“…Yet these ideas are also found in the classical works of sociology, linguistics, and economics (Marx, 1867/1990, Saussure, 1959, Durkheim, 1995, and are now widespread throughout the humanities and social sciences. To touch on just a few areas, systems thinking seems to be implicated in understanding gender structures (e.g., Walby, 1989), social norms, attitudes and ideology (e.g., Boutyline and Vaisey, 2017;Inglehart, 2018;Jansson et al, 2013;Strimling et al, 2019), and systems of language (e.g., Greenhill et al, 2017), technology (e.g., Franklin, 1999), economy (e.g., Wallerstein, 1974), and religion (e.g., Geertz, 1973). A systems approach provides a promising bridge to the as of yet unexplored wealth of theorising about culture coming from within the humanities and social sciences.…”