Therefore, memes, such as knowledge, — Pinprick
Obviously genes are not selfish, and do not try to survive or multiply. — unenlightened
in the modern world, the physical traits/characteristics that we are born with no longer seem that necessary for us to survive. We no longer need to be athletic in any sense of the word to survive and reproduce. The same can generally be said for our intelligence and even health to a large extent. — Pinprick
in the modern world, the physical traits/characteristics that we are born with no longer seem that necessary for us to survive. — Pinprick
Likewise, corporations are not selfish (they literally aren't persons) and do not try to survive or help their shareholders to multiply. — Nils Loc
Memes as conceived by Dawkins are not knowledge but propaganda. — unenlightened
There is a relation for sure. I don’t believe Dawkins even mentions propaganda in the chapter on memes does he? — I like sushi
If you think about it, comparing memes to genes amounts to breathing life into the former - it creates an image of memes as living entities with the purpose to copy themselves ASAP onto the next available brain. Is this what you had in mind? — TheMadFool
Another way of thinking about this would be to say that our genetic inheritance can no longer cause us to be evolutionarily unfit. What would make us unfit would be if somehow we failed to pass on our knowledge of science, medicine, etc. — Pinprick
Curious comparison. Dawkins wants to explain human behaviour in terms of attributes of particles of human make-up that entirely lack such behaviour. Whereas you are objecting to explaining the behaviour of the whole (corporation) in terms of the actual behaviour its parts, (people). It seems a more reasonable project. — unenlightened
Not really. I always thought memes were simply things other than genes that are passed down from generation to generation. This could be your mom’s recipe for meatloaf, how to throw a curveball, language, etc. Basically anything that is taught and learned. Maybe I’m wrong in calling information passed down from generation to generation memes, but I’d like to discuss it regardless. So, my thought was that at this point in time the skills that we learn seem to what is most necessary for our survival. For example, a person can be born with any number of physical and/or mental disabilities, which would have been a death sentence for our ancestors, but now, thanks to modern medicine, psychology, etc. that person can live much longer, and possibly even procreate. Even if the physical act of sex is impossible due to whatever disability the person has, the person can still pass on his/her DNA to an offspring using various medical fertilization techniques.
Another way of thinking about this would be to say that our genetic inheritance can no longer cause us to be evolutionarily unfit. What would make us unfit would be if somehow we failed to pass on our knowledge of science, medicine, etc. — Pinprick
“I have been a bit negative about memes, but they have their cheerful side as well. When we die there are two things we can leave behind us: genes and memes. We are built as gene machines, created to pass on our genes. But that aspect of us will be forgotten in three generations. Your child, even your grandchild, may bear a resemblance to you, perhaps in facial features, in talent for music, in the colur of her hair. But as each generation passes, the contribution of your genes is halved. It does not take long to reach negligible proportions. Our genes may be immortal but the collection of genes that is any one of us is bound to crumble away. Elizabeth II is a direct descendant of William the Conquered. Yet it is quite probable that she bears not a single one of the old king’s genes. We should not seek immortality in reproduction.
But if you contribute to the world’s culture, if you have a good idea, compose a tune, invent a sparking plug, write a poem, it may live on, intact, long after your genes have dissolved in the common pool. Socrates may or may not have a gene or two alive in the world today, as G.C. Williams has remarked, but who cares? The meme-complexes of Socrates, Leonardo, Copernicus and Marconi are still going strong.
However speculative my development of the theory of memes may be, there is one serious point which I would like to emphasize once again. This is that when we look at the evolution of cultural traits and at their their survival value, we must be clear whose survival we are talking about ...”
- Dawkins, The Selfish Gene (p.199)
But as each generation passes, the contribution of your genes is halved. It does not take long to reach negligible proportions.
Yup!A false idea almost certainly qualifies as a meme, but a meme doesn’t necessarily qualify as a false idea. — I like sushi
The same can generally be said for our intelligence and even health to a large extent. — Pinprick
Our genes allow us to have memes, but our memes don’t allow us to have genes. — I like sushi
Now you’ve shifted the discussion to the disproved position of the tabla rasa (empty slate). If someone is born and denied sensory experience or help they certainly won’t go far and die quickly. That has very little to do with memes and more to do with basic sustenance.
You seem to be equates memes with experience. That is patently false. — I like sushi
Why wouldn't basic knowledge about how to survive constitute learned knowledge, culture (memes)? — Nils Loc
Now you’ve shifted the discussion to the disproved position of the tabla rasa (empty slate). — I like sushi
If someone is born and denied sensory experience or help they certainly won’t go far and die quickly. That has very little to do with memes and more to do with basic sustenance. — I like sushi
You seem to be equates memes with experience. — I like sushi
The point here being that there is a latent capacity, a genetic predisposition, that allow adaptive behaviors. — I like sushi
However speculative my development of the theory of memes may be, there is one serious point which I would like to emphasize once again. This is that when we look at the evolution of cultural traits and at their their survival value, we must be clear whose survival we are talking about
Okay, I think I see. You’re proposing a hypothetical where ALL culture/memes are removed. — I like sushi
Interesting thought. I don’t see how some form of cohesive culture wouldn’t come into being relatively quickly - with a generation or two. I’d love to hear a counter argument to my speculation though. — I like sushi
The root of ‘meme’ was the Greek ‘mimetic’ which means ‘imitation’. This is something all humans do instinctively I’d argue - one example being a new born (within minutes) actively tries to mimic adult facial expressions. — I like sushi
Adaptive behaviors adapt from an original behavior. In terms of memes, those memes that have a strong ability to latch onto human psychology - for better or worse for the human, as with the survival of genes - survive. — I like sushi
Anyway, if all memes disappeared we’d make new ones through human error and misunderstanding. We’d create a new language - although some would argue language isn’t ‘innate’. — I like sushi
Parents would try and keep their children safe (instinctually protect them) and children would copy their parents and actively test them by doing something and observing their parents reaction (for signs of dis/approval). — I like sushi
Basically just imagine if you were not able to learn indirectly. — Pinprick
I’m not sure if anything resembling collective behavior could exist without memes though? — Pinprick
Yes, when we’re dealing strictly with behavior, but we can’t imitate internal states like beliefs or feelings. — Pinprick
our genes are selfish as Dawkins suggests — Pinprick
We may have the genetic predisposition to represent objects, thoughts, etc. with sounds, but not necessarily the same sounds. So how would I know what your sounds meant unless you somehow taught me? All I can do is observe you making sounds, but I don’t know what can be deduced from that. — Pinprick
I don’t know how we could if we weren’t able to teach each other. — Pinprick
That would be ‘indirectly’ in what sense? If there was no human culture/language then we’d create one via necessary interactions - we’re social beings. — I like sushi
In the broader sense you’re talking about I don’t see how ‘feeling’ and ‘beliefs’ aren’t part of behavior. A behavior necessitates a ‘feeling’/‘belief’ (albeit in a more dispassionate predictive fashion for entities like insects). — I like sushi
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