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Peter Turchin

is a professor of Biology and Anthropology in the University of Connecticut and Vice President of the Evolution Institute | <a href="https://twitter.com/Peter_Turchin"> Follow him on Twitter</a>

Vice President
Professor of Biology and Anthropology University of Connecticut

Curriculum VitaePeter Turchin is an evolutionary anthropologist at the University of Connecticut who works in the field of historical social science that he and his colleagues call Cliodynamics. His research interests lie at the intersection of social and cultural evolution, historical macrosociology, economic history and cliometrics, mathematical modeling of long-term social processes, and the construction and analysis of historical databases. Currently he investigates a set of broad and interrelated questions. How do human societies evolve? In particular, what processes explain the evolution of ultrasociality—our capacity to cooperate in huge anonymous societies of millions? Why do we see such a staggering degree of inequality in economic performance and effectiveness of governance among nations? Turchin uses the theoretical framework of cultural multilevel selection to address these questions. Currently his main research effort is directed at coordinating the Seshat Databank project, which builds a massive historical database of cultural evolution that will enable us to empirically test theoretical predictions coming from various social evolution theories.Turchin has published 200 articles in peer-reviewed journals, including a dozen in Nature, Science, and PNAS. His publications are frequently cited and in 2004 he was designated as “Highly cited researcher” by ISIHighlyCited.com. Turchin has authored seven books. His most recent book is Ultrasociety: How 10,000 Years of War Made Humans the Greatest Cooperators on Earth (Beresta Books, 2016).

Authored by

Peter Turchin

November 17, 2022

Ten Thousand Years of the Third Way: A Conversation with Peter Turchin

Our emergence as a species and the last ten thousand years of human history demonstrates how positive cultural change has taken place.

Business
Economy
History
Read
February 5, 2018

Anthropologist Peter Turchin explains how the seeds of Brexit unrest were planted during the Carolingian Empire

News
Read
February 20, 2013

Debate: Public Money Spent on Social Science

Politicians to propose cutting the roughly $11 million in NSF cash that funds Political Science research.

Politics
Read
February 7, 2013

Return Of The Oppressed

From the Roman Empire to our own Gilded Age, inequality moves in cycles. The future looks like a rough ride.

Economy
Read
January 13, 2013

Is War Creative?

Warfare has transformed us from living in villages to living in huge states, building cities and civilizations, and ultimately making our lives more peaceful.

Politics
Read
December 16, 2012

Does History Cycle?

The reason you have ups and downs in dynamical systems is that there are internal feedback loops.

Culture
Politics
Read
September 23, 2012

Inequality of Wealth. Inequality of Health.

Historical data show that rampant economic inequality results in declining standards of life for the least advantaged.

Economy
Health
Read
September 13, 2012

Joseph Stiglitz. The Price of Inequality. Cultural Evolution. The Evolution Institute.

Right now Ayn Randism has a much greater sway than evolutionary thinking.

Economy
Read
September 13, 2012

Twilight of the Elites. Or the Unintended Consequences of Meritocracy

How elite competition can lead to unequal outcomes.

Culture
Economy
Read
August 20, 2012

Cliodynamics: Can Science Decode the Laws of History?

he new and highly controversial discipline cliodynamics is the most recent attempt to transform history into science.

Culture
Read
July 12, 2012

Cultural Evolution of Pants II

The association between horse-riding and wearing of pants.

Culture
Read
July 9, 2012

Cultural Evolution of Pants

Why do we wear pants?

Culture
Read
June 30, 2012

Multilevel Selection is a Productive Theoretical Framework for Investigating Human History

Evolutionists respond to Steven Pinker's challenge to group selection. ETVOL welcomes all points of view.

Biology
Read
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