Cultural Evolution and Social Ontology

£45.99

Cultural Evolution and Social Ontology

Interdisciplinary Perspectives

Philosophy of language Sociology Social and cultural anthropology Psychology Philosophy of science Zoology and animal sciences Philosophy: metaphysics and ontology Social and political philosophy The Earth: natural history: general interest

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Collection: Routledge Studies in Contemporary Philosophy

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 11th March 2026

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781040622643


Introduction

This volume explores connections between two growing and complementary fields of research: cultural evolutionary theory and social ontology. It sheds light on the ontological aspects of cultural evolution that so far have been largely neglected and raises questions for social ontology regarding the relevance of evolutionary aspects of social phenomena.

Interdisciplinary Relationship

This volume shows that cultural evolutionary theory and social ontology are complementary disciplines that, while having their own subject matter and their own research questions, illuminate each other in interesting ways. While the contributors vary in their approach to the relationship between social ontology and cultural evolution, they explore their many common themes, including power, language, agency, interaction, and social institutions and roles.

Thematic Sections

The chapters are divided into thematic sections organized around meta-perspectives on cultural evolution and social ontology, the power concept in cultural evolution and social ontology, and themes of interactions and collectives in cultural and social evolution.

Implications and Audience

Together, the chapters demonstrate how social ontology can provide critical tests of central assumptions in cultural evolutionary theory, and how cultural evolution can provide accounts of the origins of social entities.

Cultural Evolution and Social Ontology will appeal to researchers and graduate students working in cultural evolution, social ontology, metaphysics, social philosophy, philosophy of the social sciences, philosophy of biology, and philosophy of science, as well as those working in disciplines outside philosophy, such as anthropology and sociology.

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