A meme is a cognitive or behavioral pattern that can be transmitted from one individual to another one. References, links.
Includes texts by Dr Susan Blackmore and links to other articles online.
The main criticism that can be raised against the memetic approach is that memes are difficult to define. What are the elements or units that make up a meme? Does a meme correspond to a complete symphony, or to a symphonic movement, a melody, a musical phrase, or even a single note?
A virtual community for bright people who love memetics.
Presents a memetic framework for the analysis of policy making based on three concepts from evolutionary theory: interaction, replication, and lineage.
FAQ, links, and a bookstore. (By Richard Brodie, author of the popular book on memetics, "Virus of the Mind".)
Collection of links and essays about memes: ideas and concepts viewed as living organisms. Includes sections on memetic theory, examples and applications, controversial issues, a lexicon and a brief bibliography.
Discussions of the quantitative analysis of cultural transfer, with focus on creativity, memes, replicators, language, ideas, evolution, computers, viruses, knowledge, artificial intelligence, brain and the mind.
Collection of philosophical essays on memetics and the evolution of culture.
Information about a book that explains the development of ideology and human cultural understanding through the spread and evolution of memes and cultural know-how.
Computers /
Artificial_Intelligence
|