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Four misunderstandings about cultural attraction
Authors:Thom Scott‐Phillips  Stefaan Blancke  Christophe Heintz
Institution:1. Department of Cognitive Science, Central European University, Budapest, Hungary;2. Department of Anthropology, Durham University, Durham, United Kingdom;3. Department of Philosophy and Moral Science, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
Abstract:Cultural attraction theory (CAT) is a research agenda the purpose of which is to develop causal explanations of cultural phenomena. CAT is also an evolutionary approach to culture, in the sense that it treats culture as a population of items of different types, with the frequency of tokens of those types changing over time. Now more than 20 years old, CAT has made many positive contributions, theoretical and empirical, to the naturalization of the social sciences. In consequence of this growing impact, CAT has, in recent years, been the subject of critical discussion. Here, we review and respond to these critiques. In so doing, we also provide a clear and concise introduction to CAT. We give clear characterizations of CAT's key theoretical notions, and we outline how these notions are derived from consideration of the natural character of cultural phenomena (Box 1 ). This naturalistic quality distinguishes CAT from other evolutionary approaches to culture.
Keywords:cognition  culture  cultural attraction  cultural evolution  evolution
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