Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The evolution of music—A comparison of Darwinia...
View graph of relations

The evolution of music—A comparison of Darwinian and dialectical methods

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

The evolution of music—A comparison of Darwinian and dialectical methods. / Gatherer, Derek.
In: Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems, Vol. 20, No. 1, 1997, p. 75-92.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Gatherer D. The evolution of music—A comparison of Darwinian and dialectical methods. Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems. 1997;20(1):75-92. doi: 10.1016/S1061-7361(97)90030-8

Author

Gatherer, Derek. / The evolution of music—A comparison of Darwinian and dialectical methods. In: Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems. 1997 ; Vol. 20, No. 1. pp. 75-92.

Bibtex

@article{088f33c44b9d47d8b5912f10839786f4,
title = "The evolution of music—A comparison of Darwinian and dialectical methods",
abstract = "Music provides a challenging system for the analysis of cultural evolution. The dialectical approach to music seeks to identify the internal stylistic tensions and contradictions (in terms of thesis and antithesis) which give rise to new musical forms (synthesis). The Darwinian alternative to dialectics, which in its most reductionist form is becoming known as memetics, seeks to interpret the evolution of music by examining the adaptiveness of its various component parts in the selective environment of culture. This essay compares the memetic and dialectical approaches with special reference to the development of jazz in the era of recorded sound, in the light of Benzon's classification of musical styles into evolutionary Ranks (Benzon, 1993). This essay concludes that the basic postulate of memetics is falsifiable and therefore that memetics qualifies as scientific in the Popperian sense, rather than being simply a pseudo-scientific meta-narrative for cultural evolution. Some suggestions for empirical analysis are provided. In contrast, the dialectical perspective is not scientific in the Popperian sense, but does provide a good explanatory framework for the history of jazz in the years 1900–1970, and shows how transitions between “ranks” (from Benzon) may be generated. However, dialectics is considerably less successful in the construction of a model to explain the period since 1970.",
keywords = "music, memetics, dialetics, evolution, culture",
author = "Derek Gatherer",
year = "1997",
doi = "10.1016/S1061-7361(97)90030-8",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "75--92",
journal = "Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems",
issn = "1061-7361",
publisher = "JAI Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The evolution of music—A comparison of Darwinian and dialectical methods

AU - Gatherer, Derek

PY - 1997

Y1 - 1997

N2 - Music provides a challenging system for the analysis of cultural evolution. The dialectical approach to music seeks to identify the internal stylistic tensions and contradictions (in terms of thesis and antithesis) which give rise to new musical forms (synthesis). The Darwinian alternative to dialectics, which in its most reductionist form is becoming known as memetics, seeks to interpret the evolution of music by examining the adaptiveness of its various component parts in the selective environment of culture. This essay compares the memetic and dialectical approaches with special reference to the development of jazz in the era of recorded sound, in the light of Benzon's classification of musical styles into evolutionary Ranks (Benzon, 1993). This essay concludes that the basic postulate of memetics is falsifiable and therefore that memetics qualifies as scientific in the Popperian sense, rather than being simply a pseudo-scientific meta-narrative for cultural evolution. Some suggestions for empirical analysis are provided. In contrast, the dialectical perspective is not scientific in the Popperian sense, but does provide a good explanatory framework for the history of jazz in the years 1900–1970, and shows how transitions between “ranks” (from Benzon) may be generated. However, dialectics is considerably less successful in the construction of a model to explain the period since 1970.

AB - Music provides a challenging system for the analysis of cultural evolution. The dialectical approach to music seeks to identify the internal stylistic tensions and contradictions (in terms of thesis and antithesis) which give rise to new musical forms (synthesis). The Darwinian alternative to dialectics, which in its most reductionist form is becoming known as memetics, seeks to interpret the evolution of music by examining the adaptiveness of its various component parts in the selective environment of culture. This essay compares the memetic and dialectical approaches with special reference to the development of jazz in the era of recorded sound, in the light of Benzon's classification of musical styles into evolutionary Ranks (Benzon, 1993). This essay concludes that the basic postulate of memetics is falsifiable and therefore that memetics qualifies as scientific in the Popperian sense, rather than being simply a pseudo-scientific meta-narrative for cultural evolution. Some suggestions for empirical analysis are provided. In contrast, the dialectical perspective is not scientific in the Popperian sense, but does provide a good explanatory framework for the history of jazz in the years 1900–1970, and shows how transitions between “ranks” (from Benzon) may be generated. However, dialectics is considerably less successful in the construction of a model to explain the period since 1970.

KW - music

KW - memetics

KW - dialetics

KW - evolution

KW - culture

U2 - 10.1016/S1061-7361(97)90030-8

DO - 10.1016/S1061-7361(97)90030-8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

SP - 75

EP - 92

JO - Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems

JF - Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems

SN - 1061-7361

IS - 1

ER -