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Education Quote by Gregory Bateson

"In the transmission of human culture, people always attempt to replicate, to pass on to the next generation the skills and values of the parents, but the attempt always fails because cultural transmission is geared to learning, not DNA"

About this Quote

Bateson is calmly detonating one of the most comforting fantasies modern societies sell themselves: that the future is just the present, safely copied and laminated. Parents and institutions try to reproduce a cultural self-portrait - skills, morals, status markers - as if “values” were heirlooms with a reliable chain of custody. His twist is that transmission “always fails,” not because families are negligent, but because culture doesn’t move like biology. It moves like learning: messy, selective, opportunistic, and shaped by feedback.

The line draws power from a scientific contrast that’s also a moral provocation. DNA replication is high-fidelity; errors are rare and mostly punished. Learning is the opposite: it thrives on variation. What gets “passed on” is never the parent’s original message but the child’s usable version, filtered through peers, media, incentives, and the practical question of what works now. Bateson’s subtext is almost cybernetic: culture is a system that changes as it communicates. Every act of teaching is also an act of distortion, because the learner is not a passive storage device but an adaptive agent.

Context matters here. Bateson spent his career poking at rigid categories - nature vs. nurture, individual vs. system - and studying how patterns persist through interaction, not inheritance. Read this way, the quote is less a lament than a warning: if you design education, parenting, or politics as though culture can be “replicated,” you will misread failure as moral decline. You’ll miss the real point: transmission is transformation, and the transformation is the feature.

Quote Details

TopicLearning
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Bateson, Gregory. (2026, January 15). In the transmission of human culture, people always attempt to replicate, to pass on to the next generation the skills and values of the parents, but the attempt always fails because cultural transmission is geared to learning, not DNA. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-transmission-of-human-culture-people-142439/

Chicago Style
Bateson, Gregory. "In the transmission of human culture, people always attempt to replicate, to pass on to the next generation the skills and values of the parents, but the attempt always fails because cultural transmission is geared to learning, not DNA." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-transmission-of-human-culture-people-142439/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"In the transmission of human culture, people always attempt to replicate, to pass on to the next generation the skills and values of the parents, but the attempt always fails because cultural transmission is geared to learning, not DNA." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-transmission-of-human-culture-people-142439/. Accessed 11 Feb. 2026.

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Gregory Bateson (May 9, 1904 - July 4, 1980) was a Scientist from United Kingdom.

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