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A Frightening Admission?

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Peter J. Bowler published an article in Science (Jan. 9, 2009) titled “Darwin’s Originality.” While much of Bowler’s analysis is just plain wrong (e.g., Darwin’s theory being already “in the air” is NOT accurately premised largely upon Wallace co-discovery of natural selection as Bowler suggests but upon much deeper secularizing processes coextensive with skeptics like David Hume and positivists like Auguste Comte, both of whom deeply influenced Darwin, and ideas even predating them), but another of his comments is just plain frightening. Toward the end of his essay Bowler distances Darwinism from the racial hygiene of the Nazis but then writes the following: “But by proposing that evolution worked primarily through the elimination of useless variants, Darwin created an image that could all too easily be exploited by those who wanted the human race to conform to their own pre-existing ideals. In the same way, his popularization of the struggle metaphor focused attention onto the individualistic aspects of Spencer’s philosophy.” Lauding “modern science” for recognizing “Darwin’s key insights,” Bowler admits that some of them are “profoundly disturbing” and that “the theory, in turn, played into the way those implications were developed by later generations. This is not,” he adds, “a simple matter of science being ‘misused’ by social commentators, because Darwin ‘s theorizing would almost certainly have been different had he not drawn inspiration from social, as well as scientific, influences. We may well feel uncomfortable with those aspects of his theory today, especially in light of their subsequent applications to human affairs. But if we accept science’s power to upset the traditional foundations of how we think about the world, we should also accept its potential to interact with moral values [emphasis added].”
 
So what is Bowler saying here? Should we adopt the standards of Peter Singer? Are we all due for a little “culling of the unfit”? Are we to sacrifice ethics on the alter of Darwinian “science”? Bowler’s conclusion regarding Darwin’s “originality” is hardly the uplifting message one would expect.

Comments
jerry @ 9, sorry for the late reply - it's the time lag. My experience with Italy is the same as Gaz' with Britain, there are a lot of Catholics who are voters or even members of a socialist party.Kontinental
December 9, 2009
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jerry (9), "Yes European socialism is atheistic as well as most other variants." Rubbish. Britain, for example, has - for now - a socialist Prime Minister who is the son of a Scottish Minister and a practising Christian. Check out the Socialist block of MEPs in the European Parliament and you'll find most of them - nearly all - are actually Christians.Gaz
December 9, 2009
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"Now I am puzzled:" You shouldn't be. Everything I said was obvious. You point out an anti intellectual anomaly where a iron fisted dictator has some strange ideas. Yes he was atheistic and and an extreme socialist. That does not make him the model for all socialism. Current socialism is also atheistic as it tries to produce a heaven on earth and in doing so must go with the most extreme anti theistic ideology currently available. Darwinian evolution is that ideology despite the obvious implications of it as far as class. Yes European socialism is atheistic as well as most other variants. You live there so you must know that.jerry
December 9, 2009
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I agree that the highlighted text is confused, but so are the sentences preceding it. Without reading the whole of Bowler's article it is hard to guess which parts of Darwin's theory are meant by "key insights", and which parts of the theory are based on social rather than scientific reasoning. Mr Flannery agrees with Bowler, though for different reasons, that a theory of evolution by variation and selection was in the air by the mid 19th century. It is hard to conceive of such a theory that did not place the individual as the most important locus of selection. We have theories of group selection, but these operate in addition to, not as replacements of, selection at the level of the individual. It is therefore hard to see how any of the key insights of Darwin's theory are based on social philosophy, rather than science. Of course, that did not stop anyone from seeing the theory through the lens of their own social philosophy, or dismissing evolution as an 'English theory'. But let us not ascribe these failures to the theory itself, any more than the muddiness of Bowler's prose is caused by his subject.Nakashima
December 9, 2009
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Jerry @ 3: Now I am puzzled: The OP seems to point to a possible use of Darwinian theory by Nazi "racial hygiene" (I shudder at the term). However, you suggest a relationship to socialism. Being European, I can assure that Stalinists were violently opposed to Darwinian evolution; you might have heard of Lyssenko who spent years of fruitless efforts to prove the Lamarckian theory instead.Kontinental
December 9, 2009
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People don’t work that way. They apply meaning to a worldview.
They apparently also confuse their "is" and "ought."hummus man
December 9, 2009
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avocationist (4), "And so it is a a bit disingenuous to say that Darwinism is merely a statement of how things are." It's not at all disingenuous. The theory of evolution is merely a theory, based on the evidence, about the origin of species (and note, it isn't even a theory about how life started). That's all it is - an explanation of the mechanism by which species arise. "People don’t work that way. They apply meaning to a worldview." The theory of evolution is only a "view" about the mechanism for the origin of species. It is not an explanation for anything else about the world, not even about the way in which humans ought to behave. If they try to apply "meaning" to it then they are trying to apply meaning to something that doesn't actually have any "meaning" in that sense. And if people don't understand that - i.e. they "don't work that way" - then there's been a failing in their education. Those who "don't work that way" need to study more.Gaz
December 9, 2009
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Seversky, It's really not a matter of whether or not Darwin himself would have approved of racial hygiene, but of whether the theory naturally lends itself to that. And so it is a a bit disingenuous to say that Darwinism is merely a statement of how things are. People don't work that way. They apply meaning to a worldview.avocationist
December 8, 2009
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It is interesting that some of the most ardent defenders of Darwin are left wing ultra socialists that are often found in academic and other elite circles. Darwinism and egalitarian beliefs are at odds with each other. But the one thing that trumps non-egalitarian processes is atheism. And as Richard Dawkins has said Darwin made it ok to be a fulfilled atheist. So on the one hand Darwin is at odds with egalitarian thinking on the other hand it is in sync with the atheistic orientation of liberal left wing ideology which burst on the scene in the French Revolution. The atheistic aspects are more important in the short run than the class system implied by Darwin's ideas. Socialism thus feels very comfortable with these atheistic implications.jerry
December 8, 2009
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It really should not be necessary to repeat this but the theory of evolution is a theory in biology not ethics. Natural selection was proposed as a process whereby those individuals who are fortunate enough to be better fitted to the environment in which they find themselves are more likely to survive to produce offspring than those who are less well-adapted. It is simply a description and explanation of the way things are. 'Should' does not come into it. As for the Nazis, even if Darwin's ideas influenced their policies significantly, it does not mean it is something he would have approved of nor does it have any bearing on how good evolution is as a scientific theory. Besides, if his ideas were so highly-regarded by the Nazis, how is that, in 1935, Die Bucherei, "the official Nazi journal for lending libraries", published a list of "purification" guidelines which included the following:
6. Writings of a philosophical and social nature whose content deals with the false scientific enlightenment of primitive Darwinism and Monism (Haeckel).
The suspicion has to be that the campaign to associate Darwinian theory with the Nazis has much more to do with anti-evolutionary propaganda than it does with history.Seversky
December 8, 2009
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the problem i find with social darwinism is that what humans choose as fit or unfit would be arbitrary and would be more like breeding than natural selection. Just like breeding can limit the genetic variability, so could social darwinism. We never know what the next natural culling process will be, so if we deem some group of humans unfit, yet they had some genetic advantage we'd be SOL. We're the last species of humans left on earth so the last thing we need to do is cull ourselves.Fross
December 8, 2009
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