Dynamical Disequilibrium, Transformation, and the Evolution and Development of Sustainable Worldviews
Liane Gabora, Maegan Merrifield

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new theoretical framework inspired by complexity theory to understand how human culture evolves and how this understanding can guide the development of sustainable worldviews.
Contribution
It introduces a novel complexity-inspired model of cultural evolution and explores its implications for fostering sustainable worldviews and transformative individual change.
Findings
A new complexity-based framework for cultural evolution
Insights into how cultural change can be directed towards sustainability
Implications for individual transformation and sustainable habits
Abstract
This chapter begins by outlining a promising, new theoretical framework for the process by which human culture evolves inspired by the views of complexity theorists on the problem of how life began. Elements of culture, like species, evolve over time; that is, they exhibit cumulative change that is adaptive in nature. By studying how biological evolution got started, we gain insight into not just the specifics of biological evolution, but also general insights into the initiation of any evolutionary process that may be applicable to culture. We then explore the implications of this new framework for culture on the transformative processes of individuals. Specifically, we will address what this emerging perspective on cultural evolution implies for to go about attaining a sustainable worldview; that is, a web of habits, understandings, and ways of approaching situations that is conducive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · World Systems and Global Transformations · Cultural Differences and Values
