Article

Culture, Embodiment and Genes: Unravelling the Triple Helix

Details

Citation

Wheeler M & Clark A (2008) Culture, Embodiment and Genes: Unravelling the Triple Helix. Philosophical Transactions B: Biological Sciences, 363 (1509), pp. 3563-3575. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2008.0135

Abstract
Much recent work stresses the role of embodiment and action in thought and reason, and celebrates the power of transmitted cultural and environmental structures to transform the problem-solving activity required of individual brains. By apparent contrast, much work in evolutionary psychology has stressed the selective fit of the biological brain to an ancestral environment of evolutionary adaptedness, with an attendant stress upon the limitations and cognitive biases that result. On the face of it, this suggests either a tension or, at least, a mismatch, with the symbiotic dyad of cultural evolution and embodied cognition. In what follows, we explore this mismatch by focusing on three key ideas: cognitive niche construction; cognitive modularity; and the existence (or otherwise) of an evolved universal human nature. An appreciation of the power and scope of the first, combined with consequently more nuanced visions of the latter two, allow us to begin to glimpse a much richer vision of the combined interactive potency of biological and cultural evolution for active, embodied agents.

Keywords
cultural transmission; embodied cognition; nich construction; evolutionary psychology; Modularity; neuroconstructivism

Journal
Philosophical Transactions B: Biological Sciences: Volume 363, Issue 1509

StatusPublished
Publication date30/11/2008
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/807
PublisherRoyal Society Publishing
ISSN0962-8436

People (1)

People

Professor Michael Wheeler

Professor Michael Wheeler

Professor, Philosophy