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The Deep Structures of Culture and Cognition - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

The Deep Structures of Culture and Cognition - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

Episode 175 Published 1 year ago
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The Deep Structures of Culture and CognitionThe Deeper Thinking Podcast

In this episode, we dive deep into the structuralist theories of Claude Levi-Strauss, exploring how the human mind organizes culture and cognition through universal structures. These deep cognitive frameworks govern the way we understand myths, kinship systems, and cultural expressions. The journey into understanding these universal structures is not simply intellectual, but a profound rethinking of how we perceive human culture in its entirety.

The structuralist mindset goes beyond merely studying isolated cultural artifacts or behaviors. It challenges us to see cultural phenomena as deeply connected, shaped by unconscious structures within the mind, as proposed by Levi-Strauss. As he suggested, the study of myths and rituals reveals not just stories or behaviors, but the underlying cognitive patterns that guide human experience across cultures.

At the core of this approach is the idea of binary oppositions—the dualities like life/death, nature/culture, raw/cooked, good/evil—that Levi-Strauss argued are universally present in the way humans organize their cultural realities. These oppositions are not arbitrary; they are fundamental to human thought, reflecting cognitive structures that transcend culture.

However, the professional mindset of the anthropologist is not simply about identifying these structures—it’s about understanding their dynamics. As Foucault and Derrida have critiqued, culture is not a static system of binary oppositions but a dynamic field shaped by historical and social forces. While Levi-Strauss revealed the fundamental ways in which universal cognitive patterns organize cultural meaning, contemporary scholars now understand that these structures must be examined within their social and historical contexts, recognizing individual agency and historical contingency.

Why Listen?
  • Understanding how universal cognitive patterns shape culture and cognition

  • Exploring the concept of binary oppositions in myths and kinship systems

  • The intersection of culture, cognition, and historical context

  • The role of agency in shaping the structures that govern human thought

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