Cambridge University Press, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, (42), 2019
DOI: 10.1017/s0140525x19000268
Full text: Unavailable
Abstract I argue that the increased rate of innovation in eighteenth-century England cannot be understood without accounting for the unprecedented level of contact between England and other societies as a consequence of sixteenth-century colonialism. I propose cultural interconnectedness and in-group cooperation as two potential alternative explanations for the psychological changes and innovative behavior described by Baumard.