Darwinophobia
I
Darwinophobia II - Andy's Attack
By Steve Sailer
Andrew
Ferguson's March 19, 2001 Weekly
Standard article "Evolutionary
Psychology and its True Believers," is
representative of a general pattern of Darwinophobia
found throughout the Right. It's hard to think of a
major conservative magazine that hasn't embarrassed
itself in recent years by running an article attacking
Darwinism.
There
are some good reasons for disliking some of Darwin's
modern descendants. The Village Atheist tub-thumping
of Richard Dawkins, for instance, is completely
unjustified by the science. Further, it's obviously
counterproductive, playing into the hands of the
crudest Creationists. In 1999, I wrote two long essays
for the National
Post of Toronto on "Darwin's Enemies on the
Right and the Left." In the first,
A Miracle Happens Here: Darwin's Enemies on the Right, I
considered the religious question in some detail,
concluding that atheistic biologists should learn more
about cosmology before spouting off.
Still,
it's more than a little strange to see the Weekly
Standard turning for guidance to Leftists who hate
the very concept of "human nature" because
it implies limits to the effectiveness of the social
engineering that they want to force upon humanity.
Steven Jay Gould and Company are the spiritual descendents of the
anti-Darwin Lysenkoists who sent so many of the Soviet
Union's Darwinian geneticists to the Gulag. (My National Post article "Equality
v. Truth:
Darwin's Enemies on the Left,"
reviews the ongoing struggle between Darwinists and
the Left.)
Ferguson
trots out all their tired arguments against
neo-Darwinism. For example, he approvingly quotes Anne
Fausto-Sterling, "a geneticist and professor of
women's studies," who poohs-poohs the idea that
Darwinian selection caused men to favor quantity in
mating partners while women favor quality. Ferguson
summarizes her point as, "their 'hypotheses'
about the origin of sexual roles can't really be
tested, as scientific theories are supposed to
be."
Anne
and Andy, of course, miss the key point that lots of
other scientific theories "can't really be
tested." For example, you can't reproduce
Continental Drift in the lab. You can't scoop up a few
continents, go back a billion years, and then see if
the same drift happens all over again.
Ferguson
thrashes onward, quoting from his new-found pals:
"Return
once more to female sexual coyness: Even if one
grants that it is found across cultures, can we be
certain that the trait is instinctual? 'It seems
just as plausible—if not more so—that these
preferences derive from rational, conscious
deliberation,' writes the science writer John Horgan,
in a thoughtful dissection of evolutionary
psychology included in his recent book, The
Undiscovered Mind. 'By puberty, most females
recognize that even if they employ contraception,
they are at risk of becoming pregnant during a
sexual encounter; it is thus quite rational for
females to be more wary of casual sex than males
are.'"
Just because you can't
test historical theories like Continental Drift or
Darwinism in the lab, it doesn't mean they aren't
testable. You just have to be more clever. You have to
look for naturally occurring tests.
For example, many
of us lived through an excellent test of Horgan's
theory that sex roles are not at all instinctual. The
introduction of the birth control pill in 1964 and the
legalization of abortion in 1970-1973 made having an
unwanted baby a negligible risk to women. This lead to
the late Sexual Revolution, as men temporarily
persuaded many women that the only thing holding them
back from the joys of random sex had been fear of
pregnancy.
While this brief
era provided all sorts of fun to Hugh Hefner, Wilt
Chamberlain, and Warren Beatty, it proved much less
emotionally and physically satisfying to the great
majority of women. Therefore, in the Eighties, women
greeted the arrival of AIDS (which never threatened
middle class women to any appreciable degree) with
tasteless gratitude, finding it the perfect excuse for
retiring from the Sexual Revolution.
Of course, much
of the wisdom that neo-Darwinians laboriously
rediscover had never been lost by non-intellectuals,
such as your grandmother, who made these truths about
humanity the basis of her nagging.
In 2000, for
example, evolutionists won worldwide headlines with
the following stop-the-presses findings:
1.
Women like taller men. ("So stop slouching
like a slob, young man!")
2.
Rapists are often motivated by sexual desire.
("So stop dressing like a slut, young
lady!").
The
biggest problem with contemporary neo-Darwinism is
that - in its reigning "evolutionary
psychology" version - it talks solely about sex
in order to avoid to having to mention race. Real
Darwinism, though, is essentially about two things:
sex and
race.
Charles
Darwin did not dream up the Theory of Evolution. Many
earlier thinkers, like his grandfather Erasmus Darwin
and the great French naturalist Jean Baptiste Lamarck,
had proposed various schemes of gradual changes in
organisms. Darwin's contribution was the precise
engine of evolution: selection. Lamarck, for example,
had believed that giraffes possess long necks because
their ancestors had stretched their necks to reach
higher leaves. This stretching somehow caused their
offspring to be born with longer necks. Darwin,
however, argued that the proto-giraffes who happened
to be born with longer necks could eat more and thus
left behind more of their longer-necked children than
the proto-giraffes unlucky enough to be born with
shorter necks.
And
what selection selects are hereditary genetic
differences. In "The Descent of Man," Darwin
wrote, "Variability is the necessary basis for
the action of selection."
Consider
the full title of Darwin's epochal book: "The
Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection or the
Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for
Life." It is hard to imagine two words that
could get a scholar in worse trouble today than "Favoured
Races." But that term is not some deplorable Dead
White European Maleism that we can scrape away to get
down to Darwin's multiculturally sensitive core idea.
Not at all: "Favoured Races" is
Darwin's Big Idea. For if we didn't differ
genetically, selection could not act upon us. We would
still be bacteria.
Note
well, however, that Darwin wrote "Favoured
Races," not "Favoured Race." Darwinism
is no brief for some purported Master Race. It
proposes not that one race is superior in all things,
but that all races are superior in several things.
That is how it accounts for the glorious diversity of
life.
The
unity and diversity of the human race are not
contradictory ideas. In fact, considering the vast
range of geographic and social environments found
across the face of the Earth, the only way we could
flourish in so many places yet retain our unity is to
adapt endlessly. To stay one species, we have to be
many races.
Here
again Darwin clashes with the Left. While
"diversity" and "equality" are
both considered Good Things by multiculturalists, that
does not make them synonyms. They are antonyms. The
more environments we have been selected to adapt to,
the more trade-offs selection has had to make.
Thus
the more meaningless it is to boast that your group is
supreme overall. But the more implausible it also is
to expect all groups to be identically favored in each
particular setting or skill --whether it is high
altitude mountain climbing, engineering, charisma,
running the 100 meters, or stand-up comedy.
Unfortunately,
the inevitable conservatism of genuine neo-Darwinism
made it so many enemies on Leftist-dominated campuses
that anthropologists John Tooby and Leda Cosmides
found it expedient to relaunch sociobiology under the
new, improved brand name of "evolutionary
psychology." In a brilliant marketing ploy, they
spin-doctored neo-Darwinism into academic
acceptability by pronouncing themselves the truest
True Believers in equality. They portrayed human
nature as almost monolithically uniform, and
proclaimed that science should only study human
similarities.
Yet, except for
identical twins, no two humans' genetic codes are the
same. So, exactly whose genes were they going to
study? Stumped, the evolutionary psychologists
responded with name-calling: Interest in human
differences was deemed evil, or tedious, or
insensitive, or just not done. This
conservative-egalitarian party line soon had many
smart people parroting silly ideas. For example, one
of Steven Pinker's evolutionary psychology bestsellers
concluded, complete with italics: "…
differences between individuals are so boring!"
Since most
highly-educated people are infected with the Platonic
virus that makes them prefer to think in terms of
nonexistent abstract certainties rather than reality's
fuzzy probabilities, few challenged the new orthodoxy
of a homogenous human nature. The evolutionary
psychologists themselves, however, soon found that
while egalitarianism was a useful cover story, it was
a largely useless methodology for learning about
humanity. Ironically, but not surprisingly,
evolutionary psychology has become primarily the study
of sex differences.
Why? Because
knowledge consists of contrasts.
Information can be boiled down to that most
basic of contrasts, the ones and zeroes of digital
data, but it can't be boiled down further to all ones.
So, if we want to learn much about human nature, we're
going to need to compare different kinds of humans:
male and female, sick and healthy, young and old,
smart and stupid, gay and straight, tall and short,
black and white, and so forth. They all deserve
respect as manifestations of human nature's rich
diversity. (See my National
Post article "The
Future of Human Nature" for a discussion of
what this implies for the future when genetic
engineering becomes more advanced.)
If you have a
fairly fast web connection, probably the best
introduction to the implications of honest
neo-Darwinism is my Thatcher
Speech Web Presentation. This provides the text
and the amusing slides from a speech I gave at a Hudson
Institute conference hosted by former Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher.
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
March 30,
2001