Cecilia Heyes | |
---|---|
Born | Ashford, UK | 6 March 1960
Alma mater | University College London (BSc 1981, PhD 1984) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Psychology |
Institutions | University of Oxford |
Cecilia Heyes FBA (born 6 March 1960) is a British psychologist who studies the evolution of the human mind.[1] She is a Senior Research Fellow in Theoretical Life Sciences at All Souls College, and a Professor of Psychology at the University of Oxford. She is also a Fellow of the British Academy (psychology and philosophy sections),[2] and President of the Experimental Psychology Society.
Heyes is the author of Cognitive Gadgets: The Cultural Evolution of Thinking (2018),[3][4][5] described by Tyler Cowen as "an important book and likely the most thoughtful of the year in the social sciences".[6]
Heyes has argued that the picture presented by some evolutionary psychology of the human mind as a collection of cognitive instincts – organs of thought shaped by genetic evolution over very long time periods[7][8] – does not fit research results. She posits instead that humans have cognitive gadgets – "special-purpose organs of thought" built in the course of development through social interaction. These are products of cultural rather than genetic evolution,[9] and may develop and change much more quickly and flexibly than cognitive instincts.
In 2017, Heyes gave the Chandaria Lectures at the Institute of Philosophy, University of London.[9] She has written for the Times Literary Supplement[10] and given a number of radio and television interviews.[11]