Abstract
In the first part of this article we survey general similarities and
differences between biological and social macroevolution. In the
second (and main) part, we consider a concrete mathematical
model capable of describing important features of both biological
and social macroevolution. In mathematical models of historical
macrodynamics, a hyperbolic pattern of world population growth
arises from non-linear, second-order positive feedback between
demographic growth and technological development. This is more
or less identical with the working of the collective learning
mechanism. Based on diverse paleontological data and an analogy
with macrosociological models, we suggest that the hyperbolic
character of biodiversity growth can be similarly accounted for by
non-linear, second-order positive feedback between diversity
growth and the complexity of community structure, suggesting
the presence within the biosphere of a certain analogue of the
collective learning mechanism. We discuss how such positive
feedback mechanisms can be modelled mathematically.