Egenis seminar: "Methodological difficulties in explaining human culture"
With Dr Saira Khan (University of Bristol)
Egenis seminar series
| An Egenis, the Centre for the Study of Life Sciences seminar | |
|---|---|
| Date | 3 November 2025 |
| Time | 15:15 to 17:00 |
| Place | Hybrid |
Event details
Abstract
Cumulative cultural evolution occurs when modifications to cultural artefacts and practices are preserved over generations, leading to successive improvement. Human cumulative culture is thought to be unique. Theorists often attribute this uniqueness to either human-specific technical cognition or social cognition. I argue that attempts to determine the cognitive "difference-maker" between human and animal culture which rely on developmental and experimental psychology are flawed. In particular, they pose methodological difficulties in making inferences from modern humans to our ancestors, and encourage "magic-bullet" style thinking. I propose narrative explanations as an alternative methodology.
Venue: Byrne House, Streatham Campus, Exeter (limited spaces)
Online: via Zoom
Free to attend. Register here


