New Perspectives on Organism-Environment Interactions in Anthropology

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Abstract

Anthropologists contend that the organism-environment connections responsible for human evolution are indirect—mediated by culture. This chapter reviews influential twentieth-century anthropological interpretations of the cultural mediation of human adaptations to environments, arguing that ethnography and other qualitative forms of analysis reveal important phenomena overlooked by quantitative analysts committed to methodological individualism. It highlights work by post-positivist anthropologists, who describe relations among human and non-human organisms, cultural forms, and features of environments as “natural-cultural” networks, an approach reminiscent of developmental systems theory and niche construction. Evolutionary theorists have much to gain by incorporating these sophisticated, contemporary post-positivist anthropological understandings of culture into their models of human-environment connections.

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Schultz, E. A. (2014). New Perspectives on Organism-Environment Interactions in Anthropology. In History, Philosophy and Theory of the Life Sciences (Vol. 4, pp. 79–102). Springer Science and Business Media B.V. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7067-6_5

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