In this paper I consider the implications of work in evolutionary psychology for institutional analysis. I respond to Pascal Boyer and Michael Bang Petersen ('The Naturalness of ( Many) Social Institutions: Evolved Cognition as their Foundation'; 2012), who put forward a programmatic statement in this connection. I argue that their discussion overstates the explanatory power of evolutionary psychology and does not take sufficient account of what we already know about institutions. At the same time, I suggest that they, and the empirical work upon which they draw, make an important contribution by helping us to establish more clearly the boundary conditions of institutional analysis. I call for ongoing cooperation and for the establishment of a unified research tradition that brings together both evolutionary psychology and institutionalism.
机构:
Univ EAFIT, Dept Psicol, Grp Invest El Metodo Anal & Sus Aplicac Ciencuas, Medellin, ColombiaUniv EAFIT, Dept Psicol, Grp Invest El Metodo Anal & Sus Aplicac Ciencuas, Medellin, Colombia
Manrique Tisnes, Horacio
De Castro Correa, Alberto
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Univ Norte, Dept Psicol, Grp Invest Psicol, Medellin, ColombiaUniv EAFIT, Dept Psicol, Grp Invest El Metodo Anal & Sus Aplicac Ciencuas, Medellin, Colombia