and more secondarily an outcome of sheer economic conditions Michel Foucault s recent and very much misunderstood concepts such as Biopower Biopolitics and Power knowledge has been cited as breaking free from the traditional conception of man as cultural animal Foucault regards both the terms cultural animal and human nature as misleading abstractions leading to a non critical exemption of man and anything can be justified when regarding social processes or natural phenomena social phenomena 71 Foucault argues these complex processes are interrelated and difficult to study for a reason so those truths cannot be topled or disrupted For Foucault the many modern concepts and practices that attempt to uncover the truth about human beings either psychologically sexually religion or spiritually actually create the very types of people they purport to discover Requiring trained specialists and knowledge codes and know how rigorous pursuit is put off or delayed which makes any kind of study not only a taboo subject but deliberately ignored He cites the concept of truth 72 within many human cultures and the ever flowing dynamics between truth power and knowledge as a resultant complex dynamics Foucault uses the term regimes of truth and how they flow with ease like water which make the concept of truth impervious to any further rational investigation Some of the West s most powerful social institutions are powerful for a reason not because they exhibit powerful structures which inhibit investigation or it is illegal to investigate there historical foundation It is the very notion of legitimacy Foucault cites as examples of truth which function as a Foundationalism claims to historical accuracy Foucault argues systems such as Medicine Prisons 73 74 and Religion as well as groundbreaking works on more abstract theoretical issues of power are suspended or buried into oblivion 75 He cites as further examples the Scientific study of Population biology and Population genetics 76 as both examples of this kind of Biopower over the vast majority of the human population giving the new founded political population their politics or polity With the advent of biology and genetics teamed together as new scientific innovations notions of study of knowledge regarding truth belong to the realm of experts who will never divulge their secrets openly while the bulk of the population do not know their own biology or genetics this is done for them by the experts This functions as a truth ignorance mechanism where the subjugated knowledge s as those that have been both written out of history and submerged in it in a masked form produces what we now know as truth He calls them Knowledge s from below and a historical knowledge of struggles Genealogy Foucault suggests is a way of getting at these knowledge s and struggles they are about the insurrection of knowledge s Foucault tries to show with the added dimension of Milieu derived from Newtonian mechanics how this Milieu from the 17th century with the development of the Biological and Physical sciences managed to be interwoven into the political social and biological relationship of men with the arrival of the concept Work placed upon the industrial population Foucault uses the term Umwelt borrowed from Jakob von Uexkull meaning environment within Technology production cartography the production of Nation states and Government making the efficiency of the Body politic Law Heredity and Consanguine 75 not only sound genuine and beyond historical origin and foundation it can be turned into exact truth where the individual and the societal body are not only subjugated and nullified but dependent upon it Foucault is not denying that genetic or biological study is inaccurate or is simply not telling the truth what he means is that notions of this newly discovered sciences were extended to include the vast majority or whole populations of populations as an exercise in regimes change Foucault argues that the conceptual meaning from the Middle ages and Canon law period the Geocentric model later superseded by the Heliocentrism model placing the position of the law of right in the Middle ages Exclusive right or its correct legal term Sui generis was the Divine right of kings and Absolute monarchy where the previous incarnation of truth and rule of political sovereignty was considered absolute and unquestioned by political philosophy monarchs popes and emperors However Foucault noticed that this Pharaonic version of political power was transversed and it was with 18th century emergence of capitalism and liberal democracy that these terms began to be democratized The modern Pharaonic version represented by the president the monarch the pope and the prime minister all became propagandized versions or examples of symbol agents all aimed at towards a newly discovered phenomenon the population 77 As symbolic symbol agents of power making the mass population having to sacrifice itself all in the name of the newly formed voting franchise we now call Democracy However this was all turned on its head when the Medieval rulers were thrown out and replaced by a more exact apparatus now called the state when the human sciences suddenly discovered The set of mechanisms through which the basic biological features of the human species became an object of a political strategy and took on board the fundamental facts that humans were now a biological species 78 Sociobiology edit Main article Sociobiology Sociobiology departs perhaps the furthest from classical social evolutionism 79 It was introduced by Edward Wilson in his 1975 book Sociobiology The New Synthesis and followed his adaptation of evolutionary theory to the field of social sciences Wilson pioneered the attempt to explain the evolutionary mechanics behind social behaviours such as altruism aggression and nurturance 79 In doing so Wilson sparked one of the greatest scientific controversies of the 20th century by introducing and rejuvenating neo Darwinian modes of thinking in many social sciences and the humanities leading to reactions ranging from fundamental opposition not only from social scientists and humanists but also from Darwinists who see it as excessively simplistic in its approach 80 to calls for a radical restructuring of the respective disciplines on an evolutionary basis 81 The current theory of evolution the modern evolutionary synthesis or neo darwinism explains that evolution of species occurs through a combination of Darwin s mechanism of natural selection and Gregor Mendel s theory of genetics as the basis for biological inheritance and mathematical population genetics 79 Essentially the modern synthesis introduced the connection between two important discoveries the units of evolution genes with the main mechanism of evolution selection 79 Due to its close reliance on biology sociobiology is often considered a branch of the biology although it uses techniques from a plethora of sciences including ethology evolution zoology archaeology population genetics and many others Within the study of human societies sociobiology is closely related to the fields of human behavioral ecology and evolutionary psychology Sociobiology has remained highly controversial as it contends genes explain specific human behaviours although sociobiologists describe this role as a very complex and often unpredictable interaction between nature and nurture The most notable critics of the view that genes play a direct role in human behaviour have been biologists Richard Lewontin Steven Rose and Stephen Jay Gould Given the convergence of much of sociobiology s claims with right wing politics this approach has seen severe opposition both with regard to its research results as well as its basic tenets 82 this has led even Wilson himself to revisit his claims and state his opposition to some elements of modern sociobiology 83 Since the rise of evolutionary psychology another school of thought Dual Inheritance Theory has emerged in the past 25 years that applies the mathematical standards of Population genetics to modeling the adaptive and selective principles of culture This school of thought was pioneered by Robert Boyd at UCLA and Peter Richerson at UC Davis and expanded by William Wimsatt among others Boyd and Richerson s book Culture and the Evolutionary Process 1985 was a highly mathematical description of cultural change later published in a more accessible form in Not by Genes Alone 2004 In Boyd and Richerson s view cultural evolution operating on socially learned information exists on a separate but co evolutionary track from genetic evolution and while the two are related cultural evolution is more dynamic rapid and influential on human society than genetic evolution Dual Inheritance Theory has the benefit of providing unifying territory for a nature and nurture paradigm and accounts for more accurate phenomenon in evolutionary theory applied to culture such as randomness effects drift concentration dependency fidelity of evolving information systems and lateral transmission through communication 84 Nicholas Christakis also advances similar ideas about evolutionary sociology in his 2019 book Blueprint The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society emphasizing the relevance of underlying evolutionary forces that have helped to shape all societies whatever their cultural differences 85 Theory of modernization edit Main article Modernization theory Theories of modernization are closely related to the dependency theory and development theory 86 While they have been developed and popularized in the 1950s and 1960s their ideological and epistemic ancestors can be traced back until at least the early 20th century when progressivist historians and social scientists building upon Darwinian ideas that the roots of economic success in the US had to be found in its population structure which as an immigrant society was composed of the strongest and fittest individuals of their respective countries of origin had started to supply the national myth of US American manifest destiny with evolutionary reasoning Explicitly and implicitly the US became the yardstick of modernisation and other societies could be measured in the extent of their modernity by how closely they adhered to the US American example 87 Modernization Theories combine the previous theories of sociocultural evolution with practical experiences and empirical research especially those from the era of decolonization The theory states that Western countries are the most developed and the rest of the world mostly former colonies is in the earlier stages of development and will eventually reach the same level as the Western world 86 Development stages go from the traditional societies to developed ones 86 Third World countries have fallen behind with their social progress and need to be directed on their way to becoming more advanced 86 Developing from classical social evolutionism theories the theory of modernization stresses the modernization factor many societies are simply trying or need to emulate the most successful societies and cultures 86 It also states that it is possible to do so thus supporting the concepts of social engineering and that the developed countries can and should help those less developed directly or indirectly 86 Among the scientists who contributed much to this theory are Walt Rostow who in his The Stages of Economic Growth A Non Communist Manifesto 1960 concentrates on the economic system side of the modernization trying to show factors needed for a country to reach the path to modernization in his Rostovian take off model 86 David Apter concentrated on the political system and history of democracy researching the connection between democracy good governance and efficiency and modernization 86 David McClelland The Achieving Society 1967 approached this subject from the psychological perspective with his motivations theory arguing that modernization cannot happen until given society values innovation success and free enterprise 86 Alex Inkeles Becoming Modern 1974 similarly creates a model of modern personality which needs to be independent active interested in public policies and cultural matters open to new experiences rational and able to create long term plans for the future 86 Some works of Jurgen Habermas are also connected with this subfield The theory of modernization has been subject to some criticism similar to that levied against classical social evolutionism especially for being too ethnocentric one sided and focused on the Western world and its culture Contemporary perspectives editPolitical perspectives edit The Cold War period was marked by rivalry between two superpowers both of which considered themselves to be the most highly evolved cultures on the planet The USSR painted itself as a socialist society which emerged from class struggle destined to reach the state of communism while sociologists in the United States such as Talcott Parsons argued that the freedom and prosperity of the United States were a proof of a higher level of sociocultural evolution of its culture and society At the same time decolonization created newly independent countries who sought to become more developed a model of progress and industrialization which was itself a form of sociocultural evolution Technological perspectives edit nbsp Schematic timeline of information and replicators in the biosphere major evolutionary transitions in information processing 88 Many who argue that the next stage of sociocultural evolution consists of a merger with technology especially information processing technology Several cumulative major transitions of evolution have transformed life through key innovations in information storage and replication including RNA DNA multicellularity and also language and culture as inter human information processing systems 89 90 in this sense it can be argued that the carbon based biosphere has generated a cognitive system humans capable of creating technology that will result in a comparable evolutionary transition Digital information has reached a similar magnitude to information in the biosphere It increases exponentially exhibits high fidelity replication evolves through differential fitness is expressed through artificial intelligence AI and has facility for virtually limitless recombination Like previous evolutionary transitions the potential symbiosis between biological and digital information will reach a critical point where these codes could compete via natural selection Alternatively this fusion could create a higher level superorganism employing a low conflict division of labor in performing informational tasks humans already embrace fusions of biology and technology We spend most of our waking time communicating through digitally mediated channels most transactions on the stock market are executed by automated trading algorithms and our electric grids are in the hands of artificial intelligence With one in three marriages in America beginning online digital algorithms are also taking a role in human pair bonding and reproduction 88 Anthropological perspectives edit Current political theories of the new tribalists consciously mimic ecology and the life ways of indigenous peoples augmenting them with modern sciences Ecoregional Democracy attempts to confine the shifting groups or tribes within more or less clear boundaries that a society inherits from the surrounding ecology to the borders of a naturally occurring ecoregion Progress can proceed by competition between but not within tribes and it is limited by ecological borders or by Natural Capitalism incentives which attempt to mimic the pressure of natural selection on a human society by forcing it to adapt consciously to scarce energy or materials Gaians argue that societies evolve deterministically to play a role in the ecology of their biosphere or else die off as failures due to competition from more efficient societies exploiting nature s leverage Thus some have appealed to theories of sociocultural evolution to assert that optimizing the ecology and the social harmony of closely knit groups is more desirable or necessary than the progression to civilization A 2002 poll of experts on Neoarctic and Neotropic indigenous peoples reported in Harper s magazine citation needed revealed that all of them would have preferred to be a typical New World person in the year 1491 prior to any European contact rather than a typical European of that time This approach has been criticised by pointing out that there are a number of historical examples of indigenous peoples doing severe environmental damage such as the deforestation of Easter Island and the extinction of mammoths in North America and that proponents of the goal have been trapped by the European stereotype of the noble savage The role of war in the development of states and societies edit Particularly since the end of the Cold War there has been a growing number of scholars in the social sciences and humanities who came to complement the more presentist neo evolutionary research with studies into the more distant past and its human inhabitants A key element in many of these analyses and theories is warfare which Robert L Carneiro called the prime mover in the origin of the state 91 He theorizes that given the limited availability of natural resources societies will compete against each other with the losing group either moving out of the area now dominated by the victorious one or if the area is circumscribed by an ocean or a mountain range and re settlement is thus impossible will be either subjugated or killed Thus societies become larger and larger but facing the constant threat of extinction or assimilation they were also forced to become more complex in their internal organisation both in order to remain competitive as well as to administer a growing territory and a larger population 92 Carneiro s ideas have inspired great number of subsequent research into the role of war in the process of political social or cultural evolution An example of this is Ian Morris who argues that given the right geographic conditions war not only drove much of human culture by integrating societies and increasing material well being but paradoxically also made the world much less violent Large scale states so Morris evolved because only they provided enough stability both internally and externally to survive the constant conflicts which characterise the early history of smaller states and the possibility of war will continue to force humans to invent and evolve 93 War drove human societies to adapt in a step wise process and each development in military technology either requires or leads to comparable developments in politics and society 94 Many of the underlying assumptions of Morris s thinking can be traced back in some form or another not only to Carneiro but also to Jared Diamond and particularly his 1997 book Guns Germs and Steel Diamond who explicitly opposes racist evolutionary tales 95 argues that the ultimate explanation of why different human development on different continents is the presence or absence of domesticable plants and animals as well as the fact that the east west orientation of Eurasia made migration within similar climates much easier than the south north orientation of Africa and the Americas 96 Nevertheless he also stresses the importance of conflict and warfare as a proximate explanation for how Europeans managed to conquer much of the world 97 given how societies who fail to innovate will tend to be eliminated by competing societies 98 Similarly Charles Tilly argues that what drove the political social and technological change which after centuries of great variation with regard to states lead to the European states ultimately all converging on the national state was coercion and warfare War wove the European network of national states and preparation for war created the internal structures of states within it 99 He describes how war became more expensive and complex due to the introduction of gunpowder and large armies and thus required significantly large states in order to provide the capital and manpower to sustain these which at the same time were forced to develop new means of extraction and administration 100 However Norman Yoffee has criticised such theorists who based on general evolutionary frameworks came to formulate theories of the origins of states and their evolution He claimed that in no small part due to the prominence of neoevolutionary explanations which group different societies into groups in order to compare them and their progress both to themselves and to modern ethnographic examples while focusing mostly on political systems and a despotic elite who held together a territorial state by force much of what has been said of the earliest states both in the professional literature as well as in popular writings is not only factually wrong but also is implausible in the logic of social evolutionary theory 101 See also editAccelerating change Biocultural evolution Clash of Civilizations Critical juncture theory Cultural diversity Cultural evolution Cultural materialism Cultural neuroscience Cultural selection theory Diffusion of innovations Dual inheritance theory Economic determinism Edward Burnett Tylor Evolutionary anthropology Environmental racism Extended order Franz Boas Futures studies Historicism Institutional memory Julian Steward Leslie White Lewis Henry Morgan Memetics Moral progress Neoevolutionism Neuroculture Origin of language Origin of speech Origins of society Population dynamics Punctuated equilibrium Rationalization sociology Raciolinguistics Reformism Social Darwinism Social cycle theory Social dynamics Social implications of the theory of evolution Societal collapse Sociocultural system Social progress Symbolic culture Technological evolutionReferences edit Korotayev Andrey 2004 World Religions and Social Evolution of the Old World Oikumene Civilizations A Cross cultural Perspective First ed Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press pp 1 8 ISBN 978 0 7734 6310 3 Compare Tivel David E 2012 3 Evolution Cultures and Ethnicity Evolution The Universe Life Cultures Ethnicity Religion Science and Technology Pittsburgh Dorrance Publishing p 89 ISBN 9781434918161 Cultural evolution as a theory in anthropology was developed in the nineteenth century as an outgrowth of Darwinian evolution It is the process by which structural reorganization is affected through time eventually producing a form or structure which is qualitatively different from the ancestral form Bowler Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press pp 301 304 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Dawkins Richard 1976 The Selfish Gene Oxford University Press p 190 ISBN 0 19 857519 X Sztompka p 491 Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press pp 145f ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press pp 27 47 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Montesquieu Charles de Secondat 1989 Anne M Cohler Basia Carolyn Miller Harold Samuel Stone eds The spirit of the laws Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 213 245 ISBN 0 521 36183 4 OCLC 18559462 Montesquieu Charles de Secondat 1989 Anne M Cohler Basia Carolyn Miller Harold Samuel Stone eds The spirit of the laws Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 246 307 ISBN 0 521 36183 4 OCLC 18559462 Montesquieu Charles de Secondat 1989 Anne M Cohler Basia Carolyn Miller Harold Samuel Stone eds The spirit of the laws Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 310 ISBN 0 521 36183 4 OCLC 18559462 Lund Nelson 2018 Rousseau s rejuvenation of political philosophy A new introduction Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 3 319 82342 3 OCLC 1091034107 Rousseau Jean Jacques 1997 Victor Gourevitch ed The discourses and other political writings Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 161 178 ISBN 0 521 41381 8 OCLC 35638169 a b Priestman Martin 2013 Victor Gourevitch ed The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin Ashgate Publishing p 184 Bowler Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 85 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 a b Priestman Martin 2013 Victor Gourevitch ed The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin Ashgate Publishing p 188 Priestman Martin 2013 Victor Gourevitch ed The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin Ashgate Publishing p 191 Priestman Martin 2013 Victor Gourevitch ed The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin Ashgate Publishing p 189 This is from James Secord s introduction to Chambers Robert 1994 James Secord ed Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation and Other Evolutionary Writings Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 1 3 Bowler Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press pp 135 136 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 a b Bowler Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 136 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 284 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 285 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 286 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 a b Sztompka p 495 For a recent comparison between biological and social evolution see Grinin L Markov A Korotayev A 2013 On similarities between biological and social evolutionary mechanisms Mathematical modeling Cliodynamics The Journal of Quantitative History and Cultural Evolution 4 2 doi 10 21237 C7CLIO4221334 Simon 1960 Herbert Spencer and the Social Organism Journal of the History of Ideas 21 2 294 299 doi 10 2307 2708202 JSTOR 2708202 p 296 Simon 1960 Herbert Spencer and the Social Organism Journal of the History of Ideas 21 2 294 299 doi 10 2307 2708202 JSTOR 2708202 p 296 7 a b Simon 1960 Herbert Spencer and the Social Organism Journal of the History of Ideas 21 2 294 299 doi 10 2307 2708202 JSTOR 2708202 p 297 8 Boyd Richerson Built for Speed Not for Comfort Darwinian Theory of Human Laws History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 23 pp 423 463 Simon 1960 Herbert Spencer and the Social Organism Journal of the History of Ideas 21 2 297 doi 10 2307 2708202 JSTOR 2708202 Bowler Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Clark Charles M A September 1990 Adam Smith and Society as an Evolutionary Process Journal of Economic Issues 24 3 825 844 doi 10 1080 00213624 1990 11505073 ISSN 0021 3624 Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Smith Adam 1981 R H Campbell Andrew S Skinner eds An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations Indianapolis Liberty Classics pp 689 708 ISBN 0 86597 008 4 OCLC 7811517 Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 172 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Bluemle Gerold 200 Jahre Darwin und 250 Jahre Theory of Moral Sentiments von Adam Smith Zur Aktualitat eines vergessenen Werkes International Journal of Economic Sciences and Applied Research 2 89 110 Malthus Thomas R 2018 Shannon C Stimson ed An essay on the principle of population the 1803 edition 1803 ed New Haven pp 11 23 ISBN 978 0 300 23189 2 OCLC 1020319147 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 104 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 a b c d e f g Sztompka pp 498 499 The Philosophy Of Positivism Archived 10 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine Adventures in Philosophy Modern History Sourcebook Herbert Spencer Social Darwinism 1857 fordham edu Perrin Robert G 2012 Herbert Spencer s Four Theories of Social Evolution American Journal of Sociology 81 6 1339 1359 doi 10 1086 226226 ISSN 0002 9602 S2CID 143884335 Carneiro Robert L 2015 Turner Jonathan H Machalek Richard Maryanski Alexandra eds Spencer s Conception of Evolution and Its Application to the Political Development of Societies Boulder CO and London Paradigm Publishers pp 215 227 ISBN 9781315634203 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Herbert Spencer Archived 24 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine Sociological Theorists Page Bowle r Peter J 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley CA University of California Press p 222 ISBN 978 0 520 26128 0 OCLC 426118505 Hume Brad D 2011 Evolutionisms Lewis Henry Morgan Time and the Question of Sociocultural Evolutionary Theory Histories of Anthropology Annual 7 1 91 126 doi 10 1353 haa 2011 0009 ISSN 1940 5138 S2CID 170478166 a b c d Sztompka pp 499 500 Morgan Lewis H 1877 Chapter III Ratio of Human Progress Ancient Society a b Commager H S 1950 The American Mind An Interpretation of American Thought and Character Since the 1880s Yale University Press p 199 ISBN 9780300000467 a b c d Sztompka pp 500 501 a b Gossett Thomas F 1997 Race The History of an Idea in America Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198025825 Cape E P 1922 Lester F Ward a Personal Sketch G P Putnam s sons a b c d e f Sztompka p 500 a b c d Sztompka p 501 a b Hodgson Knudsen 2010 Darwin s Conjecture The Search for General Principles of Social and Biological Evolution Chicago University of Chicago Press p 6 a b c Hodgson Knudsen 2010 Darwin s Conjecture The Search for General Principles of Social and Biological Evolution Chicago University of Chicago Press p 7 Boyd Richerson Built for Speed Not for Comfort Darwinian Theory of Human Laws History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 23 433 Hodgson Knudsen 2010 Darwin s Conjecture The Search for General Principles of Social and Biological Evolution Chicago University of Chicago Press p 8 Hodgson Knudsen 2010 Darwin s Conjecture The Search for General Principles of Social and Biological Evolution Chicago University of Chicago Press p 9 Hodgson Knudsen 2010 Darwin s Conjecture The Search for General Principles of Social and Biological Evolution Chicago University of Chicago Press p 10 Hodgson Knudsen 2010 Darwin s Conjecture The Search for General Principles of Social and Biological Evolution Chicago University of Chicago Press p 12 Hodgson Knudsen 2010 Darwin s Conjecture The Search for General Principles of Social and Biological Evolution Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 12 13 Habermas Jurgen 1985 The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity Polity Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 7456 0830 3 Trigger Bruce G 2006 A history of archaeological thought 2nd ed Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press p 241 ISBN 0 521 60049 9 OCLC 123371323 Sahlins Marshall David Service Elman eds 1960 Evolution and culture Ann Arbor MI Univ of Michigan Press a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Sztompka pp 502 503 White Leslie 1959 The Evolution of Culture The Development of Civilization to the Fall of Rome Mcgraw Hill ISBN 0 07 069682 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Sztompka p 504 Sztompka p 505 Linquist Stefan Machery Edouard Griffiths Paul E Stotz Karola 2011 Exploring the folkbiological conception of human nature Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 366 1563 444 453 doi 10 1098 rstb 2010 0224 PMC 3013472 PMID 21199848 van de Ven W T H 2012 The Social Reality of Truth Foucault Searle and the role of truth within social reality Foucault Michel 1975 Discipline and Punish CRS Report For Congress Federal Prison Industries 2007 a b Kantorowicz Ernst 1956 The Kings Two Bodies Michel Foucault Bio history and bio politics Originally published in Le Monde no 9869 17 18 October 1976 Review of Jacques Ruffie From Biology to Culture and republished in Foucault Studies 18 October 2014 Foucault Michel 1977 1978 Security Territory Population pp 135 163 311 332 Foucault Michel 1977 1978 Security Territory Population pp 1 23 54 86 a b c d Sztompka p 506 Johnson Matthew 2020 Archaeological theory an introduction Third ed Hoboken NJ p 214 ISBN 978 1 118 47502 7 OCLC 1076449679 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Merz Benz Peter Ulrich 2010 Soziologie und Sozialwissenschaften In Sarasin Philipp Sommer Marianne eds Evolution Ein interdisziplinares Handbuch Stuttgart and Weimar J B Metzler pp 318 325 ISBN 978 3 476 05462 3 OCLC 929995587 Preglau Max 2003 Meleghz Tamas Niedenzu Heinz Jurgen eds Sozio Biologie als letzte grosse Erzahlung wider den biologischen Reduktionismus Wiesbaden Westdeutscher Verlag pp 339 344 ISBN 978 3 531 14043 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Wilson Edward O 2012 The social conquest of earth 1st ed New York Liveright Pub pp 207 221 ISBN 978 0 87140 413 8 OCLC 755704999 Boyd Robert Richerson Peter J Peter J Richerson 1985 Culture and the Evolutionary Process Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 06933 3 Christakis Nicholas 2019 Blueprint The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society New York Little Brown ISBN 978 0316230032 a b c d e f g h i j Sztompka pp 507 508 Wehler Hans Ulrich 1975 Modernisierungstheorie und Geschichte Gottingen Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht ISBN 3 525 33373 0 OCLC 1603671 a b Gillings M R Hilbert M Kemp D J 2016 Information in the Biosphere Biological and Digital Worlds Trends in Ecology amp Evolution 31 3 180 189 doi 10 1016 j tree 2015 12 013 PMID 26777788 S2CID 3561873 Jablonka E Szathmary E 1995 The evolution of information storage and heredity Trends in Ecology amp Evolution 10 5 206 211 doi 10 1016 S0169 5347 00 89060 6 PMID 21237011 Szathmary E 2015 Toward major evolutionary transitions theory 2 0 Table 1 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 33 10104 10111 Bibcode 2015PNAS 11210104S doi 10 1073 pnas 1421398112 PMC 4547294 PMID 25838283 Carneiro Robert L 1970 A Theory of the Origin of the State Science 169 3947 734 Bibcode 1970Sci 169 733C doi 10 1126 science 169 3947 733 PMID 17820299 S2CID 11536431 Carneiro Robert L 1970 A Theory of the Origin of the State Science 169 3947 733 738 Bibcode 1970Sci 169 733C doi 10 1126 science 169 3947 733 PMID 17820299 S2CID 11536431 Morris Ian 2014 War What is it good for conflict and the progress of civilization from primates to robots New York ISBN 978 0 374 28600 2 OCLC 846545682 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Morris Ian 2012 The Evolutioin of War Cliodynamics 3 9 37 Diamond Jared M 1997 Guns germs and steel The fates of human societies 1st ed New York W W Norton pp vi 6 12 ISBN 0 393 03891 2 OCLC 35792200 Diamond Jared M 1997 Guns germs and steel The fates of human societies 1st ed New York W W Norton pp 62 158 ISBN 0 393 03891 2 OCLC 35792200 Diamond Jared M 1997 Guns germs and steel The fates of human societies 1st ed New York W W Norton p 10 ISBN 0 393 03891 2 OCLC 35792200 Diamond Jared M 1997 Guns germs and steel The fates of human societies 1st ed New York W W Norton p 352 ISBN 0 393 03891 2 OCLC 35792200 Tilly Charles 1990 Coercion capital and European states AD 990 1990 Cambridge MA B Blackwell p 76 ISBN 1 55786 067 X OCLC 20170025 see 20 28 Tilly Charles 1990 Coercion capital and European states AD 990 1990 Cambridge MA B Blackwell pp 67 95 ISBN 1 55786 067 X OCLC 20170025 Yoffee Norman 2005 Myths of the archaic state evolution of the earliest cities states and civilizations Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 2 ISBN 0 511 08109 X OCLC 252514212 Cited sources editSztompka Piotr 2002 Socjologia Znak ISBN 83 240 0218 9 Bibliography editThe Philosophy of Positivism Jared Diamond The World until Yesterday What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies Penguin Books 2012 ISBN 978 0 141 02448 6 Sztompka Piotr The Sociology of Social Change Blackwell Publishers 1994 ISBN 0 631 18206 3 Trigger Bruce Sociocultural Evolution Calculation and Contingency New Perspectives on the Past Blackwell Publishers 1998 ISBN 1 55786 977 4 Stocking George Victorian Anthropology Free Press 1991 ISBN 0 02 931551 4 Evans Pritchard Sir Edward A History of Anthropological Thought 1981 Basic Books Inc New York Graber Robert B A Scientific Model of Social and Cultural Evolution 1995 Thomas Jefferson University Press Kirksville MO Harris Marvin The Rise of Anthropological Theory A History of Theories of Culture 1968 Thomas Y Crowell New York Hatch Elvin Theories of Man and Culture 1973 Columbia University Press New York Hays H R From Ape to Angel An Informal History of Social Anthropology 1965 Alfred A Knopf New York Johnson Allen W and Earle Timothy The Evolution of Human Societies From Foraging Group to Agrarian State 1987 Stanford University Press Kaplan David and Manners Robert Culture Theory 1972 Waveland Press Inc Prospect Heights Illinois Kuklick Henrika The Savage Within The Social History of British Anthropology 1885 1945 1991 Cambridge University Press Cambridge McGilchrist Iain The Master and His Emissary The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World 2009 Yale University Press US and London Mesoudi A 2007 Using the methods of experimental social psychology to study cultural evolution Journal of Social Evolutionary amp Cultural Psychology 1 2 35 58 Full text Mesoudi A Cultural Evolution How Darwinian Theory Can Explain Human Culture and Synthesize the Social Sciences 2011 University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 52044 5 Morgan John Henry In the Beginning The Paleolithic Origins of Religious Consciousness 2007 Cloverdale Books South Bend ISBN 978 1 929569 41 0 Raoul Naroll and William T Divale 1976 Natural Selection in Cultural Evolution Warfare versus Peaceful Diffusion American Ethnologist 3 97 128 Segal Daniel 2000 Western Civ and the Staging of History in American Higher Education The American Historical Review Vol 105 No 3 Jun 2000 pp 770 805 doi 10 2307 2651809 Seymour Smith Charlotte Macmillan Dictionary of Anthropology 1986 Macmillan New York Stocking Jr George W Race Culture and Evolution Essays in the History of Anthropology 1968 The Free Press New York Stocking Jr George W After Tylor British Social Anthropology 1888 1951 1995 The University of Wisconsin Press Winthrop Robert H Dictionary of Concepts in Cultural Anthropology 1991 Greenwood Press New York Readings from an evolutionary anthropological perspective edit Two special issues on the evolution of culture Evolutionary Anthropology Issues News and Reviews Volume 12 Issue 2 Pages 57 108 April 2003 The evolution of culture New perspectives and evidence p 57 60 Charles H Janson Eric A Smith Making space for traditions p 61 70 Dorothy Fragaszy Traditions in monkeys p 71 81 Susan Perry Joseph H Manson Is culture a golden barrier between human and chimpanzee p 82 91 Christophe Boesch Cultural panthropology p 92 105 Andrew Whiten Victoria Horner Sarah Marshall Pescini The fossil record Human and nonhuman p 106 108 Eric Delson Evolutionary Anthropology Issues News and Reviews Volume 12 Issue 3 Pages 109 159 2003 On stony ground Lithic technology human evolution and the emergence of culture p 109 122 Robert Foley Marta Mirazon Lahr The evolution of cultural evolution p 123 135 Joseph Henrich Richard McElreath The adaptive nature of culture p 136 149 Michael S Alvard Do animals have culture p 150 159 Kevin N Laland William HoppittExternal links editSociocultural evolution on Principia Cybernetica Web Classical Sociological Theory Comte and Spencer Secular Cycles and Millennial Trends Portals nbsp Evolutionary biology nbsp Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sociocultural evolution amp oldid 1205770004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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