Culture and Cognition: Evolutionary Perspectives
By (Author) Bradley Franks
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
5th April 2011
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Cultural studies
303.4
Paperback
380
Width 155mm, Height 235mm
552g
Human culture depends on human minds for its creation, meaning and exchange. But minds also depend on culture for their contents and processes. Past resolutions to this circularity problem have tended to give too much weight to one side and too little weight to the other. In this groundbreaking and timely work, Bradley Franks demonstrates how a more plausible resolution to the circularity problem emerges from reframing mind and culture and their relations in evolutionary terms. He proposes an alternative evolutionary approach that draws on views of mind as embodied and situated. By grounding social construction in evolution, evolution of mind is intrinsically connected to culture resolving the circularity problem. In developing his theory, Franks provides a balanced critical assessment of modularity-based and social constructionist approaches to understanding mind and culture.
'In this breathtakingly wide-ranging survey of recent efforts to understand the relationship between mind and culture, Franks seeks a novel rapprochement between social constructionism and nativism by grounding both in an overarching evolutionary framework... This book should stimulate much debate among social scientists.' Harvey Whitehouse, Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Oxford "Is the mind a product of culture or is culture a product of the mind Clearly, both must be true, but the circularity of this observation has long impaired our understanding of the true relationship between the mind and culture. Using new insights from evolutionary theory, Bradley Frank shows how to break out of this circularity. The result is a book that should be read by a wide range of anthropologists, psychologists, and philosophers." Lee Cronk, Professor of Anthropology, Rutgers University 'As the author himself admits in his conclusion, the Circularity Problem is hardly solved here. But the sophistication of his evolutionary approach, the sheer depth and complexity of his argument, makes this book a welcome addition to an enduring issue in the human sciences.' - Michael Bloomfield, Creative Intelligence International, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
BRADLEY FRANKS is a senior lecturer in psychology at the London School of Economics. He has published widely in the areas of cognition, culture, evolutionary theory and philosophy of mind.