Memes: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with " '''* Book: The Meme Machine. Susan Blackmore, 1999. ''' =Description= Johan Nygren: "16 years ago, Susan Blackmore released the seminal work The Meme Machine, and put forth...") |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''* Book: The Meme Machine. Susan Blackmore, 1999. | |||
''' | =More Information= | ||
==Books to Read== | |||
'''* Book: The [[Meme Machine]]. Susan Blackmore, 1999.''' | |||
Johan Nygren: | Johan Nygren: | ||
| Line 9: | Line 12: | ||
(https://steemit.com/bitnation/@johan-nygren/decentralized-law-and-post-geographical-communication-leads-to-decentralized-borderless-virtual-nations-dbvns) | (https://steemit.com/bitnation/@johan-nygren/decentralized-law-and-post-geographical-communication-leads-to-decentralized-borderless-virtual-nations-dbvns) | ||
[[Category:Media]] | [[Category:Media]] | ||
Revision as of 09:06, 6 February 2017
More Information
Books to Read
* Book: The Meme Machine. Susan Blackmore, 1999.
Johan Nygren:
"16 years ago, Susan Blackmore released the seminal work The Meme Machine, and put forth in detail how cultures are created by smaller units of information called memes, darwinian replicators that evolve through mutation and selection, and that these were what constituted language, and cultures. The word meme had been around for decades, originally coined and popularized by Richard Dawkins in 1976, and similar concepts date back to early civilization. “ (https://steemit.com/bitnation/@johan-nygren/decentralized-law-and-post-geographical-communication-leads-to-decentralized-borderless-virtual-nations-dbvns)