Chapter 12 talks about the evolution of cultures, Cultural evolution. Cultural evolution presumes
that over time, cultural change such as the rise of social inequalities or
emergence of agriculture occurs as a result of humans adapting to some non-cultural
stimulus, such as climate change or population growth. Cultural evolution was considered
directional, that is, as human populations transform themselves, their culture
becomes progressively complex. Today, the theory of cultural evolution is an more
complex explanations for cultural change, and for the most part archaeologists
believe that social changes are not only driven by biology or a strict
adaptation to change, but by a complex web of social, environmental, and
biological factors.
Cultures
evolve. In one sense, this is a truism; in other senses, it asserts one or another
controversial, speculative, unconfirmed theory of culture. Consider a cultural
inventory of some culture at some time--say 1900AD. It should include all the
languages, practices, ceremonies, edifices, methods, tools, myths, music, art,
and so forth, that compose that culture. Over time, that inventory changes.
Today, a hundred years later, some items will have disappeared, some
multiplied, some merged, some changed, and many new elements will appear for
the first time. A verbatim record of this changing inventory through history
would not be science; it would be a data base. That is the truism: cultures
evolve over time.
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