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From biology to culture to the new new economy, the buzzword on everyone's lips is "meme." How do animals learn things? How does human culture evolve? How does viral marketing work? The answer to these disparate questions and even to what is the nature of thought itself is, simply, the meme. For decades researchers have been convinced that memes were The Next Big Thing for the understanding of society and ourselves. But no one has so far been able to define what they are. Until now.
Here, for the first time, Robert Aunger outlines what a meme physically is, how memes originated, how they developed, and how they have made our brains into their survival systems. They are thoughts. They are parasites. They are in control. A meme is a distinct pattern of electrical charges in a node in our brains that reproduces a thousand times faster than a bacterium. Memes have found ways to leap from one brain to another. A number of them are being replicated in your brain as you read this paragraph.
In 1976 the biologist Richard Dawkins suggested that all animals -- including humans -- are puppets and that genes hold the strings. That is, we are robots serving as life support for the genes that control us. And all they want to do is replicate themselves. But then, we do lots of things that don't seem to help genes replicate. We decide not to have children, we waste our time doing dangerous things like mountain climbing, or boring things like reading, or stupid things like smoking that don't seem to help genes get copied into the next generation. We do all sorts of cultural things for reasons that don't seem to have anything to do with genes. Fashions in sports, books, clothes, ideas, politics, lifestyles come and go and give our lives meaning, so how can we be gene robots?
Dawkins recognized that something else was going on. We communicate with one another and we get ideas, and these ideas seem to have a life of their own. Maybe there was something called memes that were like thought genes. Maybe our bodies were gene robots and our minds were meme robots. That would mean that what we think is not the result of our own creativity, but rather the result of the evolutionary flow of memes as they wash through us.
What is the biological reality of an idea with a life of its own? What is a thought gene? It's a meme. And no one before Robert Aunger has established what it physically must be. This elegant, paradigm-shifting analysis identifies how memes replicate in our brains, how they evolved, and how they use artifacts like books and photographs and advertisements to get from one brain to another. Destined to inflame arguments about free will, open doors to new ways of sharing our thoughts, and provide a revolutionary explanation of consciousness, The Electric Meme will change the way each of us thinks about our minds, our cultures, and our daily choices.
Here, for the first time, Robert Aunger outlines what a meme physically is, how memes originated, how they developed, and how they have made our brains into their survival systems. They are thoughts. They are parasites. They are in control. A meme is a distinct pattern of electrical charges in a node in our brains that reproduces a thousand times faster than a bacterium. Memes have found ways to leap from one brain to another. A number of them are being replicated in your brain as you read this paragraph.
In 1976 the biologist Richard Dawkins suggested that all animals -- including humans -- are puppets and that genes hold the strings. That is, we are robots serving as life support for the genes that control us. And all they want to do is replicate themselves. But then, we do lots of things that don't seem to help genes replicate. We decide not to have children, we waste our time doing dangerous things like mountain climbing, or boring things like reading, or stupid things like smoking that don't seem to help genes get copied into the next generation. We do all sorts of cultural things for reasons that don't seem to have anything to do with genes. Fashions in sports, books, clothes, ideas, politics, lifestyles come and go and give our lives meaning, so how can we be gene robots?
Dawkins recognized that something else was going on. We communicate with one another and we get ideas, and these ideas seem to have a life of their own. Maybe there was something called memes that were like thought genes. Maybe our bodies were gene robots and our minds were meme robots. That would mean that what we think is not the result of our own creativity, but rather the result of the evolutionary flow of memes as they wash through us.
What is the biological reality of an idea with a life of its own? What is a thought gene? It's a meme. And no one before Robert Aunger has established what it physically must be. This elegant, paradigm-shifting analysis identifies how memes replicate in our brains, how they evolved, and how they use artifacts like books and photographs and advertisements to get from one brain to another. Destined to inflame arguments about free will, open doors to new ways of sharing our thoughts, and provide a revolutionary explanation of consciousness, The Electric Meme will change the way each of us thinks about our minds, our cultures, and our daily choices.
From biology to culture to the new new economy, the buzzword on everyone's lips is "meme." How do animals learn things? How does human culture evolve? How does viral marketing work? The answer to these disparate questions and even to what is the nature of thought itself is, simply, the meme. For decades researchers have been convinced that memes were The Next Big Thing for the understanding of society and ourselves. But no one has so far been able to define what they are. Until now.
Here, for the first time, Robert Aunger outlines what a meme physically is, how memes originated, how they developed, and how they have made our brains into their survival systems. They are thoughts. They are parasites. They are in control. A meme is a distinct pattern of electrical charges in a node in our brains that reproduces a thousand times faster than a bacterium. Memes have found ways to leap from one brain to another. A number of them are being replicated in your brain as you read this paragraph.
In 1976 the biologist Richard Dawkins suggested that all animals -- including humans -- are puppets and that genes hold the strings. That is, we are robots serving as life support for the genes that control us. And all they want to do is replicate themselves. But then, we do lots of things that don't seem to help genes replicate. We decide not to have children, we waste our time doing dangerous things like mountain climbing, or boring things like reading, or stupid things like smoking that don't seem to help genes get copied into the next generation. We do all sorts of cultural things for reasons that don't seem to have anything to do with genes. Fashions in sports, books, clothes, ideas, politics, lifestyles come and go and give our lives meaning, so how can we be gene robots?
Dawkins recognized that something else was going on. We communicate with one another and we get ideas, and these ideas seem to have a life of their own. Maybe there was something called memes that were like thought genes. Maybe our bodies were gene robots and our minds were meme robots. That would mean that what we think is not the result of our own creativity, but rather the result of the evolutionary flow of memes as they wash through us.
What is the biological reality of an idea with a life of its own? What is a thought gene? It's a meme. And no one before Robert Aunger has established what it physically must be. This elegant, paradigm-shifting analysis identifies how memes replicate in our brains, how they evolved, and how they use artifacts like books and photographs and advertisements to get from one brain to another. Destined to inflame arguments about free will, open doors to new ways of sharing our thoughts, and provide a revolutionary explanation of consciousness, The Electric Meme will change the way each of us thinks about our minds, our cultures, and our daily choices.
Here, for the first time, Robert Aunger outlines what a meme physically is, how memes originated, how they developed, and how they have made our brains into their survival systems. They are thoughts. They are parasites. They are in control. A meme is a distinct pattern of electrical charges in a node in our brains that reproduces a thousand times faster than a bacterium. Memes have found ways to leap from one brain to another. A number of them are being replicated in your brain as you read this paragraph.
In 1976 the biologist Richard Dawkins suggested that all animals -- including humans -- are puppets and that genes hold the strings. That is, we are robots serving as life support for the genes that control us. And all they want to do is replicate themselves. But then, we do lots of things that don't seem to help genes replicate. We decide not to have children, we waste our time doing dangerous things like mountain climbing, or boring things like reading, or stupid things like smoking that don't seem to help genes get copied into the next generation. We do all sorts of cultural things for reasons that don't seem to have anything to do with genes. Fashions in sports, books, clothes, ideas, politics, lifestyles come and go and give our lives meaning, so how can we be gene robots?
Dawkins recognized that something else was going on. We communicate with one another and we get ideas, and these ideas seem to have a life of their own. Maybe there was something called memes that were like thought genes. Maybe our bodies were gene robots and our minds were meme robots. That would mean that what we think is not the result of our own creativity, but rather the result of the evolutionary flow of memes as they wash through us.
What is the biological reality of an idea with a life of its own? What is a thought gene? It's a meme. And no one before Robert Aunger has established what it physically must be. This elegant, paradigm-shifting analysis identifies how memes replicate in our brains, how they evolved, and how they use artifacts like books and photographs and advertisements to get from one brain to another. Destined to inflame arguments about free will, open doors to new ways of sharing our thoughts, and provide a revolutionary explanation of consciousness, The Electric Meme will change the way each of us thinks about our minds, our cultures, and our daily choices.
Über den Autor
Robert Aunger
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents
Introduction
Chapter One: In the Middle of a Muddle
Genes and Germs
Memes in the Muddle
Chapter Two: A Special Kind of Inheritance
What Is Culture?
Sociobiology
Evolutionary Psychology
Punching the Buttons on the Jukebox of Life
Transmission Happens
Cultural Selectionism
Who's in Charge?
Rescuing Memes
Chapter Three: Adding Rooms to Darwin's House
Expanding the Living Room
A Darwinian Universe?
Replicators, Interactors, and Lineages
The Replication Reaction
Chapter Four: The Replicator Zoo
Spongy Gray Matter
Survival of the Prions
Attack of the Binaries
A Day in the Life of a Comp-Virus
Classifying Viruses
Evolution Inside a Computer
From Floppy to Hard
Learning to Network
Accounting for History
Survival of the Comp-Viruses
Convert Thy Neighbor
Chapter Five: The Data on Information
Information Is Physical
The Nature of Biological Information
The Sticky Replicator Principle
The Same Influence Rule
At Detour's End
Chapter Six: Stalking the Wild Meme
The Quest Begins
Einstein's Tea Party
A Home for Memes?
Chapter Seven: Memes as a State of Mind
Getting More Nervous with Time
The Plastic Brain
The Millisecond Meme
The Neuromeme Defined
La Meme Chose
Stationary Memes
Memes in Motion
Thinking in "Meme-Time"
Reasons for Replicating
How Memes Qualify as Replicators
Selection on Signals for Memes
The Meaning of Memes
The First and Last Meme
Nice Parasites
Why Do We Have Big Brains Anyway?
Chapter Eight: Escape from Planet Brain
Mind the Gap
Signals as Interactors
Signals as Phenotypes
Signals as "Instigators"
Ecological Selection on Signals
The Richness of the Response
Never Mind the Gap
Rethinking Communication
Imitation, Schmimitation
Chapter Nine: The Techno-Tango
Artifacts as Phenotypes
Artifacts as Interactors
Artifacts as Signal Templates
Communicative Artifacts
Artifacts as Replicators
The Machining of Culture
A Darwinian Duet
Who's in Control Now?
Rethinking Culture
Chapter Ten: Rethinking Replication
Biology versus Culture
The Big Picture
Chapter Eleven: The Revolution of Memes
The Evolution of Memes
The Revelation of Memes
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
Introduction
Chapter One: In the Middle of a Muddle
Genes and Germs
Memes in the Muddle
Chapter Two: A Special Kind of Inheritance
What Is Culture?
Sociobiology
Evolutionary Psychology
Punching the Buttons on the Jukebox of Life
Transmission Happens
Cultural Selectionism
Who's in Charge?
Rescuing Memes
Chapter Three: Adding Rooms to Darwin's House
Expanding the Living Room
A Darwinian Universe?
Replicators, Interactors, and Lineages
The Replication Reaction
Chapter Four: The Replicator Zoo
Spongy Gray Matter
Survival of the Prions
Attack of the Binaries
A Day in the Life of a Comp-Virus
Classifying Viruses
Evolution Inside a Computer
From Floppy to Hard
Learning to Network
Accounting for History
Survival of the Comp-Viruses
Convert Thy Neighbor
Chapter Five: The Data on Information
Information Is Physical
The Nature of Biological Information
The Sticky Replicator Principle
The Same Influence Rule
At Detour's End
Chapter Six: Stalking the Wild Meme
The Quest Begins
Einstein's Tea Party
A Home for Memes?
Chapter Seven: Memes as a State of Mind
Getting More Nervous with Time
The Plastic Brain
The Millisecond Meme
The Neuromeme Defined
La Meme Chose
Stationary Memes
Memes in Motion
Thinking in "Meme-Time"
Reasons for Replicating
How Memes Qualify as Replicators
Selection on Signals for Memes
The Meaning of Memes
The First and Last Meme
Nice Parasites
Why Do We Have Big Brains Anyway?
Chapter Eight: Escape from Planet Brain
Mind the Gap
Signals as Interactors
Signals as Phenotypes
Signals as "Instigators"
Ecological Selection on Signals
The Richness of the Response
Never Mind the Gap
Rethinking Communication
Imitation, Schmimitation
Chapter Nine: The Techno-Tango
Artifacts as Phenotypes
Artifacts as Interactors
Artifacts as Signal Templates
Communicative Artifacts
Artifacts as Replicators
The Machining of Culture
A Darwinian Duet
Who's in Control Now?
Rethinking Culture
Chapter Ten: Rethinking Replication
Biology versus Culture
The Big Picture
Chapter Eleven: The Revolution of Memes
The Evolution of Memes
The Revelation of Memes
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2010 |
---|---|
Fachbereich: | Allgemeines |
Genre: | Importe, Psychologie |
Rubrik: | Geisteswissenschaften |
Thema: | Lexika |
Medium: | Taschenbuch |
ISBN-13: | 9781451612950 |
ISBN-10: | 1451612958 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Ausstattung / Beilage: | Paperback |
Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
Autor: | Aunger, Robert |
Hersteller: | Free Press |
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: | Books on Demand GmbH, In de Tarpen 42, D-22848 Norderstedt, info@bod.de |
Maße: | 229 x 152 x 24 mm |
Von/Mit: | Robert Aunger |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 13.07.2010 |
Gewicht: | 0,65 kg |
Über den Autor
Robert Aunger
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents
Introduction
Chapter One: In the Middle of a Muddle
Genes and Germs
Memes in the Muddle
Chapter Two: A Special Kind of Inheritance
What Is Culture?
Sociobiology
Evolutionary Psychology
Punching the Buttons on the Jukebox of Life
Transmission Happens
Cultural Selectionism
Who's in Charge?
Rescuing Memes
Chapter Three: Adding Rooms to Darwin's House
Expanding the Living Room
A Darwinian Universe?
Replicators, Interactors, and Lineages
The Replication Reaction
Chapter Four: The Replicator Zoo
Spongy Gray Matter
Survival of the Prions
Attack of the Binaries
A Day in the Life of a Comp-Virus
Classifying Viruses
Evolution Inside a Computer
From Floppy to Hard
Learning to Network
Accounting for History
Survival of the Comp-Viruses
Convert Thy Neighbor
Chapter Five: The Data on Information
Information Is Physical
The Nature of Biological Information
The Sticky Replicator Principle
The Same Influence Rule
At Detour's End
Chapter Six: Stalking the Wild Meme
The Quest Begins
Einstein's Tea Party
A Home for Memes?
Chapter Seven: Memes as a State of Mind
Getting More Nervous with Time
The Plastic Brain
The Millisecond Meme
The Neuromeme Defined
La Meme Chose
Stationary Memes
Memes in Motion
Thinking in "Meme-Time"
Reasons for Replicating
How Memes Qualify as Replicators
Selection on Signals for Memes
The Meaning of Memes
The First and Last Meme
Nice Parasites
Why Do We Have Big Brains Anyway?
Chapter Eight: Escape from Planet Brain
Mind the Gap
Signals as Interactors
Signals as Phenotypes
Signals as "Instigators"
Ecological Selection on Signals
The Richness of the Response
Never Mind the Gap
Rethinking Communication
Imitation, Schmimitation
Chapter Nine: The Techno-Tango
Artifacts as Phenotypes
Artifacts as Interactors
Artifacts as Signal Templates
Communicative Artifacts
Artifacts as Replicators
The Machining of Culture
A Darwinian Duet
Who's in Control Now?
Rethinking Culture
Chapter Ten: Rethinking Replication
Biology versus Culture
The Big Picture
Chapter Eleven: The Revolution of Memes
The Evolution of Memes
The Revelation of Memes
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
Introduction
Chapter One: In the Middle of a Muddle
Genes and Germs
Memes in the Muddle
Chapter Two: A Special Kind of Inheritance
What Is Culture?
Sociobiology
Evolutionary Psychology
Punching the Buttons on the Jukebox of Life
Transmission Happens
Cultural Selectionism
Who's in Charge?
Rescuing Memes
Chapter Three: Adding Rooms to Darwin's House
Expanding the Living Room
A Darwinian Universe?
Replicators, Interactors, and Lineages
The Replication Reaction
Chapter Four: The Replicator Zoo
Spongy Gray Matter
Survival of the Prions
Attack of the Binaries
A Day in the Life of a Comp-Virus
Classifying Viruses
Evolution Inside a Computer
From Floppy to Hard
Learning to Network
Accounting for History
Survival of the Comp-Viruses
Convert Thy Neighbor
Chapter Five: The Data on Information
Information Is Physical
The Nature of Biological Information
The Sticky Replicator Principle
The Same Influence Rule
At Detour's End
Chapter Six: Stalking the Wild Meme
The Quest Begins
Einstein's Tea Party
A Home for Memes?
Chapter Seven: Memes as a State of Mind
Getting More Nervous with Time
The Plastic Brain
The Millisecond Meme
The Neuromeme Defined
La Meme Chose
Stationary Memes
Memes in Motion
Thinking in "Meme-Time"
Reasons for Replicating
How Memes Qualify as Replicators
Selection on Signals for Memes
The Meaning of Memes
The First and Last Meme
Nice Parasites
Why Do We Have Big Brains Anyway?
Chapter Eight: Escape from Planet Brain
Mind the Gap
Signals as Interactors
Signals as Phenotypes
Signals as "Instigators"
Ecological Selection on Signals
The Richness of the Response
Never Mind the Gap
Rethinking Communication
Imitation, Schmimitation
Chapter Nine: The Techno-Tango
Artifacts as Phenotypes
Artifacts as Interactors
Artifacts as Signal Templates
Communicative Artifacts
Artifacts as Replicators
The Machining of Culture
A Darwinian Duet
Who's in Control Now?
Rethinking Culture
Chapter Ten: Rethinking Replication
Biology versus Culture
The Big Picture
Chapter Eleven: The Revolution of Memes
The Evolution of Memes
The Revelation of Memes
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2010 |
---|---|
Fachbereich: | Allgemeines |
Genre: | Importe, Psychologie |
Rubrik: | Geisteswissenschaften |
Thema: | Lexika |
Medium: | Taschenbuch |
ISBN-13: | 9781451612950 |
ISBN-10: | 1451612958 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Ausstattung / Beilage: | Paperback |
Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
Autor: | Aunger, Robert |
Hersteller: | Free Press |
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: | Books on Demand GmbH, In de Tarpen 42, D-22848 Norderstedt, info@bod.de |
Maße: | 229 x 152 x 24 mm |
Von/Mit: | Robert Aunger |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 13.07.2010 |
Gewicht: | 0,65 kg |
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