4.8 Article

Sociocultural epistasis and cultural exaptation in footbinding, marriage form, and religious practices in early 20th-century Taiwan

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0907520106

Keywords

Taiwan Aborigines; cultural evolution; demographic change; marriage customs

Funding

  1. American Council of Learned Societies
  2. Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation for Scholarly Exchange
  3. Pacific Cultural Foundation
  4. Institute of Ethnology at the Academia Sinica
  5. Stanford University
  6. Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies
  7. National Institutes of Health [GM28016]

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Social theorists have long recognized that changes in social order have cultural consequences but have not been able to provide an individual-level mechanism of such effects. Explanations of human behavior have only just begun to explore the different evolutionary dynamics of social and cultural inheritance. Here we provide ethnographic evidence of how cultural evolution, at the level of individuals, can be influenced by social evolution. Sociocultural epistasis-association of cultural ideas with the hierarchical structure of social roles-influences cultural change in unexpected ways. We document the existence of cultural exaptation, where a custom's origin was not due to acceptance of the later associated ideas. A cultural exaptation can develop in the absence of a cultural idea favoring it, or even in the presence of a cultural idea against it. Such associations indicate a potentially larger role for social evolutionary dynamics in explaining individual human behavior than previously anticipated.

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