| ABOUT US | ARCHIVES | LINKS | RSS FEED | MONDAYS | |

3quarksdaily

An Eclectic Digest of Science, Art and Literature

« WHAT THE HECK IS COLLABORATIVE ETHNOGRAPHY? | Main | James Frey on Oprah »

January 26, 2006

Shalizi on Moretti's Graphs, Maps, Trees

I posted earlier about The Valve's online seminar on Franco Moretti's Graphs, Maps, Trees. Now, Cosma Shalizi's piece is up and it's definitely worth a read.

One thing Moretti does not do, anywhere, is construct models linking individual behavior to aggregate patterns. Economists and sociologists already make such models, and anthropologists are starting to do so. It may be premature here, but ultimately it will be vital. If different social groups have different beliefs, is that because those beliefs express their relations to the mode of production, or is it because they tend to talk more with in the group than across group boundaries? Adaptationist theories of culture tend to go for the first choice, but we don’t really know whether the latter could account for the specific patterns of cultural difference and change that we see.

How Not to Learn from the Natural Sciences

What I said above about not mindlessly imitating biology deserves some amplification.

Evolution ought to have a bad name in the study of literary history. Reading Rene Wellek’s “The Concept of Evolution in Literary History” (or his article for the Dictionary of the History of Ideas) is actually quite depressing. (It brings to mind Kurt Vonnegut’s line “they deserved to fail, because they were all so stupid”.) The many post-Darwinian ventures in this direction went, essentially, nowhere, at least as far as understanding literature better goes. It surely didn’t help that their understandings of biological evolution were often very bad, generally some kind of Spencerian or even Lamarckian belief in tendencies of progressive development — perhaps inspiring, but hopelessly un-explanatory. (This has vitiated far too much evolutionary theorizing about social processes; cf. Toulmin’s chapter 5.) As for the more recent wave, since the 1980s, the people who seem to think that literature exists because humanity craves dramatizations of Daly and Wilson’s Sex, Evolution and Behavior drive me up the wall. (Their idea makes no sense even if you are very sympathetic to evolutionary psychology, which I am.)

Which said, this is not at all what Moretti is proposing, and I don’t see the harm in trying to make this all fit together as another instance of a general pattern, alongside biological evolution, because they have similar causally-relevant features, and so similar mechanisms are at work. . .

Posted by Robin Varghese at 03:20 PM | Permalink

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c562c53ef00d83428a10a53ef

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Shalizi on Moretti's Graphs, Maps, Trees:

Comments

Shalizi's notebooks are, apart from 3qd, one of my favorite internet sites. I wish he would write a book!!

TD

Posted by: Thomas | Jan 26, 2006 10:05:41 PM

We at 3QD are all huge admirers of Cosma's writings ourself, and have more than once identified him as perhaps the smartest presence in the blogosphere, so I am with you. (Although, on second thought, maybe it is best for smart people to stick with journal articles. No truly serious idea needs book-length for its exposition.)

Posted by: Abbas Raza | Jan 27, 2006 1:08:21 AM

Post a comment






Subscribe to this blog's feed  

3QD ADVERTISING


3QD on Twitter


Miscellany

Lijit Search

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Add to Google


Recent Comments

Carlos on Are the "New Atheists" are Right-Wing on Foreign Policy?

Ray Butlers on Thursday Poem

Dave Ranning on Debating Unscientific America

J. Hawkins on Thursday Poem

J. Hawkins on Tragic hero: Laurie Taylor interviews Terry Eagleton

Dave Ranning on Are the "New Atheists" are Right-Wing on Foreign Policy?

Ruchira on Thursday Poem

Jim on Thursday Poem

Dubus on Are the "New Atheists" are Right-Wing on Foreign Policy?

Frances Madeson on Thursday Poem

velika on Vocal Minority Insists It Was All Smoke and Mirrors

panoptican on Want to keep your wallet? Carry a baby picture

Shatha on Saieen Zahoor, Rohail Hyatt, Noori: Aik Alif

Chris Horner on Want to keep your wallet? Carry a baby picture

John Ballard on Saieen Zahoor, Rohail Hyatt, Noori: Aik Alif

Lambness on Tragic hero: Laurie Taylor interviews Terry Eagleton

aguy109 on A new technology called compressive sensing slims down data at the source

Christopher on Tragic hero: Laurie Taylor interviews Terry Eagleton

Ken Pidcock on Debating Unscientific America

Louise Gordon on Tragic hero: Laurie Taylor interviews Terry Eagleton

Jim on Wednesday Poem

DavidG on Are the "New Atheists" are Right-Wing on Foreign Policy?

Jonathan on Tragic hero: Laurie Taylor interviews Terry Eagleton

Norman Costa on Wednesday Poem

Carlos on Tragic hero: Laurie Taylor interviews Terry Eagleton


Acclaim For 3QD


"I couldn't tear myself away from 3 Quarks Daily, to the point of neglecting my work. Congratulations on this superb site."—Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University.

"I have placed 3 Quarks Daily at the head of my list of web bookmarks."—Richard Dawkins, Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.

"Just wanted you to know I’m one of many who reads and enjoys 3 Quarks....almost daily."—David Byrne, musician, former lead-singer of the Talking Heads, artist, intellectual.


The 3QD Prizes

Logo designed by Vicki Winters

Subscribe to this blog's feed