IntroductionAssembled life. A natural history of societies

  1. Peretó, Juli 1
  2. Bertranpetit, Jaume 2
  1. 1 University of Valencia (Spain).
  2. 2 Pompeu Fabra University (UPF) in Barcelona (Spain).
Aldizkaria:
Mètode Science Studies Journal: Annual Review

ISSN: 2174-3487 2174-9221

Argitalpen urtea: 2023

Zenbakien izenburua: Science. The Genesis of Ideas

Zenbakia: 13

Mota: Artikulua

DOI: 10.7203/METODE.13.24679 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openSarbide irekia editor

Beste argitalpen batzuk: Mètode Science Studies Journal: Annual Review

Garapen Iraunkorreko Helburuak

Laburpena

Evolutionary biology provides explanations for the natural and remote origins of cooperation, as well as for the cognitive revolution associated with the emergence of the human species and its characterising social organisation. To understand the foundations of this human social organisation, we need to look for the adaptive advantages that social structures may have provided in the history of life, and understand which of these qualities appear to follow genuine biological vectors. Undoubtedly, human cognitive skills have allowed us to go even further and the increase in the complexity of social structures also followed an independent process, based on what would later be called economics and power structures, and initially rooted in a distinctively human trait, cumulative culture. It is now a matter of debate whether the behaviours from the earliest hunter-gatherer settlements to today’s large urban structures are truly biologically rooted. Building on the evolutionary basis of cooperation, this monograph looks at human social structures, from the most ancient and simple to the most complex of modern societies.