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'Thought Contagion' is the first mainstream book published on this new science, and has some excellent early chapters on the history of memetics, and importantly, the relationship between memetics and other sciences such as socio-biology, epidemiology, and the social sciences. Lynch draws on the earlier work of Dawkins, Dennett, and Hofstadter to present a solid scientific model, which he has developed elsewhere via extensive mathematical proofs.
The presentation of propagation modes is more precise and scientific than a more populist evolutionary psychology/drives-hot button influenced work like Richard Brodie's 'Virus of the Mind' (Integral Press, 1996). Brodie has interestingly admitted that Lynch actually began his work before Brodie did, and that Lynch's book was stalled by a careful peer-review process (leaving aside the heated Brodie/Lynch debates on the future direction of memetics and its public presentation). The bibliography is also incredibly useful. Lynch's writing is crisp and clear, very readable but also very serious. Lynch wants to convince you, and often succeeds.
Where most memetics books become controversial is in their analysis of contemporary social issues. For many readers, the archetypal book on memetics is still to be written, but the science is still in its infancy, and has developed much over the past several years.
Lynch does an admirable job of examining a broad range of issues, from the prevalence of different forms of religious fundamentalism and talk-show/advocacy journalism politics to debates on human sexuality, drug addiction, and gun control. The latter are so hotly debated that Lynch is likely to come across sounding subdued compared to typical media hype. But this is a scientist talking rationally, not a journalist.
Lynch is at his best when he takes an indepth case-study approach, backing up his arguments with scientific data and graphs (a sample case-study on the Amish is presented in the opening chapter, and is available online). Readers are more likely to disagree with his handling of other issues, and not look at either his presentation, or how he subtly works thought contagion theory into his arguments. It takes several readings to appreciate his sections on linguistics and abstract mathematics as well.
Definitely worth reading, Lynch's book was the first to give a serious indication of the potential of memetics as a valid new science, and to hint at powerful social applications. Lynch continues to reveal and further develop his key models, important mathematical proofs, and real-world applications.
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