Fr. 236.00

First Institutional Spheres in Human Societies - Evolution and Adaptations From Foraging to the Threshold of Modernity

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

Descrizione

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Few concepts are as central to sociology as institutions. Yet, like so many sociological concepts, institutions remain vaguely defined. This book expands a foundational definition of the institution, one which locates them as the basic building blocks of human societies-as structural and cultural machines for survival that make it possible to pass precious knowledge from one generation to the next, ensuring the survival of our species. The book extends this classic tradition by, first, applying advances in biological evolution, neuroscience, and primatology to explain the origins of human societies and, in particular, the first institutional sphere: kinship. The authors incorporate insights from natural sciences often marginalized in sociology, while highlighting the limitations of purely biogenetic, Darwinian explanations. Secondly, they build a vivid conceptual model of institutions and their central dynamics as the book charts the chronological evolution of kinship, polity, religion, law, and economy, discussing the biological evidence for the ubiquity of these institutions as evolutionary adaptations themselves.

Sommario

Introduction


  1. On the Origins of Human Capacities

  2. Selection as the Force Driving Institutional Evolution

  3. Building Human Institutions

  4. The Dynamics of Institutional Autonomy

  5. The First Human Institution: The Evolution of the Nuclear Family and Kinship

  6. The Elaboration of Kinship

  7. The Emergence of Polity in Human Societies

  8. The Increasing Autonomy of Polity

  9. The Emergence of Religion

  10. Religious Evolution and Religious Autonomy

  11. The Emergence of Economy

  12. The Emergence of Law

  13. Legal Autonomy and the Expanding Institutional Infrastructure

  14. Institutional Evolution To The Brink of Modernity

  15. Institutional Evolution and Stratification

  16. The Evolved Institutional Order and the West
Bibliography

Info autore










Seth Abrutyn is Associate Professor in the Sociology Department at the University of British Columbia. His research straddles two primary streams: the evolution of human institutions, like religion or polity, and the role place and place-based culture play in shaping adolescent mental health and suicide. His work has won several national awards, and can be found in outlets like American Sociological Review, Sociological Theory, and American Journal of Public Health.
Jonathan H. Turner was named the 38th University Professor in the history of the University of California system. He is primarily a general sociological theorist. He has authored or coauthored 43 books, and edited 9 additional books. This book on The First Human Institutions is his fourth book on this topic human institutions, focusing on the origin of human institutional systems and their evolution to the structural and culture base necessary for modernity.


Riassunto

This book expands a foundational definition of the institution, one which locates them as the basic building blocks of human societies – as structural and cultural machines for survival that make it possible to pass precious knowledge from one generation to the next, ensuring the survival of our species.

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