• Des idées qui viennent
    with Roger-pol Droit
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 191 (4): 526-527. 2001.
  •  268
    IX*—Loose Talk
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 86 (1): 153-172. 1986.
    Dan Sperber, Deirdre Wilson; IX*—Loose Talk, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 86, Issue 1, 1 June 1986, Pages 153–172, https://doi.org/10.1093/ar.
  •  160
    Although a few pioneers in psycholinguistics had, for more than twenty years, approached various pragmatic issues experimentally, it is only in the past few years that investigators have begun employing the experimental method in testing pragmatic hypotheses. We see this emergence of a proper experimental pragmatics as an important advance with a great potential for further development. In this chapter we want to illustrate what can be done with experimental approaches to pragmatic issues by pre…Read more
  •  210
    Defining and explaining culture (comments on Richerson and Boyd, not by genes alone)
    with Nicolas Claidi”ere
    Biology and Philosophy 23 (2): 283-292. 2008.
    We argue that there is a continuum of cases without any demarcation between more individual and more cultural information, and that therefore “culture” should be viewed as a property that human mental representations and practices exhibit to a varying degree rather than as a type or a subclass of these representations and practices (or of “information”). We discuss the relative role of preservative and constructive processes in transmission. We suggest a revision of Richerson and Boyd’s classifi…Read more
  • Rethinking Symbolism
    with Alice L. Morton
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 10 (4): 281-282. 1977.
  •  302
    This chapter determines a major empirical hurdle for any future discipline of memetics. It mainly shows that one can find very similar copies of some cultural item, link these copies through a causal chain of events which faithfully reproduced those items, and nevertheless not have an example of memetic inheritance. In addition, the stability of cultural patterns is proof that fidelity in copying is high despite individual variations. It is also believed that what is offered as an explanation is…Read more
  •  111
    Pragmatics
    Cognition 10 (1-3): 281-286. 1981.
  •  555
    Relevance theory
    In Deirdre Wilson & Dan Sperber (eds.), Relevance theory, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 607-632. 2002.
    General overview of relevance theory
  •  75
    The mutual relevance of teaching and cultural attraction
    with Thomas C. Scott-Phillips
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38. 2015.
  •  253
    Why a deep understanding of cultural evolution is incompatible with shallow psychology
    In Nicholas J. Enfield & Stephen C. Levinson (eds.), Roots of Human Sociality, Berg Publishers. pp. 431-449. 2006.
    Human, cognition, interaction, and culture are thoroughly intertwined. Without cognition and interaction, there would be no culture. Without culture, cognition and interaction would be very different affairs, as they are among other social species. The effect of culture on mental life has always been a main concern of the social sciences and, after a long period of almost total neglect, it is more and more taken into consideration in cognitive psychology. The effect of cognition, and in particul…Read more
  •  162
    The article revisits the old controversy concerning the relation of the mother's brother and sister's son in patrilineal societies in the light both of anthropological criticisms of the very notion of kinship and of evolutionary and epidemiological approaches to culture. It argues that the ritualized patterns of behavior that had been discussed by Radcliffe-Brown, Goody and others are to be explained in terms of the interaction of a variety of factors, some local and historical, others pertainin…Read more
  •  217
    The Guru Effect
    Review of Philosophy and Psychology 1 (4): 583-592. 2010.
    Obscurity of expression is considered a flaw. Not so, however, in the speech or writing of intellectual gurus. All too often, what readers do is judge profound what they have failed to grasp. Here I try to explain this guru effect by looking at the psychology of trust and interpretation, at the role of authority and argumentation, and at the effects of these dispositions and processes when they operate at a population level where, I argue, a runaway phenomenon of overappreciation may take place
  •  131
    Communicate. We humans do it all the time, and most of the time we do it as a matter of course, without thinking about it. We talk, we listen, we write, we read - as you are doing now - or we draw, we mimic, we nod, we point, we shrug, and, somehow, we manage to make our thoughts known to one another. Of course, there are times when we view communication as something difficult or even impossible to achieve. Yet, compared to other living kinds, we are amazingly good at it. Other species, if they …Read more
  •  129
    Causal Cognition: A Multidisciplinary Debate (edited book)
    with David Premack and Ann James Premack
    Oxford University Press UK. 1995.
    An understanding of cause--effect relationships is fundamental to the study of cognition. In this book, outstanding specialists from comparative psychology, social psychology, developmental psychology, anthropology, and philosophy present the newest developments in the study of causal cognition and discuss their different perspectives. They reflect on the role and forms of causal knowledge, both in animal and human cognition, on the development of human causal cognition from infancy, and on the …Read more