NEO-EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH
NEO-EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH
- Neoevolutionism is a social theory
that rejects some of the dogmas of earlier theories of social evolutionism
in an effort to explain the evolution of societies by drawing on Charles
Darwin's theory of evolution.
- In the 1930s, sociological
neo-evolutionism first appeared. It had significant development in the
years following World War II, and in the 1960s, both sociology and
anthropology adopted it.
- Neo-evolutionary hypotheses are
supported by data from disciplines including archaeology, paleontology,
and history. Neo-evolutionism is said to be objective and only
descriptive, excluding all allusions to a moral or cultural system of
values, according to its proponents.
- While historical particularism
regarded cultural evolutionism as unscientific in the early 20th century,
it had sought to explain how culture evolves by articulating broad
principles of its evolutionary process in the 19th century.
- Neoevolutionary theorists revived
and improved evolutionary concepts, which led to their acceptance by
modern anthropology.
- Neoevolutionism rejects many of the
tenets of traditional social evolutionism, most notably the emphasis on
social advancement that predominated earlier conceptions of sociological
evolution.
- Whether or not they are empirical
is the primary distinction between Neoevolutionism and Nineteenth-Century
Evolutionism. The new evolutionism focused on quantifiable evidence to
analyze the process of cultural evolution, unlike the evolutionism of the
nineteenth century, which depended on value judgment and assumptions.
Neoevolutionary ideas provided some sort of unifying framework for
cross-cultural study. By the late 1960s, anthropologists were once again
in full accord with evolutionary theory, largely due to their work.
THEORY OF NEOEVOLUTION: PARABOLIC CURVE
V. GORDON CHILDE
Trained archaeologist and philologist
Specialized in the study of European
prehistory
Accepted socio economic theory of Marxism
In his book ‘Social Evolution’ he explained
Evolution of culture -- Three major events
1
Invention of food production
2
Urbanization
3
Industrialization
Schemes of archaeological periods and
cultural development
Archaeological period |
Cultural development |
Paleolithic |
Savagery |
Neolithic |
Barbarism |
Copper age |
Higher Barbarism |
Early bronze age |
Civilization |
Much influenced by E.B Taylor and Morgan
Julian Steward.
v Neoevolutionist Julian Steward concentrated on how societies and
the environment interact. Steward's interests eventually shifted to
environmental impacts on societies and cultural development, despite the fact
that he had studied Historical Particularism as a graduate student in
anthropology. He suggested that similar characteristics in the evolution of
various civilizations may be explained as parallel adaptations to comparable
environmental conditions.
v The Shoshone are a Native American tribe in the Great Basin of the
Western United States, where Steward started his anthropological career. He
developed a theory that described social systems in terms of their adaptation
to technical and environmental conditions via his research of the Shoshone
civilization in the hard, arid climate. Cultural ecology is Steward's
evolutionary theory. The foundation of Julian
Steward's evolutionary theory, cultural ecology, is the notion that an
environment's resources shape a social structure. For a cultural-ecological
research, Steward suggested three fundamental approaches.
v
First,
the relationship between subsistence strategies and natural resources must be
analyzed.
v
Second,
the behavior patterns involved in a particular subsistence strategy must be
analyzed. For example, certain game is best hunted by individuals while other
game can be captured in communal hunts. These patterns of activities reveal
that different social behaviors are involved in the utilization of different
resources.
v
The
third step is to determine how these behavior patterns affect other aspects of
the society. This strategy showed that environment determines the forms of
labor in a society, which affects the entire culture of the group.
The principal concern of cultural ecology is to determine
whether cultural adaptations toward the natural environment initiate social
transformations of evolutionary change.
Steward asserted that many civilizations can independently develop
parallel traits even if he did not believe in a single universal path of
cultural progress. He uncovered numerous shared characteristics of cultural
development that are present in several civilizations living in comparable
situations by applying cultural ecology. He avoided making generalizations
about culture; instead, he dealt with similarities in a small number of
cultures and provided detailed justifications for why they exist.
Because Steward's evolutionary theory is predicated on the notion
that there are several patterns of development toward cultural complexity, the
theory is also known as multilinear evolution. Steward did not presume that all
cultures are in the same level of evolution, to put it another way. He examined
the evolutionary connections between, for instance, Mesopotamia, Egypt, China,
Mesoamerica, and the Andes. Because all of these civilizations emerged in arid
and semi-arid regions where irrigation and flood-water agriculture formed the
economic backbone, they all had similarities in the evolution of form and
function. He suggested that these commonalities result from comparable natural
settings rather than common phases of cultural development or the spread of
civilization between these places.
Leslie White (The
United States, 1900-1975)
- The notion of cultural evolution
was created by Leslie White, although most anthropologists at the time
ignored it. When Morgan's model and evolutionary theory fascinated White
in the 1920s, he began making attempts to revive the subject. White came
to the conclusion that the theory, despite its flaws, could not be
abandoned. His primary contribution was the scientific understanding he
gave to the development of culture. He came up with an approach for
assessing the level of cultural advancement.
- White first distinguished between the
three components of culture—technological, sociological, and
ideological—and asserted that the technological aspect is what drives
cultural development. The material, mechanical, physical, and chemical
instruments, as well as how humans employ these methods, make up the
technical aspect. Following is White's justification for the significance
of technology:
1. Technology is an
endeavor to find solutions to survival issues.
2. In the end, this effort entails gathering enough energy and
switching it for human requirements.
3. Societies that capture more energy and use it more efficiently
have an advantage over other societies.
4. These various communities are therefore more developed in an
evolutionary sense.
Based on the logics
above, White expressed the degree of cultural development by the formula: E x T
= C. In this method, E is the amount of energy harnessed per capita per year, T
shows the efficiency of the tools used for exploiting the energy, and C
represents the degree of cultural development. Presenting this measurement,
White asserted that developing effective control over energy is the prime cause
of cultural evolution.
White believed that culture
has general laws of its own. Based on these universal principles, culture
evolves by itself.
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