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Brown Bag Lectures are informal, public talks that are followed by extensive dissussions. Speakers are KLI fellows or visiting researchers who are interested in presenting their work to an interdisciplinary audience and discussing it in a wider research context. The Brown Bag Lecture series was discontinued in 2014 with the KLI moving to its new premises in Klosterneuburg. In 2014 the KLI Colloquia were established as the new lecture series.

Event Details

Stephen Sterns
KLI Brown Bag
The Hierachical Evolution of Social Interactions
Steve STEARNS (Yale University and KLI)
2005-11-08 13:15 - 2005-11-08 13:15
KLI for Evolution and Cognition Research, Altenberg, Austria
Organized by KLI

Topic description:
I will focus on two questions: Are humans stalled in a major evolutionary transition? If so, do the conflicts that cause the transition to stall shape much of our current life and our past history? To introduce the discussion, I outline the theory of major transitions, illustrate conflicts among levels in hierarchical selection, lay out some evidence suggesting that humans have been subject to hierarchical selection, and mention the mechanisms that I think have been responsible. I then state the criteria by which I think good science should be judged and note how hard it is in practice to meet those criteria in the social sciences. I list and briefly evaluate the state of play in the major approaches to issues like these: kin and hierarchical selection, primarily on genes; resolution of conflict in major transitions between genes and individuals; dual-inheritance gene-culture co-evolution; game theory and behavioral economics, most dealing with behavioral phenotypes (strategies); evolutionary psychology, mostly dealing with hard-wired, special-purpose cognitive modules; and the rational choice theory of classical economics and political science. The quality of theory and evidence is quite heterogeneous among those specialties. I then suggest three possible research programs involving the history of laws, of politics, and of economics. The best one could expect of such research is an increase in the plausibility of the ideas, not a demonstration of causation. In closing I discuss some assumptions in more detail and suggest how one might begin to work on evolutionary political science.

 

Biographical note:
Stephen Stearns joined the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Yale University in 2000 after having spent 17 years in Basel, Switzerland, as Director of the Zoology Institute. At Yale he is Edward P. Bass Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and has been chair of his department since July, 2002. He received his PhD in Zoology from the University of British Columbia in 1975, was a Miller Fellow at Berkeley 1975-1978, and taught at Reed College in Portland, Oregon 1978-1983. He co-founded the European Society for Evolutionary Biology (1987) and the Tropical Biology Association (1990). Dr. Stearns' research interests are in life history evolution, evolutionary functional genomics, evolutionary ecology, evolutionary genetics, the evolution of aging, and evolutionary medicine. Dr. Stearns is currently a Visiting Fellow at the KLI.