The hard problem: Tom Stoppard on the limits of what science can explain
Can evolution explain acts of kindness, and morality? We arranged a debate between a sceptical Tom Stoppard and the evolutionary biologist David Sloan Wilson. Stuart Jeffries acted as referee
selfishness beats altruism within groups, but altruistic groups beat selfish ones
EXTRACT
n his book, Wilson tries to return evolutionary theory to the orthodoxy he claims Darwin believed in, namely that altruism is not a fiction, but rather involves real sacrifice that can be explained scientifically. He argues that, in evolutionary terms, selfishness beats altruism within groups, but that altruistic groups beat selfish ones. Consider, Wilson suggests, the male water strider. For our purposes there are two types: the “rapist” and the “gentleman”. The “rapist” attempts to mate without regard to female receptivity, the “gentleman” mates only when approached by females. Within groups, “rapists” out-compete “gentlemen” for mates and so, if within-group selection were the only force, the “gentlemen” water striders would be extinct. But they are not: “rapists” prevent females from feeding and so cause them to lay fewer eggs. Groups consisting of all “gentlemen” lay more than twice the number of eggs as those consisting of all “rapists”.
What’s true of water striders is true of all functionally organised groups, even human ones: in evolutionary terms, a functionally organised group of altruistic Mother Teresas would beat a functionally organised group of selfish Ayn Rands. Rand once wrote a book called The Virtue of Selfishness; Wilson’s suggestion is that, at a group level, it can become a vice, leading in extremis to a group’s extinction.
Phi Beta Iota: This is also true at the meta level — selfish political parties will make financial and ideological gains in the short term, but in the long term they are killing the nation that needs intelligence with integrity in the whole. The point then brings us back full circle to the culture of the society as it is communicated from one generation to another — as the educational system spirals downward into a “festival of ignorance” and laziness, the society becomes both stupid and selfish. It is an intellectual and moral cancer that is fatal.
See Especially:
Review: Philosophy and the Social Problem–The Annotated Edition
See Also:
2014 Robert Steele Applied Collective Intelligence
Open Power: Democracy Lost & Found Essay, Book Review Blurbs and Links [Updated 3 MAR 2015]
Review: Evolutionary Activism by Tom Atlee
Review: Intelligent Governance for the 21st Century: A Middle Way between West and East
Review: Making Learning Whole–How Seven Principles of Teaching can Transform Education
Review: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth
Review: Reflexive Practice–Professional Thinking for a Turbulent World
Review: The Code for Global Ethics: Ten Humanist Principles
Review: Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle
Review: The Vanishing of a Species? A Look at Modern Man’s Predicament by a Geologist (Hardcover)
Review: Why Nations Fail – The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty