Cumulative culture and future thinking: Is mental time travel a prerequisite to cumulative cultural evolution?

► We examine the relationship between future thinking and cumulative culture. ► The role of future thinking in innovation and information exchange is considered. ► We present an argument that future thinking influences a species’ extent of culture. ► Future thinking could facilitate the cumulative n...

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Veröffentlicht in:Learning and motivation 2012-11, Vol.43 (4), p.220-230
Hauptverfasser: Vale, G.L., Flynn, E.G., Kendal, R.L.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► We examine the relationship between future thinking and cumulative culture. ► The role of future thinking in innovation and information exchange is considered. ► We present an argument that future thinking influences a species’ extent of culture. ► Future thinking could facilitate the cumulative nature of human culture. Cumulative culture denotes the, arguably, human capacity to build on the cultural behaviors of one's predecessors, allowing increases in cultural complexity to occur such that many of our cultural artifacts, products and technologies have progressed beyond what a single individual could invent alone. This process of cumulative cultural evolution underlies human cultural success and has enabled us to reach and inhabit some of the most inhospitable environments on this planet. Why humans, but not other animals, have exhibited a cultural explosion has caused much deliberation. The human propensity to imitate, teach, “mind-read” and cooperate have all featured prominently in accounts of the prerequisites for cumulative culture. However, this may not represent the complete picture. In this article we consider whether there exists a link between future thinking, specifically prospective mental time travel, and the observed distribution of cumulative culture.
ISSN:0023-9690
1095-9122
DOI:10.1016/j.lmot.2012.05.010