The Principles of Social EvolutionClarendon Press, 1986 - 412 Seiten Dispelling the general assumption that social institutions survive because of their sophisticated adaptive advantages, this ground-breaking work asserts that the commonest customs and institutions may endure because of their very simplicity or as a result of simple human proclivity. Using religious, military, and kinship institutions to illustrate this argument, the author shows that a precise combination of these factors may lead to the emergence of new forms of social evolution. |
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Seite 25
... properties shared by social and biological systems but the difference between these systems , and hence between their respective ' structuralisms ' , are just as important as the similarities . According to Piaget , ' . . . the notion ...
... properties shared by social and biological systems but the difference between these systems , and hence between their respective ' structuralisms ' , are just as important as the similarities . According to Piaget , ' . . . the notion ...
Seite 214
... properties of evolution ; this can only be explained by the properties of the institutions themselves . It will also be remarked that I have given a highly abstract analysis of these institutions . In any real society , however , they ...
... properties of evolution ; this can only be explained by the properties of the institutions themselves . It will also be remarked that I have given a highly abstract analysis of these institutions . In any real society , however , they ...
Seite 373
... properties of institutions , and the fact that the same institutions may be adopted for a variety of different reasons . As a result , agriculture , lineal descent , primogeniture , ritual authority , and war leadership , for example ...
... properties of institutions , and the fact that the same institutions may be adopted for a variety of different reasons . As a result , agriculture , lineal descent , primogeniture , ritual authority , and war leadership , for example ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 1 |
Darwinism and Social Evolution | 29 |
The Survival of the Mediocre | 81 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adaptive anthropology aspects assembly associated authority basic basis become belief biological centralized Chapter Chinese clan clear clearly closely competition concept consider course culture dependent descent distinction early economic effective environment especially essential established evidence evolutionary example existence explain fact force forms functions give groups human ibid idea importance increase individual Indo-European institutions involved kind king kinship Konso land less maintain major means military nature necessary noted officials organization origin particular period person political population possible practice Press priests primitive principles problem produce properties reasons refer regard relations relative religious requirements result ritual rules seems selection sense significance simply social evolution social organization society specific status structure success theory thought traits unit University warfare warriors whole