Humans and other animals: The tangled web of culture

When:
November 26, 2014 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
2014-11-26T19:00:00+00:00
2014-11-26T20:30:00+00:00
Where:
The Royal Institution of Great Britain
21 Albemarle Street
Mayfair, London W1S 4BS
UK
Cost:
£12/£8
Contact:
Royal Institution
020 7409 2992

inle_lake_myanmar_1_3050e404cb5001aeAre humans unique in their diverse and wide-ranging cultures? How much of the cultural difference we see can be attributed to the local environment? And what impact can the way societies behave have on the world around them?

Join a panel of experts to discuss how the environment might drive cultural evolution, what impact culture has on the environment, and whether humans are the only species with distinct cultures.

About the speakers

Andrew Whiten is Wardlaw Professor in the School of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of St Andrews and is the UK’s leading expert on non-human cultures. His most recent research focuses on social learning, traditions in humans and non-human primates with behavioural experiments.

Gaia Vince is a British science writer with experience in editing and writing for both science journals and popular science magazines, including Nature, New Scientist, Scientific American, and The Guardian. She has recently finished a trip around the world while writing a book called ‘Adventures In The Anthropocene’ in which she writes about the human-changed planet, human societies, ecosystems and our relationship with the natural world.

Ruth Mace is Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology in the Human Evolutionary Ecology Group at UCL, exploring human behaviour and life history as adaptations to local environments, including cultural evolution. Areas of interest include human reproductive scheduling, parental investment, human marriage, and the evolution of social institutions.