LAST WEEK I WROTE THIS:
If Darwinists from Darwin to Dawkins and beyond can peddle their claims based on their plausibility (some of those entirely implausible if you look at them with even moderate rigor) then I don't think Behe is asking for anything his opponents don't take as their own privilege.
It's going to be another hard day for me - I should have waited till past harvest time to move - so I'm going to post one of the pieces I had the most fun writing, exactly the examination of one of those fables of science peddled by the high priest of Darwinian fundamentalism, Richard Dawkins and, I'll bet, is widely taught in university level science classes and accepted by even those who go into biology as a career without ever giving it any critical thought at all. Such is the quality of current materialist - atheist - scientism, even that which gets published and taught as real, gen-you-wine science.
-------------------------
One
of the most popular ideas in current materialism, atheism and among the
self appointed "skeptics" is that "altruism" is a product of natural
selection. That idea was pushed by a latter day Darwinist named W.D.
Hamilton* who came up with equations alleging to prove that conscious
acts of self sacrifice by an individual were really acts of genetic
self-interest, selfishness for the propagation of genes by organisms
that are the mere robots and vehicles of them.
Backing up, the problem that acts of generosity posed for the
theory of natural selection goes back to the beginning with Darwin. If
natural selection is what formed all organisms, body and mind and
behavior, acts of generous self-sacrifice, resulting in the death or
injury or even some form of reproductive disadvantage can't be
explained. Natural selection is, as even Darwin asserted, all about
"survival of the fittest" [On the Origin of Species 5th ed. p. 92]
in a struggle for life and reproduction. And, as seen in yesterday's
post, Darwin and his followers were already making the most extravagant
claims about its action in human societies. They, of course, had
nothing but narrative, lacking data to back up then claims. Quite often
in Darwin, Haeckel and others, the narrative was a thinly veiled
creation myth designed to assert an appearance of natural selection in
nature when it was only there in the fables. That effort has continued
down to today, it is the reason why such an overwhelming amount of
asserted "science" surrounding behavior and thought becomes accepted,
fashionable, out-moded and then junked as newer fables or, on occasion,
some actual data or the application of reason debunks them.
In the hands of any Darwinian fundamentalist, whose goal is not
to test Natural Selection but to uphold it and assert its universal
explanatory power, all phenomena which could harm the theory must be
either rejected or twisted to fit it. "Altruism" as expounded by
Hamilton is transformed into a mere appearance of generosity but which
is, actually, Darwinian self-interest on behalf of genes contained
within organisms. In order to do that the human experience of
generosity has to be made to equal behaviors in other species which are
far removed from us in evolutionary descent by many hundreds of millions
of years, ants figure heavily in it. I haven't seen any applications
of Hamilton to organisms more distant in time for us, though the
imperatives of the ultra-Darwinist claiming the total explanatory power
of natural selection could hardly continue to ignore the vast majority
of the living species, and grad students in the soft "sciences" will
always be looking for novel ways to please the faculties in their field.
The most frequently articulated form of Hamiltonian "altruism"
I've encountered, by far, is that of gene selfishness as popularized by
Richard Dawkins in The Selfish Gene. And by a factor of many times to
one, the expression of such "altruism" brought up by his fans is in the
fable of "the first bird to call out". I wrote briefly and quickly on
that last spring. My recent go around
at Jeffrey Sallit's atheist themed "science" blog, "Recursivity",
brought up some even more absurd aspects of it, so I will go over it
again. Here is the fable as Dawkins sets it out.
Laying
down one's life for one's friends is obviously altruistic, but so also
is taking a slight risk for them. Many small birds, when they see a
flying predator such as a hawk, give a characteristic "alarm call", upon
which the whole flock takes appropriate evasive action. There is
indirect evidence that the bird who gives the alarm call puts itself in
special danger, because it attracts the predator's attention
particularly to itself. This is only a slight additional risk, but it
nevertheless seems, at least at first sight, to qualify as an altruistic
act by our definition.
Richard Dawkins: p.6, The Selfish Gene, Thirtieth Anniversary Edition, 2006
In my analysis last spring, I noted, at great detail that the entire basis of the invented "altruism" was the assertion, "There
is indirect evidence that the bird who gives the alarm call puts itself
in special danger, because it attracts the predator's attention
particularly to itself." Only where is that "indirect evidence" that
the first bird calling out had more of a chance at being killed by the
predator? Dawkins gives none, something he has in common with others
making assertions of "altruism" of this sort. Lacking a large enough
number of filmed examples to study in which to identify both the "first
bird to call out" and that it was the one caught by the "flying
predator" it would be impossible to make that hypothesis into real
science. No matter how well it might work as convincing narrative.
Just
on the basis of physics, if the other birds in the flock were close
enough for the alarm call to allow them to escape, they'd have to be far
closer than the predator and, the speed of sound being rather fixed,
they'd probably have taken off in a flurry of confusion before the
predator even heard the call. I don't think that part of the fable
passes muster either in terms of adequate scientific observation
(something generally lacking in evo-psy) or on the basis of basic
physics. I'll pass over the often observed phenomenon that when birds
see a predator, they very often don't call out but play statues. Also
that among some birds, it's not uncommon for different species to flock
together and for bird flocks to be found in close proximity to each
other.
But,
as I put it to the mathematician, Shallit, the proposal has even more
basic problems with it. If Dawkins is correct that there is a genetic
basis of bird "alturism", in lines with his fable, and that the
"altruism" consists in the self-sacrifice of birds containing those
genes, in order that other birds containing that gene can escape and
reproduce, he ignores that birds not containing that genetic "altruism"
would also benefit from that self-sacrifice. That would
mean that every time Dawkins fable happened, every time those "altruism"
genes worked as proposed, the percentage of birds containing the
"altruism" genes would decrease and the percentage of those not
containing them would increase within the flock and within the species.
For Dawkins fable to work, decreasing numbers within the population
would have to result in either increasing percentages or, at the very
least, a statistically neutral wash. I challenged Shallit to explain
why that wasn't true. On my last check the self-promoted champion of
science and mathematics had failed to do that. As I noted to him
neither has anyone else I've ever posed that problem to.
Even more problematic from the point of view of natural selection
would be the fact that every time an "altruistic" bird sacrificed
itself, its breeding potential, passing on the "altruism" gene to a new
generation, would be cut off. In its stead the birds not carrying
"genetic altruism" would have an increased chance
of successfully breeding in its place and any offspring they produced
would not have to compete with as many offspring carrying his "altruism
genes" in the next generation. How the "altruism genes" would increase
from that needs to be answered. As well as how those who claim to
uphold the highest of scientific and logical integrity could create such
"science".
Now, there is nothing in classical Darwinism that is more
established than the contention that eyesight and hearing are the
products of natural selection, progressively selecting individuals with
inferior eyesight and hearing to die through predation and decreased
success in producing offspring. Good eyesight and hearing are the
quintessential examples of positive adaptations, offered as proof of
the correctness of the theory of natural selection. Natural selection
fails as a theory if positive adaptations do not result in more
offspring for those individuals having them than for those which don't
have them, eventually resulting in new species which incorporate that
adaptation. That is the bedrock concept of natural selection and
Darwinism. Without that the long, violently contested and continuing
struggle over the evolution of the eye would never have happened.
I further noted that the proposed "altruistic" self-sacrifice,
based in genetics would have the odd effect of turning superior
eye-sight and hearing into a maladaptation. "Altruistic" birds with
superior eyesight and hearing would be more likely to see a predator
first, more likely to call out first and more likely to die in its
talons than an "altruistic" bird with bad eyesight and hearing.
Nearsighted, hard-of-hearing "altruistic" birds would be more likely to
be among the survivors as their more able fellows sacrificed
themselves, they potentially would increase the percentage of bad
eyesight and hearing in the subset of "altruistic" birds, leaving them
more prone to being preyed on in other ways. I'll repeat that.
According to classic Darwinism, such good eyesight and hearing would
increase the maladaptive effect of genes that directly led to early
"altriustic" bird death if they had superior eyesight and hearing within
the group of "altruistic" birds, but bad eyesight is, in itself,
maladaptive. Any way I can see, Dawkins' proposed "altruism" is a
maladaptation, failing in purely Darwinian terms as well as
contradicting the properties of the set of Natural numbers.
How Richard Dawkins and those who peddle the idea of Hamiltonian
"altruism" can be successful when their ideas are so essentially
irrational needs investigation. It also has to be asked how the entire
effort to dispose of real generosity on behalf of a theory that can't
explain it can lead alleged champions of science to so totally trash
everything, including logic, including mathematics, including Darwinian
doctrine, itself. in order to deliver on a bad note of promissory
materialism.
No matter what it's alleged scientific origin is, the concept of
"altruism" set out in such illogical fashion is extremely popular with
materialists, atheists, "skeptics" because of their devotion to
Darwinism. As noted, it is frequently cited by them in online
discussions and blog brawls. It is ideologically important to them that
Darwin's ultimate theory, which is natural selection, not evolution,
has a standing similar to that of the laws of gravitation and
those concerning chemical bonds. I was brought up with a
non-ideological faith in the power of natural selection which I've found
extremely difficult to test and question and I wasn't wedded to it in
the same, emotional way that atheists are. The first reason for the
atheist devotion to natural selection is found in its earliest
supporters. Galton said it in noting his motives in the invention of eugenics,
THE publication in 1859 of the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin
made a marked epoch in my own mental development, as it did in that of
human thought generally. Its effect was to demolish a multitude of
dogmatic barriers by a single stroke, and to arouse a spirit of
rebellion against all ancient authorities whose positive and
unauthenticated statements were contradicted by modern science.
Ernst Haeckel, as well, expressed his adoption of natural selection in terms of its ideological use,
On the other hand, the theory of development carried out by
Darwin, which we shall have to treat of here as the Non-miraculous or
Natural History of Creation, and which has already been put forward by
Goethe and Lamarck, must, if carried out logically, lead to the monistic
or mechanical (causal) conception of the universe.
Most explicitly he said,
This final triumph of the monistic conception of nature
constitutes the highest and most general merit of the Theory of Descent,
as reformed by Darwin.
As noted in previous posts, Charles Darwin was fully aware of Haeckel's
statements as he cited the book in which Haeckel said it. I have seen
nothing to indicate that Darwin rejected that view.
The very real conflict over evolution overturning a literal
interpretation of Genesis masks a far deeper ideological conflict that
comes from natural selection, considered to be an absolute law of
nature. It was a fight that Darwin's accepted and deeply appreciated
early promoters were already laying out in full detail, including,
literally, a rejection of the most basic ideas of morality. You can
read Huxley, Galton, Haeckel, and others right down to today to see that
has been a feature of natural selection as articulated by its foremost
promoters. As natural selection was, itself, based in the moral
atrocity of Malthusian economics, any expectation of anything else
coming from it is irrational. There is no place for the
real phenomena of human generosity in the declaration that the
alternative to selfishness is death, which is what natural selection is.
Generosity escapes the artificial gravity of Darwinism, it will
whenever it arises. Its reality is denied by Hamilton's perversion of
"altruism", itself a word invented by Comte to try to force generosity
into his less sciency articulation of materialism. It's hardly a
surprise that, given the cynicism and stupidity of most of the promotion
of atheism today, that turning it into selfishness by unthinking
molecules would be so very popular.
* In a planned post I will look at the idea that what the rather awful
and depraved W. D. Hamilton had to say about generosity and
"altruism" should have been taken with more pinches of salt than are
compatible with health.
Update: Since someone asked, my difficulty in questioning natural
selection comes, first and foremost, in that it was the way I've been
taught to think of evolution for more than fifty years. Try to imagine
how you would face the fact of evolution if you didn't assume that
natural selection was both a law of nature and the framework into which
all other thinking about evolution must fit. Second was the enormous
coercion that comes to someone who begins to question the theory. That
coercion is ubiquitous and powerful. Creationists aren't affected by it
because their denial of evolution removes them from its effects. I was
never brought up to believe in the literal truth of the early chapters
of Genesis, I never have so I never had that to overcome. I had been
brought up to an entirely conventional belief in contemporary
evolutionary theory. My mother has a degree in Zoology, I did well
enough in the biology classes I took that my teacher encouraged me to
think of changing my major, I've had two field biologists in my family.
I used to care what the people imposing that coercion think, most
people on the left still do. I don't care about their opinion any
longer.
I was brought to not caring about it through my investigation of
"evolutionary" psychology and Sociobiology and other "scientific"
expositions of biological determinsm far earlier than my reading of
Darwin's books and letters led me into total heresy on the matter.
I now doubt that natural selection is a force of nature in the same way
that gravity or other physical forces abstracted into laws are. I don't
think that, as science, it's an especially good theory. I don't
believe that all of those trillions of variable, changing lives of
unique individuals, their deaths, their successes and failures at
reproduction, the role of mere chance and far more subtle and
effectively infinite variation in those really equals one force of
nature. I think a lot of the articulation of this is colored by
natural selection instead of the actual events being accurately
explained by it.
Natural selection's alleged virtue of providing an explanatory mechanism
for evolution doesn't make up for its deficiencies as a theory.
Evolution would still be a fact if natural selection was junked and no
successor framework for thinking about it replaced it. There is no law
of nature that everything has to be susceptible to that level of human
comprehension. The belief that everything is eventually explainable
with science is a superstition, not scientific. As I noted in talking
about the enormous dimensions of evolution, both in time and in numbers
of lives, the idea that Charles Darwin would find the key that unlocks
the entirety on the basis of the information he had available in 1859 it
is a matter of faith, not of reason. I think that to a great extent
the lens of natural selection might have a decisive effect on what is
looked for, how what is found is looked at and for the acceptance of any
analysis of that by science. I will predict that, eventually, natural
selection will either change far more radically than it already has in
its history (Darwin and his contemporary colleagues, other than
Weismann, believed in Lamarckian inheritance, after all). I think it's
also possible that, eventually, natural selection will be laid aside as
more of that enormous field of study is discovered.
Much is made about the instances of accuracy in what Darwin said and I
am not entirely dismissive of Darwin. I firmly believe in what I think
is his greatest insight, common ancestry, while admitting that is based
on belief and presumed probability. Which will be the topic of my next
post in this series. But I am in the same position that St. George
Mivart, an early convert to Darwinism, found himself in while attending a
series of lectures on the subject given by no less of an authority than
Thomas Huxley. He found that the more he learned about it the less
credible it seemed to him.
No comments:
Post a Comment