Human culture is uniquely open-ended rather than uniquely cumulative.

Nat Hum Behav

Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.

Published: January 2025


Article Synopsis

  • The adaptive success of humans in nature is often attributed to unique cultural traits and their capacity for change and transmission.
  • However, the study suggests that these traits are not exclusive to human culture, indicating they might not fully account for human dominance.
  • The authors propose seven alternative explanations for human ecological success, highlighting the importance of the open-ended nature of human cultural variation and suggesting a cognitive basis for this phenomenon.

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Article Abstract

Theories of how humans came to be so ecologically dominant increasingly centre on the adaptive abilities of human culture and its capacity for cumulative change and high-fidelity transmission. Here we revisit this hypothesis by comparing human culture with animal cultures and cases of epigenetic inheritance and parental effects. We first conclude that cumulative change and high transmission fidelity are not unique to human culture as previously thought, and so they are unlikely to explain its adaptive qualities. We then evaluate the evidence for seven alternative explanations: the inheritance of acquired characters, the pathways of inheritance, the non-random generation of variation, the scope of heritable variation, effects on organismal fitness, effects on genetic fitness and effects on evolutionary dynamics. From these, we identify the open-ended scope of human cultural variation as a key, but generally neglected, phenomenon. We end by articulating a hypothesis for the cognitive basis of this open-endedness.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41562-024-02035-yDOI Listing

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