Call for Papers
Cognition and Evolution in Historical and Social Research
September 23–24, 2025, Lund, Sweden
https://www.kultur.lu.se/cehsr2025
Over recent decades, cognitive science have significantly reshaped our understanding of
human thought, while modern evolutionary theory has provided robust explanations of the
biological origin of Homo sapiens. Yet, despite these transformative developments,
cognitive and evolutionary perspectives remain under-integrated within mainstream
historical and social research. This conference seeks to address this lacuna by exploring
how cognitive and evolutionary approaches can enrich our understanding of the human
condition in historical and societal contexts.
Recent advances in cognitive science, neuroscience, and genetics compel historians and
social scientists to re-evaluate foundational paradigms. Concepts such as the embodied
mind, situated and distributed cognition, and conceptual metaphor theory are increasingly
applied within the humanities and social sciences, particularly in fields such as
linguistics, literary studies, archaeology, and religious studies. Concurrently, emerging
research in cultural evolution and cognitive theory has fostered a biologically and
culturally grounded view of humans as products of long-standing bio-cultural
co-evolutionary processes.
Evolutionary frameworks have gained traction in newly established interdisciplinary
domains, including evolutionary cultural studies, evolutionary institutional economics,
evolutionary linguistics, and cognitive evolution studies. These perspectives prompt
historians and social scientists to re-examine core models and analogies—such as those
comparing cultural and organismic evolution—and to investigate the roles of variation,
selection, and inheritance (retention) within cultural dynamics.
At the heart of these inquiries lies a key question: how do cognitive
processes—perception, memory, conceptualisation, embodied action, communicative practices,
and institutional forms—function as mental constructs that contribute to social inertia or
transformation? This conference invites scholarly contributions that explore these
mechanisms and their implications for historical change and long-term social evolution.
The conference will take place at Lund University, Sweden. The nearest international
airport is Copenhagen Airport (Denmark), with direct rail connections to Lund Central
Station (approximately 35 minutes).
There is no conference fee. Participants are expected to arrange their own travel and
accommodation.
Confirmed plenary speakers:
* Peter Gärdenfors, Professor of Cognitive Science, Lund University, Sweden;
https://www.fil.lu.se/en/person/PeterGardenfors/
* Ruth Mace, Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology, University College London, UK;
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/anthropology/people/academic-and-teaching-staff/ruth-…
Suggested topics for papers include (but are not limited to):
* Cognitive history
* Cognitive archaeology
* Cognitive poetics
* Deep history
* Neurohistory
* Evolutionary culture studies
* Evolutionary institutional economics
* Evolutionary political science
* Bio-cultural co-evolution
* Embodied cognition in history and society
* Situated and distributed cognition in history and society
* Perception, memory, and conceptualisation in history and society
* Cognition, language and communication in history and society
Venue:
* LUX, Lecture hall C121, Helgonavägen 3, Lund, Sweden
Key dates:
* Deadline for abstract submission: 1 September 2025
* Notification of acceptance: 7 September 2025
* Conference starts: 23 September 2025, at 13:00
* Conference ends: 24 September, at 12:00
Submission guidelines:
Abstracts (maximum 300 words), along with a short academic biography, should be submitted
to David.Duner@kultur.lu.se<mailto:David.Duner@kultur.lu.se> no later than 1
September 2025. All presentations will be conducted in English.
Organizing committee:
* David Dunér, Professor of History of Ideas and Sciences, Lund University, Sweden
* Christer Ahlberger, Professor of History, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
* Mikael Sandberg, Professor of Political Science, Halmstad University, Sweden
Please address questions to
David.Duner@kultur.lu.se<mailto:David.Duner@kultur.lu.se>