Taking memetics seriously: Memetics will be what we make it (2024)

Darwinizing Culture: The Status of Memetics as a Science

Robert Aunger (ed.)

Published:

2001

Online ISBN:

9780191670473

Print ISBN:

9780192632449

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Darwinizing Culture: The Status of Memetics as a Science

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David L. Hull

David L. Hull

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Oxford Academic

Pages

43–67

  • Published:

    January 2001

Cite

Hull, David L., 'Taking memetics seriously: Memetics will be what we make it', in Robert Aunger (ed.), Darwinizing Culture: The Status of Memetics as a Science (Oxford, 2001; online edn, Oxford Academic, 22 Mar. 2012), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780192632449.003.0003, accessed 22 June 2024.

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Abstract

This chapter reports the author's personal view of what contemporary philosophy of biology has to say about memes-as-replicators. It is noted that memeticists cannot begin to understand what the science of memetics is until they produce some general beliefs about conceptual change and try to test them. One of the chief obstacles in understanding memetic evolution as a process is the hold that genes and organisms have on humans. There are also harmful consequences that the gene-organism perspective has had on memetics. The chapter also demonstrates how a series of replications can be identified from the translating of the information contained in these replicators to make a product – hom*ocatalysis versus heterocatalysis.

Keywords: memetics, replicators, genes, organisms, humans, hom*ocatalysis, heterocatalysis

Subject

Cognitive Psychology

Collection: Oxford Scholarship Online

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