MY AMERICAN SCIENTIST
LOG IN! REGISTER!
SEARCH
 
RSS
Logo
HOME > PAST ISSUE > Article Detail

LETTERS TO THE EDITORS

Skip the Memes, Please

To the Editors:

Olli Arjamaa and Timo Vuorisalo wrote a very interesting and informative article, “Gene-Culture Coevolution and Human Diet” (March–April). But rather than confine themselves to easily verifiable historical types of explanation—narratives, analyses or interpretations implied from concrete instances and events—they introduce an abstraction: “meme.” (I almost said “distraction.”)

Like the German philosopher Gottfried Leibniz’s “monads,” a meme can be anything. How does it aid understanding to explain the familiar with the less familiar? How does it aid understanding to invoke remote causation, where easily accessible historical explanations do the job well enough? Crème brûlée is just crème brûlée; to describe it as a meme seems gratuitous. Had I thought the article a mere meme, I might have avoided reading it. If I had, I’m rather glad to say, I would have been the poorer for it.

José Alfredo Bach
San Marcos, TX



» Post Comment

 

EMAIL TO A FRIEND :

Of Possible Interest

Science Observer: In the News

Feature Article: Urbanism on West Africa’s Slave Coast

Letters to the Editors: Is Race Real?

 

Other Related Links

Gene-Culture Coevolution and Human Diet

Subscribe to American Scientist

Sites of Interest

Duxbury Ventures Website Investments

Social Justice

Find Websites Worth

München Fair Hotels

ABC Fundraising

Promotional Products

Business Cards

Car Hire

Get a Gold Ira at Regal Assets.

Online Shopping