Lecture
Seminar: POPNET Connects with Tamas David-Barrett
- Date
- Tuesday 17 May 2022
- Time
- Location
- Snellius (room 312) and online - register below
Structural microfoundation theory
You are my love. You are my sister. You are my friend. A trivial fact of our species’ social life is that human social network edge type vary. This variation is not only important for each of these relationships, but also for the structure of the social network around us. This talk will outline the theoretical models for what happens to the social network structure when the bulk of these relationships change. Our societies shift from kinship network to friendship networks due to falling fertility, urbanisation, and migration. Second, the talk will offer an overview the existing empirical evidence using large datasets, and suggest explicit empirical hypotheses. The final part will cover how three further phenomena is predicted by this theory, and ideas of how to test these: the rise of modern law, value fundamentalism, and fake news.
About Tamas David-Barrett
Tamas David-Barrett is an evolutionary behavioural scientist, whose research asks what traits allow humans to live in large and culturally complex societies. He is especially interested in the architecture of social networks, and the evolutionary origins of social network building traits. Tamas’s structural micro-foundation theory offers a new understanding of human societies, and brings biological and social science models under a shared umbrella. Currently, Tamás is based in Oxford where he teaches at Trinity College. He was educated in London, Cambridge, Jerusalem, and Budapest. Before becoming an academic, he ran a research consultancy and worked all around the planet. He recently finished his book, Matriocracy: The Science of Gender Rules. He is the host of the State of Species annual lecture, and is currently working on a new book: How to Think Scientifically, which tells the natural history of social and scientific truths.