Modelling the emergence of open-ended cultural evolution
James Winters, Mathieu Charbonneau

TL;DR
This paper models how open-ended cultural evolution arises from the co-evolution of cultural systems and search spaces, emphasizing the importance of stochastic perturbations and selection-like processes for sustained resource production.
Contribution
It introduces a macro-level evolutionary model showing that open-ended cultural evolution requires co-evolution of cultural systems and search spaces with specific dynamic conditions.
Findings
Open-ended growth is rare and historically contingent.
Co-evolution of cultural systems and search spaces is essential.
Stochastic factors and selection-like processes must be balanced.
Abstract
Humans stand alone in terms of their potential to collectively and cumulatively change their culture in an open-ended manner. This open-endedness provides societies with the ability to continually expand their resources and to increase their capacity to store, transmit and process information at a collective-level. Here, we propose that the production of resources arises from the interaction between cultural systems (a society's repertoire of interdependent techniques, artifacts, norms and knowledge) and search spaces (an ensemble of needs, problems and goals facing a society). Starting from this premise we develop a macro-level model wherein both cultural systems and search spaces are subject to evolutionary dynamics. By manipulating the extent to which these dynamics are characterised by stochastic or selection-like processes, we demonstrate that open-ended growth is extremely rare,…
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