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What, if anything, is a Darwinian anthropology?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2004

JONATHAN MARKS
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, UNC-Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223, USAjmarks@email.uncc.edu
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Abstract

Of the diverse calls for a self-consciously ‘Darwinian’ anthropology, none is particularly satisfactory. In this paper I review five such calls and discuss their shortcomings in the light of anthropological knowledge. These are (i) the call to model cultural variation as genetic; (ii) the call to interpret all human social behaviour as ‘fitness-maximising’; (iii) the theory of memes; (iv) the use of chimpanzees as models for human behaviour; and (v) Darwinism as an evangelical ideology. I conclude with a programme for an inclusive, scientific anthropology that is consistent with Darwinian biology.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Cambridge University Press 2004

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