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Darwinism: A House Divided

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Here’s an illuminating book review. We are increasingly seeing two streams of Darwinism — one which says there’s no problem reconciling it with religion; the other which sees the two as completely incompatible. As the reviewer notes: “Stanovich takes the hard line that accepting darwinism has to mean opposing virtually all religious beliefs. He praises fundamentalists as recognizing this point while arguing that mainline churches do not see the incompatibility of science with religion.”  
 

Book Review: A rebellious revolution
Gordon M. Burghardt
Trends in Ecology & Evolution, Volume 21, Issue 10 , October 2006, Pages 537-538

Keith E. Stanovich, The Robot’s Rebellion: Finding Meaning in an Age of Darwin, University of Chicago Press (2005) ISBN 0 226 77125 3 US$18.00 pbk (374 pages). More...

 The Robot’s Rebellion introduces major findings of cognitive psychology, including decision making, heuristics, evolutionary modules and memes, to address the metaphysical and epistemological challenges of darwinism for systems of human belief. The opening chapter disappoints, however, as it sets forth Dawkin’s selfish gene versus vehicle view of evolution virtually unaltered after 30 years of intervening research. There is the generic slapdown of group selection, the admittedly anthropomorphic treatment of the wants, needs and desires of genes, and no mention of gene-environment interactions, evo-devo, or phenotypic plasticity. The extensive notes show that the author is aware of complications that he largely ignores in the text to make his polemical points starker. However, if you read on, you will be rewarded.
 The premise argued in the following six chapters is that human psychology is under the control of two, often competing, cognitive systems (‘a brain at war with itself’). One is in service primarily of our genes and only incidentally adaptive to the individual (vehicle). It is given the acronym TASS (for the awkward ‘The Autonomous Set of Systems’), a set of cognitive processes that are quick, unreflective and mandatory, and which include innate and learned habitual responses. The second system, the Analytic System (AS), enables the vehicle (individual) to override robotic TASS: relying on ‘gut instincts makes us little more than slaves of the mindless replicators’. The AS enables humans (and only humans) to rebel. Complicating the story, however, is the existence of memes which, similar to TASS, can manipulate individuals to act against their own interests (many political and religious beliefs), although many memes, such as those involved in technology (the wheel), health and safety are advantageous to individuals and essential to cultural advance. These ideas are supported by references to recent studies in cognitive science and philosophy. Intriguing examples are also given useful for class discussion. It is scary that 70% of university students think this syllogism is logical: all living things need water; roses need water; therefore roses are living things. Stanovich usefully clears up many misconceptions about rational thinking and TREE readers would find this most useful in teaching controversial topics.
 However, there are three problems with The Robot’s Rebellion. The final chapter, ‘A soul without mystery,’ harks back to the subtitle of the book and consists mainly of the ruminations of numerous philosophers with nary an evolutionary biologist or ethologist in sight. The meaning of life is located in being able to question a ‘first order preference’ (e.g. I like to smoke) by considering the health costs and thus developing a ‘second order preference’ (I prefer to prefer not to smoke), which can lead to a ‘third order preference’ (I prefer to smoke more than I prefer my preference not to smoke). Although these preferences can escalate to even higher levels, Stanovich thankfully stops at the third level. But the exercise does enable him to develop the concept of meta-rationality, which he claims is the source of rational integration that humans, but no other animals, have.
 The second problem is that, like so many before him, Stanovich wants to uncover the trait that really distinguishes humans from other animals. Humans, unlike chimpanzees and other species, code much more contextual information into their decision making. In fact, we alone use ‘symbolic utility’ (‘a symbolic action that stands for the utility of something else’) in making judgments. Unfortunately, no data are used to support these conclusions: just the TASS and memes that Stanovich earlier cautioned us against accepting without using our analytic powers. Thus, a familiar secondhand 90-year-old anecdote about chimpanzees is used, but all recent work on ape cognition is ignored. Indeed, if claims such as equity aversion in capuchin monkeys withstand scrutiny 1, 2 and 3, a major plank of Stanovich’s anthropocentrism disintegrates. As for the assertion that animals lack the ability to use symbols in making decisions, it is as if all the work on courtship, threat displays, nuptial gifts, ritualization and other phenomena did not exist. The problem gets even worse, for Stanovich is forced to argue that nonhuman animals are more rational than humans because they use classic instrumental rationality to serve their needs whereas humans, although smart, actually act dumber (‘dysrationalia’). It is about time that psychologists forego the species essentialism that Ernst Mayr fought against so vigorously.
 The final problem with The Robot’s Rebellion might keep some from using it as a textbook. Stanovich takes the hard line that accepting darwinism has to mean opposing virtually all religious beliefs. He praises fundamentalists as recognizing this point while arguing that mainline churches do not see the incompatibility of science with religion. This approach is counterproductive and is also arguably bad theology. We need to have enough self-confidence in our science that its implications will become apparent without attacking those who are sympathetic to knowledge and are, unlike the adherents of creationism and intelligent design, open to serious discussion of modern biology.
 These criticisms notwithstanding, The Robot’s Rebellion is a fine introduction to modern cognitive psychology that I heartily recommend to biologists unfamiliar with modern cognitive science. The author takes evolution seriously, even if from a flawed anthropocentric stance incorporating a revamped instinct-intelligence dichotomy.
 References
1 S.F. Brosnan and F.B.M. de Waal, Monkeys reject unequal pay, Nature 27 (2003), pp. 297-299.
2 P.G. Roma et al., Capuchin monkeys, inequity aversion, and the frustration effect, J. Comp. Psychol. 120 (2006), pp. 67-73.
3 S.F. Brosnan and F.B.M. de Waal, Partial support from a nonreplication: comment on Roma, Silberberg, Ruggerio, and Suomi, J. Comp. Psychol. 120 (2006), pp. 74-75.

Comments
6. “Blind watchmaker” thesis: the idea that all organisms have descended from common ancestors solely through an unguided, unintelligent, purposeless, material processes such as natural selection acting on random variations or mutations; that the mechanisms of natural selection, random variation and mutation, and perhaps other similarly naturalistic mechanisms, are completely sufficient to account for the appearance of design in living organisms. I'm not sure how many people would stick to definition number 6. Terms like "purposeless" and "material" "naturalistic" are totally unecessary and they speak mostly to religious ideas. Science has no need to describe things in these terms.Fross
September 18, 2006
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Carlos, I cannot figure out what your position on evolution really is. You believe in God, are apparently a more or less believing Jew, and you even stated that you do not deny that God reveals himself to man. Yet most of your comments seem completely at one with RM&NS. You recently stated something about the noetic feeling (the inner feeling of a spiritual reality) was some sort of evolutionary development. The reason I am not a compatibilist is that I find a fundamental divide between: There is a God, There is no God. Once you posit a God, the deck is stacked. The existence of matter, of a universe, of laws of nature and so forth simply cannot be an accident in the same way as it is for an atheist who thinks matter is the fundamental reality. How is it possible for someone who believes in an omniscient and omnipotent God to suppose that his views on evolution in the deepest sense are compatible with mainstream evolution?avocationist
September 18, 2006
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Isn't modern 'darwinian evolution' v 'ID' v 'theistic evolution' basically summed up as... Darwinian Evolution: We're not sure how life began, but however it began, it was purposeless except that life wants to thrive in any form it takes, and this drive to thrive + random mutation has resulted in all bio-diversity. Theistic Evolution: There was an intelligent force - perhaps even an omniscient one - which created both the cosmos and all life as we know it. We're not certain how this life began, but humanity and the aspects of mind that go with it were always intended, though we can't cite any direct proof of this. Intelligent Design: We're not sure how life began, but one look at the various feats nature has accomplished indicates that there was either active 'tinkering' with how life as we know it at various stages, or the 'program' that is biological life was endowed with capabilities so great that it could not have been accidental or random. And if this is right.. isn't it nearly impossible (thus far) to prove any of the three, even though IDers are trying hard to do so? And by this I mean less to criticize IDers than I do to criticize proponents of Darwinian Evolution. It's impossible to prove or disprove design, and equally difficult to prove or disprove that it was all random unintended chance. So why is one interpretation scientific theory, the other(s) theological/philosophical speculation? Isn't it all speculation? And if so.. shouldn't people, you know. Be informed of this? Sorry if my comments are remedial.nullasalus
September 18, 2006
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That would only help them if being put on the spot wouldn't demolish their theory.StephenA
September 18, 2006
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By the way, instead of wasting time in trying to "placate" the religious people, Darwinists would do a better job in defending their speculative hypothesis if they opened it for criticism and debates. That would be the mark that evolutionists don't fear being on the spot. Saddly, seems like that Darwinists prefer to work via court rulings, missinformation, fear-mongering, name calling and loose and vague difinitions of the word "evolution".Mats
September 18, 2006
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How many of those 90% are what we would consider as devout church-going Christians? (This is not a "True scotsman fallacy", btw) Secondly, being registed as a Christian doesn't mean you are one. In Portugal, babies are baptized as Catholic and registed as such. Most of them don't even know what Christianity stands for after they grow, but are registed as "Catholic". This is so problematic that I even had atheist friends who wanted to have their names taken off the list. I think it all comes down to one's comitement to what they claim to believe. The truth is that the more serious you take the Bible, the less likely you are to believe in darwinian myths.Mats
September 18, 2006
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Good pt tinabrewer, this kind of dualism is only necessary if one believes that NDE has been convincingly demonstrated to be true. How would most Europeans know otherwise?kvwells
September 18, 2006
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littlejon: it kind of depends upon what you mean by needing "purpose" for the non-material parts of you. If purpose is defined as a transcendent and eternal personality, then you would probably be left asking "why did the maker of all not also make matter and everything it contains?" whereas if purpose is understood more or less existentially, then of course there would be no problem filling the gap with whatever you want.tinabrewer
September 18, 2006
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Is this really any different from "Christianity: A House Divided"? After all, many Christians think that evolution and Christianity are consistent, and some don't. So Darwinism and Christianity are both divided. Perhaps neither will stand? The more reliable division is not between Darwinism and Christianity, but between "compatibilists" (those who think that Darwinism and religion are compatible) and "incompatibilists" (those who think that they are incompatible). That's where the real division lies. Compatibilists like Ken Miller and Michael Ruse are working on one side; incompabilists like Alvin Plantinga and Richard Dawkins on the other. From a compatibilist perspective, the incompatibilists are making mountains out of molehills, if not out of thin air; from an incompatibilist perspective, compatibilists are refusing to make the inferences to which they are rationally committed. By the way, the "beautiful cathedrals empty but for tourists" is mostly true of France, less so for Ireland or Italy, from what I understand. The Lutherans are still going strong in the Scandinavian countries, aren' they?Carlos
September 18, 2006
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Poul Willy Eriksen, "As I never tire of telling people, I live in Denmark, where at least 90% of the population are registered as members of a religion that should be creationist; yet more than 80% of the population accept evolution to the exclusion of creation. How come?" While the majority of your citizens may be registered to a religion, what percent actually make it an important part of their lives? My impression, please correct me if I am wrong, is that you have beautiful cathedrals in Western Europe, practically empty except for tourists. So, maybe there is only an apparent internal conflict amongst most of your people. After all, if I only go ice skating once in a blue moon (if you call it that in Denmark), I could care less about the condition of my skates.Ekstasis
September 18, 2006
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If they accept evolution #6 then that 90% must also be contortionists who live a life of irony. Must be? Could they not effectively be dualists - ie some form of accepting purposeless NDE to account for their DNA, but needing purpose to account for the parts of being human that is "more than" DNA? I for one am happy enough that NS has determined the exact form of my flesh, but of course I consider "myself" so much more than just this form... which opens up a gap... which religion slots into.littlejon
September 18, 2006
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"If they accept evolution #6 then that 90% must also be contortionists who live a life of irony." I could understand the problem if religious scientists held to scientism but I dont imagine they do.Chris Hyland
September 18, 2006
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Note that the protagonists do not disagree about neo-Darwinism. They disagree about religion and what it can accept.Mark Frank
September 18, 2006
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Hi Joseph; You wrote:
If they accept evolution #6 then that 90% must also be contortionists who live a life of irony.
Sure, you have a point; if people are simple asked whether they believe in evolution without any specification being given, what is the scientific value of the responses? However, I can tell you that a couple of years ago the leader of a very conservative Lutheran group suggested that creation should be taught in biology classes in school. It was registered that he had made the suggestion, but ´that was all. Creationism is in general not an issue at all. That Richard Dawkins (and a few others) might claim that you are not a true evolutionist unless you accept evolution #6 has little relevance, since there are no creationists claiming that he is right.Poul Willy Eriksen
September 18, 2006
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Poul Willy Eriksen: As I never tire of telling people, I live in Denmark, where at least 90% of the population are registered as members of a religion that should be creationist; yet more than 80% of the population accept evolution to the exclusion of creation. How come? I guess that all depends on which version of "evolution" they accept: The meanings of evolution, from "Darwinism, Design and Public Education": 1. Change over time; history of nature; any sequence of events in nature 2. Changes in the frequencies of alleles in the gene pool of a population 3. Limited common descent: the idea that particular groups of organisms have descended from a common ancestor. 4. The mechanisms responsible for the change required to produce limited descent with modification, chiefly natural selection acting on random variations or mutations. 5. Universal common descent: the idea that all organisms have descended from a single common ancestor. 6. “Blind watchmaker” thesis: the idea that all organisms have descended from common ancestors solely through an unguided, unintelligent, purposeless, material processes such as natural selection acting on random variations or mutations; that the mechanisms of natural selection, random variation and mutation, and perhaps other similarly naturalistic mechanisms, are completely sufficient to account for the appearance of design in living organisms. If they accept evolution #6 then that 90% must also be contortionists who live a life of irony.Joseph
September 18, 2006
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Very interesting. I particular noticed this:
The final problem with The Robot’s Rebellion might keep some from using it as a textbook. Stanovich takes the hard line that accepting darwinism has to mean opposing virtually all religious beliefs. He praises fundamentalists as recognizing this point while arguing that mainline churches do not see the incompatibility of science with religion. This approach is counterproductive and is also arguably bad theology. We need to have enough self-confidence in our science that its implications will become apparent without attacking those who are sympathetic to knowledge and are, unlike the adherents of creationism and intelligent design, open to serious discussion of modern biology. These criticisms notwithstanding, The Robot’s Rebellion is a fine introduction to modern cognitive psychology that I heartily recommend to biologists unfamiliar with modern cognitive science. The author takes evolution seriously, even if from a flawed anthropocentric stance incorporating a revamped instinct-intelligence dichotomy.
That 'Darwinists' (accepting this moniker as meaningful) are divided concerning the question of religion is well-known. However, it's not an immanent conflict. This is particularly easy to see, if probing is done outside the USA. As I never tire of telling people, I live in Denmark, where at least 90% of the population are registered as members of a religion that should be creationist; yet more than 80% of the population accept evolution to the exclusion of creation. How come?Poul Willy Eriksen
September 18, 2006
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