Below is the abstract of a forthcoming BBS target article on:
FOLK BIOLOGY AND THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF SCIENCE: COGNITIVE
UNIVERSALS AND CULTURAL PARTICULARS
by Scott Atran
This article has been accepted for publication in Behavioral and Brain
Sciences (BBS), an international, interdisciplinary journal providing
Open Peer Commentary on important and controversial current research in
the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences.
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____________________________________________________________________
FOLK BIOLOGY AND THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF SCIENCE: COGNITIVE
UNIVERSALS AND CULTURAL PARTICULARS
Scott Atran
Institute for Social Research
The University of Michigan
Ann Arbor MI 48106-1248
USA
satran(a)umich.edi
KEYWORDS: Folk biology, taxonomy, cognitive universals,
modularity, evolution, culture, Maya, anthropology
ABSTRACT: This essay in the "anthropology of science" is
about how cognition constrains culture in producing science.
The example is folk biology, whose cultural recurrence
issues from the very same domain-specific cognitive
universals that provide the historical backbone of
systematic biology. Humans everywhere think about plants and
animals in highly structured ways. People have similar
folk-biological taxonomies composed of essence-based
species-like groups and the ranking of species into lower-
and higher-order groups. Such taxonomies are not as
arbitrary in structure and content, nor as variable across
cultures, as the assembly of entities into cosmologies,
materials or social groups. These structures are routine
products of our "habits of mind," which may be in part
naturally selected to grasp relevant and recurrent "habits
of the world." An experiment illustrates that the same
taxonomic rank is preferred for making biological inferences
in two diverse populations: Lowland Maya and Midwest
Americans. These findings cannot be explained by
domain-general models of similarity because such models
cannot account for why both cultures prefer species-like
groups, despite the fact that Americans have relatively little
actual knowledge or experience at this level. This supports a
modular view of folk biology as a core domain of human
knowledge and as a special player, or "core meme," in the
selection processes by which cultures evolve. Structural
aspects of folk taxonomy provide people in different
cultures with the built-in constraints and flexibility that
allow them to understand and respond appropriately to
different cultural and ecological settings. Another set of
reasoning experiments shows that the Maya, American folk and
scientists use similarly structured taxonomies in somewhat
different ways to extend their understanding of the world in
the face of uncertainty. Although folk and scientific
taxonomies diverge historically, they continue to interact.
The theory of evolution may ultimately dispense with the
core concepts of folk biology, including species, taxonomy
and teleology; in practice, however, these may remain
indispensable for scientific work. Moreover,
theory-driven scientific knowledge cannot simply replace
folk knowledge in everyday life. Folk-biological knowledge
is not driven by implicit or inchoate theories of the sort
science aims to make more accurate and perfect.
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To help you decide whether you would be an appropriate commentator for
this article, an electronic draft is retrievable from the World Wide
Web or by anonymous ftp or gopher from the US or UK BBS Archive.
Ftp instructions follow below. Please do not prepare a commentary on
this draft. Just let us know, after having inspected it, what relevant
expertise you feel you would bring to bear on what aspect of the
article.
The URLs you can use to get to the BBS Archive:
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http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/Archive/bbs.atran.html
ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/BBS/bbs.atran
ftp://ftp.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/pub/bbs/Archive/bbs.atran
gopher://gopher.princeton.edu:70/11/.libraries/.pujournals
To retrieve a file by ftp from an Internet site, type either:
ftp
ftp.princeton.edu
or
ftp 128.112.128.1
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anonymous
Enter password as queried (your password is your actual userid:
yourlogin(a)yourhost.whatever.whatever - be sure to include the "@")
cd /pub/harnad/BBS
To show the available files, type:
ls
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get bbs.atran
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quit