--- description: Henrich's collective brain hypothesis shows that larger more interconnected populations produce more complex culture because innovation emerges from serendipity recombination and incremental improvement across social networks type: claim domain: cultural-dynamics created: 2026-02-17 source: "Web research compilation, February 2026" confidence: likely tradition: "cultural evolution, collective intelligence" --- # collective brains generate innovation through population size and interconnectedness not individual genius Joseph Henrich's "The Secret of Our Success" (2015) argues that the secret of human success lies not in innate intelligence but in collective brains -- the ability of human groups to socially interconnect and learn from one another over generations. Innovations are an emergent property of cultural learning applied within social networks. Societies and social networks function as collective brains where three sources drive innovation: serendipity, recombination, and incremental improvement. Individual genius is not among them. The evidence is structural. Among Oceanic islands, population size and island interconnectedness correlate with the number of tools and tool complexity. Urban density predicts innovation rates. Muthukrishna and Henrich identify three factors that drive innovation: sociality (network connectivity), transmission fidelity, and variance. Larger populations produce more variant ideas; denser networks transmit them more reliably; and the combination generates cumulative cultural evolution that no individual could achieve alone. This is the empirical vindication of the claim that [[intelligence is a property of networks not individuals]]. Henrich demonstrates it with data rather than argument alone. The collective brain is not a metaphor -- it is a measurable property of population structure. The internet dramatically increases all three innovation factors (sociality, fidelity, variance), predicting an acceleration of cultural evolution that empirical evidence supports. For LivingIP, this is foundational. If innovation depends on collective brain structure rather than individual capability, then designing the architecture of connection IS designing the engine of intelligence. The question is not "how smart are the agents?" but "how are the agents connected?" --- Relevant Notes: - [[intelligence is a property of networks not individuals]] -- Henrich provides the empirical evidence for this architectural claim - [[collective intelligence requires diversity as a structural precondition not a moral preference]] -- diversity provides the variance that collective brains need to innovate - [[emergence is the fundamental pattern of intelligence from ant colonies to brains to civilizations]] -- collective brains are an instance of emergent intelligence - [[the personbyte is a fundamental quantization limit on knowledge accumulation forcing all complex production into networked teams]] -- the personbyte constraint explains WHY collective brains are necessary - [[partial connectivity produces better collective intelligence than full connectivity on complex problems because it preserves diversity]] -- refines interconnectedness: more is not always better for complex problems - [[network value scales quadratically for connections but exponentially for group-forming networks]] -- the scaling dynamics that collective brains generate Topics: - [[livingip overview]] - [[network structures]]