Agentic processes in cultural evolution: relevance to Anthropocene sustainability

Author:

Richerson Peter J.1ORCID,Boyd Robert T.2,Efferson Charles3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of California, Davis, 95616, CA, USA

2. School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Institute of Human Origins, Arizona State University, Tempe, 85281, AZ, USA

3. Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Lausanne, 1015, Lausanne, Switzerland

Abstract

Humans have evolved culturally and perhaps genetically to be unsustainable. We exhibit a deep and consistent pattern of short-term resource exploitation behaviours and institutions. We distinguish agentic and naturally selective forces in cultural evolution. Agentic forces are quite important compared to the blind forces (random variation and natural selection) in cultural evolution and gene-culture coevolution. We need to use the agentic policy-making processes to evade the impact of blind natural selection. We argue that agentic forces became important during our Pleistocene history and into the Anthropocene present. Human creativity in the form of deliberate innovations and the deliberate selective diffusion of technical and social advances drove this process forward for a long time before planetary limits became a serious issue. We review models with multiple positive feedbacks that roughly fit this observed pattern. Policy changes in the case of large-scale existential threats like climate change are made by political and diplomatic agents grasping and moving levers of institutional power in order to avoid the operation of blind natural selection and agentic forces driven by narrow or short-term goals. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Evolution and sustainability: gathering the strands for an Anthropocene synthesis’.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference107 articles.

1. Richerson PJ, Boyd R. 2010 The Darwinian theory of cultural evolution and gene-culture coevolution. In Evolution since Darwin: the first 150 years (eds MA Bell, DJ Futuyma, WF Eanes, JS Levinton). Sunderland, MA: Sinauer.

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3. Turchin P. 2015 Ultrasociety: how 10 000 years of war made humans the greatest cooperators on Earth. Los Gatos, CA: Smashwords Edition.

4. The Pace of Cultural Evolution

5. Natural selection and cultural rates of change

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1. Evolution and sustainability: gathering the strands for an Anthropocene synthesis;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-11-13

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