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Dr. Blute's research interests are in cultural evolution, gene-culture co-evolution, gender and science studies.
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Dr. Blute's research interests are in cultural evolution, gene-culture co-evolution, gender and science studies.
EXPLORE >   Researchers >  Marion Blute
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Dr. Blute's research interest is in theory, in particular evolutionary epistemology, universal Darwinism or multi-process selection theory. The basic principle is that all knowledge acquiring and utilizing processes are selection processes. These include (gene-based) biological evolution by natural selection, (neural-based) individual learning by reinforcement and punishment, and (social learning or meme-based) sociocultural evolution by sociocultural selection. She is also interested in how these processes interact to influence human behaviour, mind, culture and social organization. She has related interests in the philosophy and sociology of science and gender.
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Professor Emeritus
Sociology
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Biography
Dr. Blute is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto. She completed a double major in Psychology and English at the University of Toronto before spending two years in Nigeria with Canadian University Service Overseas (CUSO). She then spent two years working for the Toronto Board of Education before returning to the University of Toronto where was awarded a Masters and a Doctorate in Sociology with a thesis titled "Darwinian Analogues and the Naturalistic Explanation of Purposivism in Biology, Psychology and the Sociocultural Sciences." She taught at the University of Toronto at Mississauga for a few years and then moved to the University of Western Ontario for three years before returning to the University of Toronto. She is a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of Biological Theory, of the editorial board of Spontaneous Generations, of the Nominations Committee of the International Society for the History, Philosophy and Social Studies of Science and an Associate of Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
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Key Publications
Blute M. 2010. Darwinian Sociocultural Evolution: Solutions to Dilemmas in Cultural and Social Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Blute M. Is it time for an updated 'eco-evo-devo' definition of evolution by natural selection? Spontaneous Generations. 2008. 2(1):1-4.
Blute M. The Evolution of Replication. Biological Theory. 2007. 2(1):10-22.
Blute M. Gene-Culture Coevolutionary Games. Social Forces. 2006. 85(1):151-166.
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Intellectual Property

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CATEGORIES
Disciplinary Focus
Social science and humanities
Research Paradigm
Social impact studies and policy development
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