THE MEANINGS OF DARWINISM: THEN AND NOW
by Robert M. Young
I am grateful to you for inviting me to take part in this
conference on ‘Darwinism and Ethics for the Next Millennium’, and I congratulate
Robin Case for having the idea of mounting it at Darwin’s old school. I say this
not only because it is an appropriate place to honour Darwin but also because
the issues we have come here to discuss and debate are of the greatest
importance for young people and their teachers to ponder. The quality and
perhaps the existence of our culture depend on the approach that gets taken to
the relationship between Darwinism, in its widest sense, and ethics.
I have never set foot in a public school before. Darwin seems
to have liked it here -- at least socially. What he has to say about himself and
the school academically may offer some comfort to those of you who are thought,
or think yourselves, indifferent scholars or are critical of the school. Darwin
was, as I’m sure you know, born in Shrewsbury, and his mother died when he was
eight. He was a pupil here for seven years between 1818 and 1825 and left when
he was sixteen, I am sorry to say, because, as he puts it in his autobiography,
‘I was doing no good at school’. He was nicknamed ‘Gas’, not for the reason you
may think, but because he was interested in chemistry, which the headmaster
thought a useless subject. Darwin thought his time here was, as a means of
education, ‘a blank’ (Darwin, 1958, pp. 25, 27, 28, 46). I do not report these
things to put down Darwin or the school but to reiterate the point that you
never know how someone who may appear an unimpressive student -- as Darwin did
at Shrewsbury, Edinburgh and Cambridge -- will turn out when his or her
imagination is fired by an interesting and challenging subject. This apparently
idle boy is the most profound thinker the study of biology, including human
biology, has ever had, yet neither his father nor his teachers had any inkling
that this would turn out to be the case or that he would distinguish himself in
any way.
I went to a state school in Texas, one that turned out in
retrospect to be a good school, but I had little notion of that until I won a
scholarship to America’s best university, Yale. I thought it was for my prowess
as a swimmer, but to my considerable surprise they also thought I was clever,
and so it turned out. I tell you this, not to compare myself to Darwin but,
because in the course of saying some things about Darwin and Darwinism then and
now, I am also going to say some things about being a scholar, a species I knew
little or nothing about when I was your age. This ignorance turned out to be an
asset, since I was so delighted when I found out what one was that I have never
got over my initial thrilled enthusiasm, and I am keen to share it with you in
the hope that some of you may become intrigued about a life of learning. It is
not currently in fashion, but it is an honourable life, and I commend it to you.
I was so ignorant when I was a schoolboy that I could not
have told you two sentences about any of the people in the study of whom I have
spent the bulk of my career as a scholar: Darwin, Marx and Freud. These men are
the central and originating figures of the main grand narratives which the
nineteenth century bequeathed to us (Young, 1988). As it happens, each has been
the subject of sustained and significantly successful attacks in recent years.
Marx has fared worst, Freud rather (but not much) better, and Darwin is, as yet,
only the subject of hostile legislation in a small number of American states and
has his stout defenders. Trashing Darwin, Marx and Freud is fashionable, but
that’s not the same as demonstrating that they were wrong or guaranteeing that
they will remain unfashionable. For example, in some quarters psychoanalysis is
a growing discipline. Over a dozen new MA degrees in Psychoanalytic Studies have
sprung up in recent years, and there are now over two score professorships in
this country associated with the subject, of which I hold the only one
designated as Psychoanalytic Studies (Young, 1999, 1999b). Similar things can be
said about the current position of Marxism, as opposed to its grotesque
distortions in the former Soviet Bloc.
The movement to forbid the teaching of the Darwinian theory
of evolution by natural selection as established fact is waxing in several
American states and has recently been made official educational policy in
Kansas. Regrettable though this is, it is certainly a rear-guard action,
occurring largely among unsophisticated religious fundamentalists. In the
broader culture there is a huge efflorescence of research, writings and
television programmes celebrating and extending the Darwinian point of view to
every nook and cranny of the science of living things, human nature and human
relations. In some hands it has been claimed as a universal explanation. I am
reminded of an analogous situation in the history of the treatment of the
mentally ill. When large mental hospitals sited in the countryside first came in
during the nineteenth century, the claims to effect cures just from being in
such pastoral settings grew and grew until someone claimed to cure all of the
patient in a given hospital. His name was Dr Awl, which led a wag to dub him Dr
Cure-All. Well, Daniel Dennett, in his book, Darwin’s Dangerous Idea (1995), has
claimed that Darwinism is such a powerful explanatory theory that it is a
universal solvent. The chemists among you will probably know that a universal
solvent poses a special problem, since it dissolves everything, leaving one with
no container in which to store it. My fear is that Darwinism, which is certainly
an idea of fundamental importance, is being promoted in an uncontained way.
I am decidedly ambivalent about the celebratory furore around
Darwin and Darwinism. You’d think I would be experiencing unalloyed delight. In
some circles and at some times I have been called the world’s leading Darwin
scholar, in others the most controversial but also the most influential. It has
even been said that I have thought more deeply about the Darwinian revolution
than anyone else. Why, then, am I not marching at the head to this growing
academic party under the banner of Darwinism? The answer is that it scares me,
and its most enthusiastic supporters make little space for the kinds of caveats
I put forward. Some of the currently fashionable Darwinism has more than a whiff
of zealotry abut it. Zealots claim too much and often run roughshod over those
who doubt and disagree. I am very enthusiastic, indeed, about the importance of
Darwin’s idea and of subsequent developments, and I’ll say why in just a moment.
I am also, however, genuinely frightened by the passion and in some cases the
arrogance with which some of the boosters of Darwinism are militantly promoting
it. I am thinking, in particular, of the intolerance displayed by Richard
Dawkins and the hucksterism of the group involved with the promotion of
Darwin@LSE. There is something quite fundamentally intemperate about the
approach and the broad claims made by some of these people.
I’ll come back to this theme. For the moment, however, I want
to go onto the other tack and say something about Darwin ‘then’, that is, in the
nineteenth century. I spent a long time studying the history of biology,
philosophy and religion in the Victorian period (Young, 1985a). My interest came
from a concern to understand human nature, which explains why I have spent
decades pondering the ideas of Marx and Freud, as well (Young, 1973, 1977, 1985,
1986, 1989 1990 1993,,1994, 1994a, 1996).
Let’s stand back and try to place Darwin in the great scheme
of the history of ideas. There have been a number of blows to human arrogance.
The concept of the solar system dethroned the Earth from being regarded as the
centre of the universe. Darwinism showed that humanity is not the specially
created pinnacle of all living beings. Marxism showed that economic and
ideological forces fundamentally condition what humans do. Freud showed that we
do not even have access to the greater part of our motivations, which are
unconscious. These explanations mitigate our conception of the human species and
our planet as central in the firmament and our humanity as adequately
characterised by rational intentionality and conscious control over our actions.
If we look at Darwin’s theory as one of the great ideas in
the history of science, we can characterise it in two ways. Evolution ranks with
gravity, the central concept in physics, and affinity, the key idea in
chemistry, as one of the most basic concepts in the natural sciences. Beyond
that, however, evolution by natural selection is a widely-applicable theory in
two senses. It is the law which binds all of life together and defines its
relations with the physical environment — how the history of living nature
relates to the history of nature. And, of course, it binds humanity by causal
laws to the rest of life and nature. Evolution by natural selection is the
process which accounts for the history of living nature, including human nature.
It is arguably the most important idea in the history of the natural and the
human sciences. Suitably interpreted, I think it is.
All of the above is fairly common knowledge, though the
breadth and depth of the scope of Darwinism is rarely adequately presented.
However, there is a huge problem, which is left unresolved -- or perhaps I
should say it is in some hands too easily resolved -- by evolution. If we take
evolution to be an all-embracing explanation of living, including human,
phenomena, then it includes human psychology, society and culture within the
causal nexus of deterministic scientific laws. If this is so, what is the basis
for morality? Put another way, how should we think of the role of values and
morality in human nature? At its most stark, evolution by natural selection
proceeds by competition for resources for resources and/or mates to achieve
viable offspring which live to reproduce. How can this conception of the
interrelations between creatures be subtle enough to include processes which
transcend competition — altruism, charity, generosity, self-critical reflection,
including what Darwin’s great inspiration, T. R. Malthus, called ’moral
restraint’? (Young, 1999a). How can it explain the diversity of customs and
mores in different cultures? Providing such explanations is, I take it, part of
the project of the new Darwinian sciences, in particular Darwinian (sometimes
called Evolutionary) Psychology. The answers they tend to provide often strike
me as less useful than the ones we can gain from more traditional ones employing
human purposes, consciously conceived and/or discerned in unconscious
motivations, which do not rely on selfish genes and competition resources and/or
mates.
It seems to me to be approaching things the wrong way up to
claim that Darwinian explanations provide the most basic accounts for the
subtleties and complexities of human relations when literature, philosophy,
theology, analytical psychology and other cultural approaches evoke and explore
them so well. Perhaps I should say, rather, that it seems wrong-headed to me to
offer Darwinian explanations as superior to or as replacements for traditional
explorations of such matters derived from the arts. It may be, of course, that
evolution explains humanity and all its works, but we must still find a way of
paying due respect to established forms of reflection on human nature and not
run headlong into a single explanatory paradigm -- and a reductionist one, at
that. The general applicability of evolutionary explanation is not the same as
its replacing other explanations or as being seen as more appropriate or basic
than them.
This point becomes an urgent one when science gains access to
the mechanisms for altering genetic processes and begins to allow us to alter
and reconstruct the genomes and achieve cloning of other species and ourselves.
It is too easy to collapse the issues involved and to allow too much authority
to scientists in the debates which it is appropriate for us to have about these
matters. There is also a common elision, which needs to be avoided. It is
sometimes thought or implied that since evolution can, in principle, explain
everything human, then evolutionists — by which I mean biological scientists and
popularisers of their ideas — have special insights and authority across all of
knowledge. I find this implied in the aggressive stances taken up by some (not
all) of the public spokespersons of science. I have in mind, for example, the
aforementioned Richard Dawkins (1976) and also Louis Wolpert (1993), both of
whom strike me as delighting in putting down people whose disciplines they
assert are made less important and even a waste of time, e.g., philosophy,
history and philosophy of science, cultural studies.
There was a similar arrogance associated with positivism in
philosophy and science in earlier decades. It was claimed that there was science
on the one hand and confusion on the other; testable hypotheses were set over
against and versus muddle, logic and poetry. A whole series of dichotomies was
posited with one side scientific and reliable and the other markedly less so:
fact-value
science-ideology
nature-culture
science-arts
primary qualities-secondary qualities
mechanism-purpose
outer-inner
rational-emotional
My experience of certain biologists, molecular biologists and
scientists who appear on the media and speak in a militant way is that they
indulge in the celebration of science at the expense of the rest of knowledge. I
advocate complementarity and peaceful coexistence and deplore arrogance,
splitting and competitiveness over such matters. Two examples come to mind. The
eminent molecular biologist, Sydney (latterly Sir Sydney) Brenner (co-translator
of the genetic alphabet), was a Fellow of King’s College, Cambridge, when I was.
I invited a distinguished philosopher of science, Mary Hesse (latterly a Fellow
of the British Academy) to a college feast, and the person arranging the seating
thought it might prove interesting to put them next to each other. When they
were introduced and Brenner asked her and was told what her field was, he
replied (in his rather thick South African accent), ‘Haven’t they closed that
down yet?’ I told this story in a television debate with the scientific pundit,
Louis Wolpert, at a point when he was denigrating scholars whose disciplines
involved reflecting on science. His comment was (also, as it happens, in a South
African accent), ‘Quite right!’. Aside from the discourtesy to a college guest,
I found Brenner’s insolence characteristic. I have a similar impression from
some of the speculations of Richard Dawkins who discusses religion as analogous
to a virus and in one article let slip that he regarded culture in the same
light (Dawkins, 1993). The implied subtext was that scientists might help us
root out these infections and leave us with pure scientific rationality. I
should add that he repudiated this implication when challenged. These people may
be right to defend themselves against the charge of being reductionists, though
some would not wish to do so. (For example, at the conference where I gave this
talk, Matt Ridley said he was proud to be a reductionist but deplored what he
called ‘greedy reductionism’.) It is not at all as obvious to me that they are
not philistines (Young, 1995a).
It is also important to ask about the relationship between
these highly-public debates and the development of Darwin scholarship, which is
proceeding apace with the progressive publication of the collected letters of
Darwin, eleven volumes of which have so far been published by Cambridge
University Press (Darwin, 1985-99), taking us up to 1863, and he lived for
nearly two more decades. I am struck by how little contact there seems to be
between the hucksterism of those offering Darwinism as a universal explanation,
on the one hand, and the professional Darwin scholars, on the other. This is, to
say the least, odd, since claims for the power of Darwin’s ideas should surely
be based on a sound foundation of what he actually said and the framework of
ideas which he advocated and within which he thought.
The area of Darwinian science which is flourishing most is
sociobiology, which in its current, more subtle and more promising form is, as I
said, called Darwinian Psychology and uses evolutionary variables to explain
human behaviour. The explanations in Darwinian Psychology are rooted in instinct
theory and expressed in term of the contribution of a given way of reacting to
competition for mates and survival. These explanations are often ingenious, but
I think they are also often far-fetched. That is, they use distal explanations
when proximal ones are called for. Don’t get me wrong. We must find more
adequate models for the inner world, and how we evolved is certain to contribute
quite fundamentally to understanding human nature. I have spent significant
periods of my life working on theories of brain function (Young, 1970, 1990), on
evolutionary theory and on evolutionary views of psychology (Young, 1970, esp.
ch. 5; 1985a, esp. ch. 3). I am not opposing those approaches, but I am
reminding you that behaviour and motivation are multi-layered, just as physics,
chemistry and biology are. It is notoriously true that you cannot deduce the
subjectively experienced properties of tables and chairs from the physical
properties of fundamental particles or explain the subtleties of food flavours
by reference to molecular interactions in biochemistry. Similarly, the layers of
historical explanation in evolution and the layers of causal explanation of
behaviour do not all reduce to the struggle for existence. There are other
layers — other levels of explanation — which provide accounts which have their
own explanatory efficacy and appropriately satisfy curiosity (Young, 1995). When
I ask someone why he has done something, I do not want to hear about his
serotonin levels. I might find an explanation in terms of brain injury or drug
reaction relevant in some cases, but in most cases I want a reply which informs
me about his motivations, one that includes a moral dimension. I will feel
fobbed off by anything else. Similarly, when I go into a chemist’s shop and ask
for something for a headache, I don’t want a response in terms of fundamental
particle physics. I want a response at the appropriate level of explanation, in
this case about a pill for my headache and instructions about how often to take
it.
We continue to turn to literature, the theatre, music and
story-telling to edify and to reflect upon human nature. Shakespeare,
Dostoyevsky, Kafka and others enlighten us, and they explain why people behave
as they do in terms of the subtleties of intentions and motivations. We need a
psychology and therapies which resonate with lived experience, and Darwinian
Psychology is so far a very long way from providing one. I want to give it a
fair wind, but in the meantime I want to see its development as a part of a
family of congenial and compatible approaches to human nature, no one which
claims to be more basic than, and to supersede, all the others. In particular, I
would argue that psychoanalysis (along with related theories drawing on it) is
at present the only theory one on offer, which illuminates the most primitive
dimensions of our inner — that is, our subjective — world below consciousness. I
should perhaps add that I speak not only as a Darwinian scholar but also as a
practitioner of psychoanalytic psychotherapy.
I want to offer some historical examples to support my belief
that we should be cautious about feeling that evolutionism is a panacea.
Science, like other modes of thought, offers no guarantee of getting things
right. Darwin was himself very modest, indeed, about the implications of his
theory for psychology. His writings on this subject were largely derivative and
rather tentative. Of course, in his lifetime there was a much more fundamental
hurdle to clear, the principle of continuity between other species and homo
sapiens. While zoology showed that we were closely allied to the higher apes,
some of Darwin’s most assiduous allies were reluctant to draw the appropriate
conclusions. Sir Charles Lyell, the great geologist, provided in his Principles
of Geology (1930-33) the principle of uniformity which posited that only current
causes, in their current intensities, could account for the history of the
changes the earth has undergone. This meant that great draughts of time would be
required to account for the history of the observed changes on our planet.
Darwin saw that small changes, working over this time scale, could produce the
evolution of species, including our own. Lyell, it must be said, was very
reluctant, indeed, to see this extrapolation made, and Darwin spent many years
agonising over Lyell’s slowness in assenting to Darwin’s explanation of The
Descent of Man (1871). Lyell’s The Antiquity of Man (1863) withheld assent from
the application of Darwinism to humanity, and it was many years before he
accepted this extrapolation.
Almost as wounding and disappointing was the fact that the
co-author of the theory of evolution by natural selection was also not a
wholehearted adherent to Darwin’s views on this matter. You may recall that
Alfred Russel Wallace was a field naturalist in the Malay Archipelago when he
suddenly grasped the essence of the theory. He had adumbrated it earlier and
came so near that Lyell warned Darwin to get his skates on and publish his
theory before Wallace forestalled him. Darwin did, indeed, sit down to write a
big book, never to be published in his lifetime, entitled, Natural Selection
(Stauffer, 1975). He was hard at it when he got a letter from Wallace saying
that he had figured it all out while having a malaria attack and lying in his
hammock. Darwin was devastated. He said that Wallace’s phrases were his own
chapter headings. This potential scoop was handled in a gentlemanly manner; they
published jointly (Darwin and Wallace, 1958) and Wallace always generously
referred to the theory as Darwinism and even wrote a book with that title
(Wallace, 1889). But where the human brain was concerned, he abandoned natural
selection and argued that some other explanation of its features was called for
(Wallace, 1870). Darwin was grievously disappointed.
You might say that the brain anatomists and
neurophysiologists would solve the problem and vindicate Darwin, but scientists
usually see what their theoretical preconceptions lead them to see. One of the
great anatomists and paleontologist of the period, Richard Owen, claimed
vociferously that there was a brain structure, the hippocampus minor, that
humans had and other species did not. This was entirely false, but gallons of
ink were consumed by Darwin’s most successful popularizer, T. H. Huxley, and
others in getting the matter clear. An eminent brain physiologist at Princeton,
my friend and colleague, Charles Gross, has told this story in a fascinating
essay, subtitled ‘On the Social Construction of Neuroanatomy’ (of which I’ll
leave a copy of for your library – Gross, 1998).
William Carpenter, probably the most respected brain
scientist of this period, said that there was a physical gap separating the
cerebral cortex from the lower nervous centres and tracts –-- a literal gap
separating the thinking and willing parts of the brain from the lower animal
parts. Any first year medical student in our own time could show you with ease
that there is no such gap. These are the lengths Darwin’s contemporaries went to
fend off the evolutionary continuity between man and beast (see Young, 1970, pp.
210-20).
I tell you these interesting anecdotes in the history of
psychology and brain science to illustrate a general point. Traditions and
points of view in science are not immune from prejudice and preconception, even
in the minds of very great thinkers and researchers. Here we have leaders in the
field whose eyes saw what their preconceptions dictated. There were other
figures in the history of psychology in Darwin’s lifetime who he thought had
more to say about the brain and psychology than he did. For example, he relied
on his disciple, Huxley, to write the part of his book on The Descent of Man
which was about the brain. In fact, the most provocative passage in On the
Origin of Species illustrates this point. In the first edition of 1859, Darwin
wrote, ‘In the distant future I see open fields for far more important
researches. Psychology will be placed on a new foundation, that of the necessary
acquirement of each mental power and capacity by gradation’ (Darwin, 1859, p.
488). Then comes the sentence, which made the book a huge threat to the
established view of the place of humanity in nature. Darwin concludes this
short, provocative paragraph as follows: ‘Light will be thrown on the origin of
man and his history’ (Ibid.). In the last edition, which he corrected until the
late 1870s, he makes it clear that he does not regard himself as having laid
those new foundation for psychology. The sentence about psychology is re-written
and reads, ‘Psychology will be securely based on the foundation already
well-laid by Mr Herbert Spencer…’ (6th ed., reprinted 1895, p. 402). Spencer
provided an evolutionary basis for both the development of mind and learning
(Spencer, 1855, 1870-72), an approach, which was taken up by the great British
neurologist John Hughlings Jackson (1931) and adopted, in turn, by Freud who
used these as assumptions in the psychoanalytic approach to the structure and
functioning of brain and mind (Freud, 1891).
I’ll make this point about preconceptions another way by
telling you something about the history of encyclopaedias. Unless you live in a
very large house you can become pretty unpopular with your wife or partner by
becoming a collector of encyclopaedias, I can tell you from personal experience.
I have several successive editions of The Encyclopaedia Britannica (the latest
edition of which, is now, she was relieved to learn, available free on-line). I
am fascinated by how they change -- you might even say that they evolve. The
founders of the encyclopaedia movement in France saw them as repositories for
the accumulation of knowledge, but they were wrong to think that knowledge
accumulates in a linear way. Not only do new discoveries get made in what has
been called ordinary science or scholarship. More important than that, as Darwin
strikingly shows, ways of thinking also shift. The categories, the assumptions,
the theories, whole approaches change. Thomas Kuhn (1962) has called this level
of change ‘a paradigm shift’. Well, if there was ever a paradigm shift in the
history of thought, it was the one wrought by Darwin. There were, of course and
as I’ve indicated, other dramatic ones. The shift from geocentric planetary
theory to heliocentric -- from belief that all planets go around the earth in
circles to belief that all planets, including the earth, go around the sun in
elliptical orbits. The atomic theory in chemistry was another. If you peruse the
eighth edition of the Britannica, you will search in vain for any mention of
evolution, even though there were theories of it about. You will, however, find
a substantial entry entitled ‘Deluge’, where the history of geology (which has
no separate entry in this edition) is subsumed under an account of the Biblical
Flood. There is only a tiny entry on ‘Evolution’ which does not mention our
sense of that word, none on ‘Development’. The one on ‘Species’ says only ‘See
LOGIC’. This volume of the Britannica bears the date 1854, five years before
Darwin’s book was published at the end of 1859. Now have a look at the ninth
edition. The long article on the Deluge has vanished, and one on ‘Evolution in
Biology’ has appeared (Huxley, 1879), as has one on ‘Evolution in Philosophy’
(Sully, 1897). The whole intellectual framework for thinking about the earth and
the history of life has shifted between the 1850s and the 1870s, when the next
edition came out.
The Darwinian theory replaced a framework which had reigned
since antiquity, and I want to urge you to read the book, which describes it.
The theory of everything which ruled intellectual and religions life from the
Greeks to Darwin was called ‘The Great Chain of Being’, and Arthur O. Lovejoy
founded the academic discipline called the History of Ideas by writing a book
about it, subtitled, ‘An Essay in the History of an Idea’. According to this
theory, this cosmology, everything that could possibly exist did exist; there
was a single chain extending from non-being to the angels and God; every link
was there. The ruling principles were plenitude, unilinear gradation, and
sufficient reason (that everything was there for a purpose). Humankind was
exactly in the middle of the chain. Alexander Pope immortalised this world view
in the eighteenth-century Age of Enlightenment in a passage I am glad that I was
required to memorise when I was a schoolboy and will now recite. It is from a
poem called ‘An Essay on Man’ and appeared in 1733. Pope wrote,
Know then thyself, presume not God to scan;
The proper study of mankind is Man.
Plac’d on this isthmus of a middle state,
A being darkly wise, and rudely great:
With too much knowledge for the Sceptic side,
With too much weakness for the Stoic’s pride,
He hangs between; in doubt to act or rest;
In doubt to deem himself a God, or Beast;
In doubt his Mind or Body to prefer;
Born but to die, and reas’ning but to err;
Alike in ignorance, his reason such,
Whether he thinks too little, or too much:
Chaos of Thought and Passion, all confused;
Still by himself abused, or disabused;
Created half to rise, and half to fall;
Great lord of all things, yet a prey to all;
Sole judge of Truth, in endless Error hurled:
The glory, jest and riddle of the world!
(Pope, 1733, Epistle II, pp. 125-26)
I find this a lovely vision, and, although perhaps passé in
certain features which are not central to the vision being conveyed, it embodies
the kind of wisdom which explanations drawn from Darwinian Psychology are
unlikely to improve upon. It was allied to a time span for human history of 6000
years, such that the earth was created in 4004 BC. Needless to say, evolution
was precluded by the terms of the theory. The links in the chain of being were
quite distinct, did not merge into each other and did not change over time.
Ironically, it was a related principle, that of uniformity, which lay at the
base of Lyell’s uniformitarian geology and Darwin’s theory, which he said came
half out of Lyell’s mind. Indeed, Darwin took volume one of Lyell’s Principles
of Geology with him as he set sail in the world voyage of the Beagle between
1831 and 1836, where he moved through space and geological time on a sufficient
scale to conceive of his own over-arching theory
It is important to stress that Darwin did not think of
evolution all by himself. Volume two of Lyell’s Principles reached Darwin in
Montevideo. Lyell wrote in opposition to evolution but the second volume
contained a careful exposition of the evolutionary theories which were then
available. Darwin’s own grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, had conceived of a theory
of evolution several decades before Charles (E. Darwin, 1794-96; McNeil, 1987).
An autodidact, Robert Chambers, had published a theory of evolution in 1844,
which had caused a great stir and led Darwin, who had worked out his own theory
in 1838, to write out a fair copy of his ideas in case his abundant physical
symptoms might kill him before he published his ideas (Darwin, 1844). And
Herbert Spencer, whom I mentioned a minute ago in connection with evolutionary
psychology, published a theory of evolution in 1852, entitled ‘The Development
Hypothesis’.
What Darwin provided was a huge amount of scientifically
respectable data and a credible theory of the mechanism of evolution. That’s not
quite right; he did not really have a mechanism. That came some time after he
died and as not clearly formulated until well into the 1930s and was not given a
truly chemical basis with the relevant structure spelled out until the
Watson-Crick model of DNA in 1953. Darwin’s account was sufficiently plausible
so that it persuaded people that evolution occurs by natural means. I fact, he
climbed down from pure belief in natural selection or the survival of the
fittest (Spencer’s phrase) and brought in other factors to the point that his
book was a bit of a mess by the sixth edition. He meticulously revised it again
and again, adding new data, shoring up his arguments in the face of criticisms.
Of the 3,878 sentences in the first edition, nearly 3,000, about 75 per cent,
were rewritten from one to five times each. Over 1,500 sentences were added, and
of the original sentences plus these, nearly 325 were dropped. Of the original
and added sentences there are nearly 7,500 variants of all kinds. In terms of
net added sentences, the sixth edition is nearly a third as long as the first.
The editions from the first to the sixth included ever-increasing revisions. Of
the total, 7 percent appeared in the second edition (1859), 14 percent in the
third (1861), 21 percent in the fourth (1866), 29 percent in the fifth (1869),
and the sixth (1872) -- including extensive replies to a single and particularly
vexing critic, St George Jackson Mivart - had even more (Peckham, 1959, p. 9).
We owe these details about Darwin’s revisions to the meticulous researches of
Morse Peckham. It is a useful exaggeration to say that by the sixth edition the
book was mis-titled and should have read On the Origin of Species by Means of
Natural Selection and All Sorts of Other Things.
But the sweep of Darwin’s argument carried the day, even
though natural selection fell out of favour, only to rise again in my own
lifetime. A former student of mine, Professor Peter Bowler, has written a series
of careful studies of Darwinism after Darwin and before modern genetics and
molecular biology (Bowler, 1983, 1986, 1988). The general theory came to command
wide assent, but his special contribution -- random variation, competition for
resources and/or for mates, survival of those with slight advantages and the
slow accumulation of such changes -- did not receive a firm basis until many
decades after Darwin died in 1882.
In the broader culture, while evolutionary theory in the
strict biological sense was not yet based on a secure mechanism of evolutionary
change, thinking in evolutionary terms and analogies swept all before it as a
framework of ideas. There was a large body of writing in evolutionary approaches
to human nature in the decades after Darwin, affecting psychology, anthropology,
sociology and even economics and architecture. Some of the most admired and
influential thinkers in these disciplines cast their theories in evolutionary
terms. They treated societies as organisms and drew on biological and
physiological concepts, especially structure, function, development and
adaptation. Together they were known as the functionalist movement. This
approach was pioneered by Herbert Spencer, who wrote an important essay entitled
‘The Social Organism’ in 1860, in which he said, ‘Societies slowly augment in
mass; they progress in complexity of structure, at the same time their parts
become more mutually dependent, their living units are removed and replaced
without destroying their integrity; and the extents these peculiarities are
proportionate to their vital activities.
‘These are traits that societies have in common with organic
bodies. And these traits in which they agree with organic bodies and disagree
with all other things, entirely subordinate the minor distinctions: such
distinctions being scarcely greater than those which separate one half of the
organic kingdom from the other. The principles of organization are the same and
the differences are simply differences of application’ (Spencer, 1860, p. 206).
Spencer had been thinking in these terms for some time. He
wrote nearly a decade earlier, ‘We commonly enough compare a nation to a living
organism. We speak of ”the body politic”, of the functions of its several parts,
of its growth, and of its diseases, as though it were a creature. But we usually
employ these expressions as metaphors, little suspecting how close is the
analogy, and how far it will bear carrying out. So completely, however, is a
society organized upon the same system as an individual being, that we may
almost say there is something more than analogy between them (Spencer, 1851, p.
448). We can discern in Spencer’s way of thinking and expressing his ideas just
how comforting and plausible it is to present our social and political beliefs
in organic, developmental and physiological rhetoric and to claim that they are
thereby firmly and deeply rooted in biological soil. That doesn’t make them
true, though.
This way of thinking was taken up by pioneers in modern
psychology and social science, for example, Émile Durkheim in France, A. R.
Radcliffe-Brown and Bronislaw Malinowski in Britain and William James, John
Dewey and Talcott Parsons in the US. It ruled in the human sciences for the
first half of this century; it was the orthodoxy. Functionalism had the
interesting feature of precluding radical or revolutionary social theories by
virtue of the terms of reference of the theory. If society was treated as an
organism and in biological and evolutionary terms, then a fundamental
(revolutionary) change in a relatively short period was literally inconceivable
within the terms of the functionalist framework (Demerath and Peterson, 1968;
Gouldner, 1971; Young, 1981). It is worth recalling that the rise of radical
theories occurred in a period of student activism in the 1960s and 1970s, when
radical protest against the Vietnam War led to a critique of the social and
political theories fashionable in academia which were seen to apologise for the
status quo (Young, 1971).
Sociobiology emerged in the 1970s and was subjected to
withering criticisms from the left. Its founder. E. O. Wilson, an expert on ants
and a professor at Harvard, played straight into the critic’s hands in arguing,
for example, that ethics should be entrusted for a time to the hands of
biologists (Wilson, 1975, 1978). Many then and now found his explanations rather
reductionist, but he has remained an influential figure. In the last few days he
has given a lecture in Boston to the American Psychological Association in which
he argued that the life sciences, such as biology, are inherently connected to
the humanities and social sciences, and that the ‘borderland disciplines of
cognitive psychology, genetics and evolutionary psychology could unify our
knowledge of human nature’. He concluded, ‘I am very aware that the conception
of a biological foundation of complex social and cultural structures runs
against the grain for a lot of scholars, but at long last we appear to have
acquired the means either to establish the truth of the fundamental unity of
knowledge or to discard the idea. I think we’re going to establish it’. I find
this worrying, even though I am in favour of interdisciplinary thinking.
I am approaching my conclusion. The thought I want to leave
you with is, once again, an ambivalent one. On the one hand, Darwin’s theory of
evolution by natural selection is one of the most important ideas in history and
perhaps the most important idea for understanding human nature, and
extrapolations from evolutionary mechanisms to psychological and social theory
are, in principle, very welcome. However, we already know a lot about human
nature from literature, religion, philosophy and other fruits of the cogitations
of clever and profound thinkers who have pondered these matters literally over
millennia, if you think of the traditions extending from the Platonic Dialogues,
the Aristotelian corpus, Greek tragedy, the great theological texts from, for
example, India, China, Japan, Islam and Christianity, Renaissance thought,
Shakespeare and so on up to Marx, Kierkegaard, Freud and insightful thinkers in
our own time whose place in history is as yet less clear. Two of my candidates
are the novelists Joseph Heller (1962) and Larry McMurtry (1985, 1999), but I
know I am biased by my own cultural upbringing and preferences.
We need to bring Darwinian insights into the broad culture of
knowledge and wisdom about human nature. What we need not to do is privilege
ideas with the adjective Darwinian in front of them, as if that label provides a
guarantee of trustworthiness or profundity, and its absence means that the
holders of other ideas are mired in error and/or befuddled irrationality. We
already have some profound ideas about human nature, thank you very much. It
would be nice to have some more but not if they want to elbow out the good ones
we already have. You might think this obvious until you hear some of the zealots
and hucksters who are immodestly and aggressively claiming that they -- because
they are Darwinians -- are uniquely qualified to represent scientific
rationality and that this form of rationality stands above and can replace
others.
Darwin, bless him, never suffered from this kind of tunnel
vision. I’d like to think what he learned here at Shrewsbury School helped him
not to be narrow-minded. The headmaster, Dr Thomas Butler, accused Darwin of
only being interested in trifles (Browne, p. 33). The boy, in turn, managed to
convey his low opinion of the headmaster in deliciously mischievous way. He took
an enthusiastic part in a game known as ‘raising the Doctor’, which ‘consisted
of a dozen boys going into the room over the Doctor in the middle of the night &
dancing a tattoo & then rushing back to bed and pretending to be asleep’
(Browne, p. 25), which proves once again that you never know how an apparently
indifferent scholar and naughty pupil will turn out.
Revised version of talk delivered at Shrewsbury School
Millennium Conference on ‘Darwinism and Ethics for the Next Millennium’, 16
October 1999.
REFERENCES
(Place of publication is London unless otherwise specified.)
Bowler, Peter J. (1983) The Eclipse of Darwinism:
Anti-Darwinian Evolution Theories in the Decades around 1900. Baltimore, MD:
Johns Hopkins University Press.
______ (1986) Theories of Human Evolution: A Century of
Debate, 1844-1944. Oxford: Blackwell.
______ (1988) The Non-Darwinian Revolution: Reinterpreting an
Historical Myth. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Browne, Janet (1995) Charles Darwin: Voyaging. Cape.
Chambers, Robert] (1844). Vestiges of the Natural History of
Creation, 2nd ed., Churchill; 11 th ed. (1860); 12th ed., Chambers (1884); 1st
edition reprinted with an introduction by Sir Gavin de Beer. Leicester:
Leicester University Press, 1969.
Darwin, Charles (1842 ). ‘Sketch of 1842’, in Darwin and
Wallace (1958), pp. 39-88.
______ (1844) ‘Charles Darwin’s Essay of 1844’. In Ibid., pp.
89-254.
______ (1859). On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.
Murray;. facsimile reprint New York: Athenaeum, 1967; 6th ed. (1872). Murray.
______ (1871). The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation
to Sex, 2nd ed. Murray, 1874.
______ (1958). The Autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882
with original omissions restored. ed. Nora Barlow. Collins.
______ (1985-1999) The Correspondence of Charles Darwin,
edited by Frederick Burkhardt et al., 11 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press (ongoing).
______ and Wallace, A. R. (1958). Evolution by Natural
Selection. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Darwin, Erasmus (1794-6). Zoonomia: or, the Laws of Organic
Life. 2 vols. Dublin: Byrne & Jones.
Dawkins, Richard (1976) The Selfish Gene. Oxford: Oxford
University Press; revised ed., 1989.
______ (1993) ‘Viruses of the Mind’, in Bo Dahlbom, ed.,
Dennett and His Critics. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 13-27.
‘Deluge’ (1854) Encyclopaedia Britannica, 8th ed. Edinburgh:
Adam and Charles Black, 1854, vol. 7, pp. 710-23.
Demerath, N. J. and Peterson, Richard (1967) System, Change,
and Conflict: A Reader on Contemporary Sociological Theory and the Debate Over
Functionalism. Collier-Macmillan.
Dennett, Daniel C. (1995) Darwin’s Dangerous Idea: Evolution
and the Meanings of Life. N. Y.: Simon & Schuster; reprinted Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1996.
Freud, S. (1891) On Aphasia: A Critical Study, trans, E.
Stengel,
N. Y.: International Universities Press, 1953.
Gouldner, Alvin W. (1971) The Coming Crisis in Western
Sociology. Heinemann Educational Books.
Gross, Charles G. (1998) ‘The Hippocampus Minor and Man’s
Place in Nature: A Case Study in the Social Construction of Neuroanatomy’, in
Brain, Vision, Memory: Tales in the History of Neuroscience. Cambridge, MA: MIT,
pp. 137-80.
Heller, Joseph (1962) Catch-22. Cape.
Huxley, T. H. (1879) ‘Evolution in Biology’, Encyclopaedia
Britnnica, 9th ed., Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black, vol. 8, pp. 744-51.
Jackson, J. H. (1931) Selected Writings, 2 vols. N. Y.: Basic
Books, 1958.
Lovejoy, Arthur O. (1936). The Great Chain of Being: A Study
of the History of an Idea . New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1960.
Kuhn, Thomas S. (1962). The Structure of Scientific
Revolutions, 2nd ed., with postscript (1970). Chicago: University of Chicago
Press.
Lyell, Charles (1830-3). Principles of Geology, being an
Attempt to Explain the Former Changes of the Earth's Surface by Reference to
Causes Now in Operation. 3 vols. Murray; 2nd ed., 3 vols. (1833).
_______ (1863). The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of
Man, with Remarks on Theories of the Origin of Species by Variation. Murray.
McMurtry, Larry (1985). Lonesome Dove. N. Y.: Simon and
Schuster.
______ (1999) Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen: Reflections
at Sixty and Beyond. N.Y.: Simon and Schuster.
McNeil, Maureen (1987) Under the Banner of Science: Erasmus
Darwin and His Age. University of Manchester Press.
Peckham, Morse, ed. (1959). The Origin of Species by Charles
Darwin: A Variorum Text. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Pope, Alexander (1733) ’An Essay on Man’; reprinted in Poems
of Alexander Pope. Nelson, n.d., pp. 116-54.
Spencer, Herbert (1851) Social Statics: or, The Conditions
Essential to Human Happiness Specified and the First of Them Developed. John
Chapman.
______ (1852). ‘The Development Hypothesis’, The Leader (20
March). Reprinted in Spencer (1901), vol. 1, pp. 1-7.
______ (1855). Principles of Psychology. Longmans.
______ (1860). ‘The Social Organism’, reprinted in Spencer
(1901), vol. 1, pp. 265-307, and Spencer (1969), pp. 195-233.
______ (1870-2). Principles of Psychology, 2nd ed., 2 vols.
Williams & Norgate.
______ (1901). Essays: Scientific, Political and Speculative,
3 vols. Williams & Norgate.
______ (1969). The Man versus the State with Four Essays on
Politics and Society. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
Stauffer, R. C., ed. (1975). Charles Darwin's Natural
Selection, Being the Second Part of his Big Species Book Written from 1856 to
1858. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Sully. James (1879) ‘Evolution in Philosophy’, Encyclopaedia
Britannica, 9th ed., Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black, vol. 8, pp. 751-73.
Wallace, Alfred R. (1870). ‘The Limits of Natural Selection
as Applied to Man’, reprinted in Wallace (1891), chap. 9.
Wallace, Alfred R. (1889). Darwinism: An Exposition of the
Theory of Natural Selection with Some of Its Applications. Macmillan.
Wallace, Alfred R. (1891) Natural Selection and Tropical
Nature: Essays on Descriptive and Theoretical Biology. Macmillan.
Wilson, Edward O. (1975) Sociobiology: The New Synthesis,
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
______ (1978) On Human Nature. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press.
Wolpert, Louis (1993) The Unnatural Nature of Science. Faber
and Faber reprint.
Young, Robert M. (1970) Mind, Brain and Adaptation on the
Nineteenth Century: Cerebral Localization and Its Biological Context from Gall
to Ferrier. Oxford: Clarendon Press; reprinted N. Y. Oxford University Press,
1990.
_______ (1971) ‘Evolutionary Biology and Ideology: Then and
Now’, in W. Fuller, ed., The Biological Revolution. Garden City: N.Y.:
Doubleday, pp. 241-82.
______ (1973) ‘The Historiographic and Ideological Contexts
of the Nineteenth-Century Debate on Man's Place in Nature’, in M. Teich and R.
M. Young, eds., Changing Perspectives in the History of Science. Heinemann
Educational Books, pp. 344-438; reprinted in Darwin’s Metaphor (1985), pp.
164-248.
______ (1977) ‘Science is Social Relations’, Rad. Sci. J. 5:
65-129.
______ (1981) ‘The Naturalization of Value Systems in the
Human Sciences', in M. Bartholomew et al., Problems in the Biological Sciences.
Milton Keynes: Open University Press, pp. 63-110.
______ (1985) ‘Darwinism is Social’, in D. Kohn, ed., The
Darwinian Heritage. Princeton University Press, pp. 609-38.
_____ (1985a) Darwin’s Metaphor: Nature’s Place in Victorian
Culture. Cambridge University Press, 1985.
______ (1986) ‘Freud: Scientist and/or Humanist’, Free Assns.
6: 7-35.
______ (1988) 'Darwin, Marx, Freud and the Foundations of the
Human Sciences', Cheiron Newsletter. Spring, pp. 7-12.
______ (1989) ‘Charles Darwin: Man and Metaphor’, Science as
Culture 5: 71-86.
______ (1990) ‘Marxism and the History of Science’, in R. C.
Olby et al., eds., Companion to the History of Modern Science Routledge, pp.
77-86.
______ (1993) ‘Darwin's Metaphor and the Philosophy of
Science’, Sci. as Culture (no. 16) 3: 375-403.
______ (1994) ‘Desmond and Moore’s Darwin: A Critique’, Sci.
as Culture (no. 20) 4: 393-424.
______ (1994a) Mental Space. Process Press
______ (1995) ‘Reductionism and Overdetermination in the
Explanation of Human Nature’, paper presented at Centre for Psychotherapeutic
Studies, University of Sheffield.
______ (1995a) ‘What Scientists Have to Learn’, Sci. as
Culture (no. 23) 5:167-80.
_______ (1996) ‘Evolution, Biology and Psychology from a
Marxist Point of View’, in Ian Parker and Russell Spears, eds., Psychology and
Society: Radical Theory and Practice. Pluto Press, pp. 35-49.
______ (1997) ‘Deadly Unconscious Logics in Joseph Heller’s
Catch- 22’, Psychoanalytic Rev. 84: 891-903.
______ (1999) ‘The Curious Place of Psychoanalysis in the
Academy’, talk delivered to the Programme in Psychoanalysis and the Humanities,
University of Toronto, 9 January 1999.
______ (1999a) ’”Malthus on Man - in animals no moral
restraint”’, Sci. as Culture 8: 189-208.
______ (1999b) ’What Is Psychoanalytic Studies?’,
Psychoanalytic Studies 1: 221-36.
Copyright: The Author
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk