Logic List Mailing Archive

Workshop "Culture and Cognition"

9 Feb 2017
Goettingen, Germany

Lichtenberg-Kolleg/Historische Sternwarte  &  Leibniz Institute for Primate 
Research

Georg-August-Universität Göttingen


Workshop
Culture and Cognition

Thursday, 9 February 2017


A number of disciplines make use of the concept of culture in their analyses, 
employing it in different contexts and with varying degrees of explicitness.

Asserting her observation of a ?primitive culture? or ?proto-culture? in 
chimpanzees, Jane Goodall (1963) cautiously advanced the definition that 
culture might consist ?of behavior patterns transmitted by imitation or 
tuition.? Shortly after, Clifford Geertz (1966) described culture as ?a 
historically transmitted pattern of meanings embodied in symbols, a system of 
inherited conceptions expressed in symbolic forms by means of which men 
communicate, perpetuate, and develop their knowledge about and attitudes toward 
life.? More recently, and more generally, William McGrew (2004) defined culture 
as simply ?the way we do things.?

Notwithstanding the myriad definitions of culture, questions remain about how 
culture is related to social life, evolution, and cognitive processes on the 
individual level?e.g. in human psychology as explored in both developmental and 
cross-cultural analyses?and in the understanding of non-human behaviors such as 
social learning, imitation, and creative problem solving.

The present workshop invites scholars from anthropology, philosophy, 
primatology, psychology, and sociology, among other disciplines, to consider 
such questions as:
·      What is culture?
·      In what ways can it be studied?
·      What might be the origins of culture?
·      How is culture transmitted and transmuted?
·      What is the relationship between culture and cognition; i.e. culture and 
the mind?
·      What can comparative studies (either cross culturally or in comparative 
zoology) tell us about culture?

The goal of the workshop is to highlight interdisciplinary connections that 
will ameliorate our understanding of the phenomenon of culture and the ways in 
which this concept can enrich our analyses of cognition.

Invited Speakers:

Andrea Bender (University of Bergen),  Liah Greenfeld (Boston University), 
Olivier Morin (Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena), 
Claudio Tennie (University of Tübingen)


Attendance at the workshop is free, but space is limited. To register please 
send an email to Jan-Wilke Brandt (jan-wilke.brandt@zvw.uni-goettingen.de 
<mailto:jan-wilke.brandt@zvw.uni-goettingen.de>) by January 31.
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