Article by Stotz (referenced in the last post), Frontiers in Psychology, 20 August 2014. This one is a bit more like Thompson's approach. The abstract:
"What kind mechanisms one deems central for the evolutionary process
deeply influences one's understanding of the nature of organisms,
including cognition. Reversely, adopting a certain approach to the
nature of life and cognition and the relationship between them or
between the organism and its environment should affect one's view of
evolutionary theory. This paper explores this reciprocal relationship in
more detail. In particular it argues that the view of living and
cognitive systems, especially humans, as deeply integrated beings
embedded in and transformed by their genetic, epigenetic (molecular and
cellular), behavioral, ecological, socio-cultural and cognitive-symbolic
legacies calls for an extended evolutionary synthesis that goes beyond
either a theory of genes juxtaposed against a theory of cultural
evolution and or even more sophisticated theories of gene-culture
coevolution and niche construction. Environments, particularly in the
form of developmental environments, do not just select for variation,
they also create new variation by influencing development through the
reliable transmission of non-genetic but heritable information. This
paper stresses particularly views of embodied, embedded, enacted and
extended cognition, and their relationship to those aspects of extended
inheritance that lie between genetic and cultural inheritance, the still
gray area of epigenetic and behavioral inheritance systems that play a
role in parental effect. These are the processes that can be regarded as
transgenerational developmental plasticity and that I think can most
fruitfully contribute to, and be investigated by, developmental
psychology."
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