TY - GEN
ID - cogprints3418
UR - http://cogprints.org/3418/
A1 - Gabora, Dr. Liane
Y1 - 2004/01//
N2 - An idea is not a replicator because it does not consist of coded self-assembly instructions. It may retain structure as it passes from one individual to another, but does not replicate it. The cultural replicator is not an idea but an associatively-structured network of them that together form an internal model of the world, or worldview. A worldview is a primitive, uncoded replicator, like the autocatalytic sets of polymers widely believed to be the earliest form of life. Primitive replicators generate self-similar structure, but because the process happens in a piecemeal manner, through bottom-up interactions rather than a top-down code, they replicate with low fidelity, and acquired characteristics are inherited. Just as polymers catalyze reactions that generate other polymers, the retrieval of an item from memory can in turn trigger other items, thus cross-linking memories, ideas, and concepts into an integrated conceptual structure. Worldviews evolve idea by idea, largely through social exchange. An idea participates in the evolution of culture by revealing certain aspects of the worldview that generated it, thereby affecting the worldviews of those exposed to it. If an idea influences seemingly unrelated fields this does not mean that separate cultural lineages are contaminating one another, because it is worldviews, not ideas, that are the basic unit of cultural evolution.
PB - Kluwer Academic Press
KW - associative network
KW - acquired characteristics
KW - autocatalytic closure
KW - conceptual closure
KW - culture
KW - evolution
KW - idea
KW - origin of life
KW - replicator
KW - self-replication
KW - worldview.
TI - Ideas are not replicators but minds are
SP - 127
AV - public
EP - 143
ER -