Richard Semon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard Wolfgang Semon (August 22, 1859December 12, 1918) was a German zoologist and evolutionary biologist, who believed in the inheritance of acquired characters and applied this to social evolution.

Semon proposed psycho-physiological parallelism according to which every psychological state corresponds to alterations in the nerves. His ideas of the mneme (based on the Greek goddess, Mneme, the muse of memory) were developed upon early in the 20th century. The mneme representated the memory of an external-to-internal experience. The resulting "mnemic trace" (or "engram") would be revived when an element resembling a component of the original complex of stimuli was encountered. Semon’s mnemic principle was based upon how stimuli produce a "permanent record, . . . written or engraved on the irritable substance," i.e. upon cellular material energistically predisposed to such inscription (Semon 1921, p. 24).

Semon found evidence in the way that different parts of the body relate to each other involuntarily, such as "reflex spasms, co-movements, sensory radiations," to infer distribution of "engraphic influence." He also took inventive recourse to phonography, the "mneme machine," to explain the uneven distribution and revival of engrams.

Richard Dawkins's concept of a cultural unit of cultural replication which he called the meme (Dawkins, 1976), though self-attributed, bears an amazing similarity to Semon’s idea of half a century earlier.

[edit] References

In other languages