This blog collects my postings and publications on IQ, personality and Genius. The Genius Famine, a book written from this blog, is available free at: http://geniusfamine.blogspot.co.uk or can be purchased at Amazon
Wednesday, 25 May 2016
Friday, 29 April 2016
Evolution of Empathizing and Systemizing - BG Charlton & P Rosenkranz
Evolution of
Empathizing and Systemizing: Empathizing
as an aspect of social intelligence, systemizing as an evolutionarily later
consequence of economic specialization
Bruce G Charlton*, Patrick
Rosenkranz
School of Psychology, Newcastle University,
NE1 7RU, UK. Email: bruce.charlton@ncl.ac.uk (*Corresponding author)
https://thewinnower.com/papers/4249-evolution-of-empathizing-and-systemizing-empathizing-as-an-aspect-of-social-intelligence-systemizing-as-an-evolutionarily-later-consequence-of-economic-specialization
Abstract
We argue that a
theory of the evolution of Empathizing (E) and Systemizing (S) needs first to
clarify that these are personality traits, as distinct from cognitive abilities.
The theory should explain both the observed reciprocity of, and the sexual
difference between, E and S in a context of the historical emergence of these
traits and their balance in relation to local selection pressures. We suggest
that the baseline state is that (since humans are social animals) ancestral
human hunter gatherers are assumed to be relatively High Empathizers, lower in
Systemizing: thus more interested in people than in things. Changes related to
the development of agriculture and technology meant that it became economically
useful for some men to become more interested in ‘things’ than in people, as a
motivation for them to learn and practice skills that were vital to personal
and (secondarily) social survival, reproduction and expansion. This selection
pressure applied most strongly to men since in the sexual division of labour it
was typically men’s role to perform such tasks. We further hypothesize that
High Systemizing men were rewarded for their socially vital work by increased
resources and high status. Because marriages were arranged in traditional
societies mainly by parental choice (and the role of parental choice was
probably increased by agriculture), it is presumed that the most valued women,
that is young and healthy women thereby having high reproductive potential,
were differentially allocated to be wives of economically successful High
Systemizers. Such unions of economically successful High Systemizing men with
the most reproductively valuable women would be expected to lead to
greater-than-average reproductive success, thereby amplifying the population
representation of genes that cause high systematizing in the population. This
hypothesis makes several testable predictions.
Introduction:
What is it that needs to be explained?
The first purpose
of this paper is conceptual clarification. In other words, we first aim to
clarify what an evolutionary theory of Empathizing and Systemizing needs to
explain: we need to be clear what has evolved, before we can suggest why and
how it may have evolved.
Therefore we need
to define the nature of both Empathizing (E) and Systemizing (S), and to
emphasize that they are personality traits or ‘dispositions’ rather than
cognitive abilities (see the section below for further explanation of this
distinction). We consider E as the disposition to apply ‘theory of mind’ (or
social intelligence) reasoning to experience; while Systemizing is a
disposition to apply non-social, abstract and systematic reasoning to
experience.
Therefore, E and
S are distinctive modes of thinking – so that in an identical situation, an
Empathizer would use one mode of thinking, while a Systemizer would use another
– even if both had the same underlying cognitive abilities, their preferences
or dispositions would be different.
To put matters
simply, E and S describe a fundamental orientation towards either People or
Things. An orientation could be understood in terms of a spontaneous focus, or
a preference. The reason for an orientation may be sought in terms of motivational
systems of gratification and aversion: a concern with either people or things,
will tend to give a particular person more pleasure (or less pain) than its
opposite.
But the situation
is not symmetrical for Empathizing and Systemizing, because Man is a social
animal: thus a focus on people is to be expected, while a focus on things in
preference to people is unexpected, and invites specific explanation.
In evolutionary
terms, we therefore can take high E almost for granted, and the pressing need
is to explain how it was possible that a preference to deal with things rather
than people was able to arise, specifically in men more strongly than in women
(Baron-Cohen, 2003). This need comes from our presumption that a preference for
things over people would – on the face of it - be likely to cause a selective
dis-advantage in terms of social relationships.
In particular, we
would assume that (all else being equal) Systemizing would probably be a
disadvantage from the perspective of sexual selection in its major form of
female sexual choice – in a nutshell, it would seem probable that individual
young women would prefer to choose high-Empathizers as sexual partners, rather
than high-Systemizers. So, for high Systemizing to have evolved in at least some
human populations; we need to explain how this presumed selective disadvantage
may have been overcome: in particular how ancestral women of high reproductive
potential could on average have ended-up reproducing with men who were
relatively more interested in things than they were interested in people!
The second (and
main) purpose of this paper is to describe specific hypotheses as to how and
why E and S traits may have evolved in ancestral humans, what may have been
their pay-offs in terms of reproductive success under specific conditions, and
to clarify the reason for the reciprocity of these traits and the existence of
sex differences in E and S (Baron-Cohen, 2003).
In brief; we
regard Empathizing as the default human personality since, as the application
of social intelligence, it reflects the great importance of social
relationships to reproductive success. By contrast, we regard Systemizing as
having emerged later in evolutionary history (and only in some, not all, human
populations) as a result of novel selection pressures mainly due to changed
economic conditions - especially the development of more-complex humans
societies (such as those dependent on complex technologies or based on
agriculture and trade) with a variety of socially-essential, specialized
‘jobs’: especially for men.
These
evolutionary hypotheses are, at this point, necessarily speculative and
intended to serve as a guide for future empirical research and testing, rather
than providing definitive answers.
Empathizing and Systemizing
conceptualized as personality traits
Empathizing and
Systemizing are personality traits – and the distinction between personality
and cognitive ability, especially general intelligence or ‘g’, is something
that needs to be made clear (Dutton and Charlton, 2016).
Intelligence and
Personality are the two main ways that psychologists have developed for
describing ‘individual differences’ between people and populations. The two
types of differences can approximately be summarized as follows: intelligence
is ability, while personality is character (or ‘disposition’); intelligence is
general – with the level of intelligence affecting many specific abilities,
while personality can be understood as a pattern of motivations, preferences,
satisfactions etc.
In terms of an
analogy with computers – intelligence is something like the processing speed,
while personality is more analogous to the types of software installed. Or (and
recognizing that a computer analogy for brain functioning is both selective and
biased), intelligence is about the efficiency of the brain, while personality
is about what that particular brain is designed to do. Or, intelligence is
about how well the brain works; while personality describes the circuitry, the
hard-wiring – what kind of brain it is.
A further
practical difference is that intelligence is measured by tests – for example IQ
tests of various types; while personality is typically evaluated by human
beings – either self-rated using self-describing personality scales, or else
rated by other people.
But an important
similarity is that both IQ and personality are (nearly always) comparative
measurements. A person ‘high’ in intelligence, or high on a personality trait
such as Empathizing, is high relative to other people. The terms ‘High’ and
‘Low’, when used both in intelligence and personality, therefore does not
describe an objective measurement of a personal attribute in the way that (for
example) high or low blood pressure or blood sugar measurements would. (This is
why the psychological field is described as individual differences.)
Empathizing and
Systemizing are properly conceptualized as personality traits, aspects of
character, dispositions or preferences to behave in certain ways; and therefore
not as cognitive abilities. E-S variations are thus not-necessarily correlated
with cognitive abilities – and indeed in some studies there is no significant
measurable correlation between E or S cognitive abilities. This is as expected,
since personality studies were developed (especially by HJ Eysenck) to describe
and compare individuals in a way that was not captured by IQ differences
(Dutton & Charlton, 2016). For example, there is neither a strong nor
consistent association between the ‘reading the mind in the eyes’ test (a test
of a cognitive ability), and scores on a self-evaluation Empathizing scale (a
measure of disposition or personality): so that an individual may score highly
at reading the mind in the eyes but score low on an Empathizing scale, or vice
versa (Lawrence, Shaw, Baker, Baron-Cohen, & David, 2004; Voracek &
Dressler, 2006).
So, a disposition
is a personality trait: understandable as a sustained tendency, an individual’s
characteristic of habitually deploying a mode of cognition. A disposition can
also be seen as an individual’s preference for using an ability. (In the sense
that preferences can only select between a certain set of abilities; one cannot
characteristically be disposed to act in any way that one is incapable of
acting.) And preference to behave in certain ways is (presumably) based on a
motivation, and motivation is associated with a psychological reward (or
gratification) from doing something – or else a psychological punishment (or
aversive consequence) of not doing something.
Ultimately,
therefore, a disposition such as Empathizing reflects that certain types of
behaviour lead to increased gratification (increased pleasure or diminution of
suffering) – and behaviour that leads to increased gratification is preferred.
Individuals differ in the types of behaviour that lead to gratification, and in
the degree of gratification associated with a specific type of behaviour – so
ultimately personality differences are underpinned by differences in what
individuals find gratifying.
In sum, individual
and group variations in Systemizing and Empathizing can be understood as
variations in the type of behaviour that (on average) lead to gratification.
Put simply: Empathizers gain enhanced gratification from Empathizing behaviour,
while Systemizers gain enhanced gratification from Systemizing behaviour. For
example, a typical High-Systemizer may have the ability to understand and
empathize with other people, but he prefers to spend most of his time doing
crosswords; while a typical High-Empathizer may be able to do crosswords to a
high standard, but she would prefer to converse with a group of friends.
Naturally, the
disposition to be Empathizing or Systemizing requires that there be the
cognitive ability to do these behaviours; to empathize requires the ability to
empathize and to systemize requires that different ability. And at extremes of
disposition there may be a deficit in such abilities, so that the extreme
Empathizer may be defective in systemizing ability and the extreme Systemizer
may be defective in theory of mind ability.
However,
deficiencies in either E or S ability are not necessary to the finding of
variations in E-S, and it seems that there may be a wide range of E-S
dispositions even when both abilities are fully intact. Therefore, these
abilities must first have evolved in order that a disposition to find them
rewarding and have a preference to use them may secondarily have evolved.
Evolution of the
Social Brain
The social brain
hypothesis sees social selection pressures as the driving force behind human
brain growth: higher cortical functions have evolved to deal with the adaptive
problems of complex group living (Adolphs, 1999, 2009; Dunbar, 1995, 1998;
Humphrey, 1976). The relative neocortex growth in humans and other primates is
due to the demands on executive brain function required by living in complex
social groups. Evidence in favour of this hypothesis shows that as group size
increases across primate species, neo-cortex size also grows (Dunbar, 1995,
1998). The set of cognitive adaptations that enable successful group living,
such as the abilities to perceive, recall and process information about others
and act according to this information, is often termed social intelligence
(Dunbar, 1998), Machiavellian intelligence (Byrne & Whiten, 1988) or social
cognition (Brothers, 1990).
Group living
poses a number of adaptive problems for the individual: attracting and
maintaining a mate, monitoring and manipulating social interactions, outwitting
rivals and forming alliances, inferring dispositions, motivations and
intentions of others, etc. Selection apparently favoured those individuals who
were the most successful at solving these adaptive problems of group living. In
order successfully to survive and reproduce within a social setting, an
individual requires the cognitive ability to react adaptively to social
challenges and to affect others positively (Byrne & Whiten, 1988) .
Amongst the
cognitive abilities enabling complex social interaction are face perception,
emotional processing, theory of mind (TOM), self-reference and working memory
(Grady & Keightley, 2002). These abilities are mediated by the interplay of
activity of networks of interdependent brain regions which support the
behaviours necessary for social interaction (Grady & Keightley, 2002).
Amongst the neural architecture that contributes to social intelligence are the
amygdala, ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the right somatosensory related
cortex (Adolphs, 1999; Grady & Keightley, 2002).
An individual
potentially benefits in terms of reproductive success by being able to predict
the behaviour of others within the group, maintain beneficial social
relationships and even manipulate social situations to advantage (Byrne &
Whiten, 1988; Humphrey, 1976). A lack of the faculties required to function
adaptively within the group can have negative reproductive consequences for the
individual. The inability positively to affect others, at least to a degree,
and adaptively to interact within a group can lead to negative emotional
effects for the individual, social ostracism and ultimately, reproductive death
(i.e. failure to raise any viable offspring). This can most clearly be seen in
the devastating effects of lesions and or disorders to the social functioning
of the individual (Ylvisaker, Feeney, & Szekeres, 1998). For instance,
individuals with the autistic spectrum disorder have abnormal face perception
(Klin et al., 1999) as well as strong deficits in the theory of mind mechanism
(Grady & Keightley, 2002). Autistic individuals have difficulties in
adaptive social behaviour, avoid normal social contact and are generally
indifferent to social encounters (Baron-Cohen, 1997).
At the core of
social intelligence lies the ability to “mind read” or theory of mind: this is
the ability to infer the contents (beliefs, desires, intentions) of the mind of
other individuals, predicting behaviour based on these inferences and
empathizing with others states of mind (Baron-Cohen, 1999, 2000, 2006b;
Baron-Cohen, Leslie, & Frith, 1985; Dennett, 1971; Premack & Woodruff,
1978). Mindreading is often seen as a predominantly cognitive ability, however
emotions play a key role in inferring other agent’s content of mind and
reacting adaptively.
Emotions and the
somatic marker mechanism
Empathizing has
evolved to represent the affective states of others and to react with an
appropriate emotion. The importance of emotions in adaptive social behaviour is
extensive; and they are pivotal in successfully modelling social behaviour.
Relevant here is the somatic marker mechanism suggested by Antonio Damasio
(Damasio, 1994, 1996, 1999) and further elaborated by Charlton (Charlton, 2000,
2003; Charlton & McClelland, 1999).
Damasio (1994,
1995, 1999) makes a distinction between emotions and feelings: Emotions are
changes in body state (and non-conscious brain state to a secondary extent)
primed by either external or internal stimuli. Feelings are the conscious
awareness of these changes in body state (Damasio, 1994, 1995). Primary
emotions are those that are innate and triggered automatically in certain
situations (Charlton, 2000, 2003; Damasio, 1995). For instance, a “fear” response can be
triggered in the presence of a snake. The somatic response in this case would
be an increase in heart rate, higher frequency of breathing, dilated pupils
etc. This pattern of somatic changes constitutes the primary emotion of fear
that can modify and initiate behaviour, such as a flight or fight response.
These emotional changes in body states can be observed in most mammals;
however, it is only some primates (the great apes probably, plus some monkeys;
and perhaps a few other relatively large-brained social mammals such as
dolphins, orcas and elephants) and of course humans that can be aware of
emotions – that is, experience feelings (Charlton, 2000).
Secondary
emotions are those emotions triggered by internal events such as remembering an
encounter with a snake or planning a route to avoid a snake. Secondary emotions
are induced by cognitive representations, i.e. internal events that have
previously been associated with a primary emotion. These secondary emotional
representations are dispositional in that they include evaluative information
about the object/event priming the emotion in the first place. Thus, remembering
an encounter with a snake can invoke the same changes in body state as the
initial encounter. Secondary emotions can therefore be seen as being acquired
through experience, and are built upon the foundations of primary emotions
(Damasio, 1995). Secondary emotions therefore occur in response to cognitive
modelling or cognitive simulations - such as memories or plans (Charlton,
2000).
Feeling an
emotion involves secondary emotions, because feeling is the conscious awareness
of a pattern of changes in body state in relation to the representation that
primed these changes. Thus, representations are juxtaposed with relevant
somatic states, i.e. emotions, to the extent that these representations are
associated or marked with a particular emotion. This juxtaposition of
representation and emotion is what constitutes the somatic marker mechanism
(Charlton, 2000; Damasio, 1994).
According to
Damasio (Damasio, 1994, 1996), the somatic marker mechanism is fundamental to
distinctively human reasoning and decision making, especially within the social
and personal realm. The neurobiological site which is critical for the somatic
marker mechanism to function is the prefrontal cortex, more specifically the
ventro-medial sector (Damasio, 1996). Individuals with damage to this section
of the cortex have defective feelings, and face considerable difficulties
making appropriate social decisions (especially in relation to context and
planning), while still retaining normal intelligence and most intellectual
capacities including the ability to experience primary emotions (Damasio,
1996).
Ultimately, a
good decision for any organism is one that is advantageous for the reproductive
success and survival of the organism, as well as the quality of survival
(Damasio, 1994). Somatic markers assist and guide the decision making process
by modelling outcomes of decisions through changes in somatic state. A possible
bad outcome of a decision can manifest itself as an immediate negative feeling
such as fears, misery or disgust. The representation of the negative outcome of
a given response option is marked with the unpleasant feeling, allowing the
organism to reject a possible decision from the outset. Thus, in Damasio’s
words “somatic markers are special instances of feelings, generated from
secondary emotions. Those emotions and feelings have been connected, by
learning, to predicted future outcomes of certain scenarios.” (Damasio, 1994).
The somatic marker mechanism functions as both a warning and incentive system
for possible negative and positive outcomes.
When somatic
markers operate consciously, they can assist in the modelling and planning of
behaviour towards other organisms. By thinking about previous social encounters
and being aware of the emotional /somatic responses that are evoked through
these deliberations, dispositions and intentions of others can be inferred
(Charlton, 2000; Damasio, 1994).This means that somatic markers are pivotal in
internally modelling social behaviour.
Representations
of other people are linked in working memory with an appropriate feeling, thus
associating own emotional reactions with the representation of others. For
instance, the perception of a rival male can invoke the emotional reaction of
fear. The perceptual representation of this individual is then marked with the
somatic state of fear. At a later point in time, thinking about this
individual, i.e. drawing upon the representation from long term memory can
similarly produce the same emotional reaction. Inferences about the disposition
of the other individual can be modelled upon the subject’s own emotional
reaction to the encounter (Charlton, 2000). In sum, ‘theory of mind’ is
ultimately derived from awareness of the subject’s emotional response to
another person.
The somatic
marker mechanism can be seen as being the underlying neurobiological mechanism
of the theory of mind mechanism and the empathizing system. Where Baron-Cohen
(2005) describes the development and function of these two systems, Damasio’s
somatic marker explain the underlying neurobiological mechanism by which both
dispositions and inferences about another organisms’ mental as well as
affective states can be made.
Because human
intelligence and consciousness have fundamentally evolved to deal with the
social world, the spontaneous and immediate experience of the environment is
infused by social information. Humans are primed to interpret ambiguous
situation (like the fluttering of leaves) as being caused by agency (Barrett,
2000; Guthrie, 1995) and to reading social meaning into natural events (Bering,
2002). This tendency to anthropomorphise the significant environment and to
imbue it with social agency may underlie the evolution of religious beliefs
(Charlton, 2002a, 2002b; Guthrie, 1995; Rosenkranz & Charlton, 2013).
Empathizing
evolved to focus on people, Systemizing evolved to focus on things
Empathizing is
based upon the above-described ‘theory of mind’ ability. Theory of mind refers
to the ability, found in some social animals, to infer metal contents such as
dispositions, motivations and intentions in another con-specific.
We conceptualize
Empathizing as the disposition to apply ‘theory of mind’ cognitive ability –
this can be applied to the social situations for which the ability (presumably)
evolved, and also to understanding the world in general (and not just the
social world). In other words, Empathizing is the spontaneous tendency of
humans to focus on people, and also to regard ‘things’ as if they were people
(‘anthropmorphism’).
Since humans are
social animals, and in line with evolutionary concepts such as the Social Brain
and ‘Machiavellian Intelligence’, we regard social intelligence as probably
deriving from primate ancestry, and therefore closer to the ancient, natural
and spontaneous form of human interest and motivation than is an interest in
non-human-things. We therefore regard the highly Empathizing personality type
as underpinned by an evolutionarily more-ancient personality type than is
Systemizing.
In other words,
Empathizing is more fundamental to humans than Systemizing, and is intrinsic to
the species: Empathizing came before Systemizing. Further, it is possible that
a preference for Systemizing did not evolve in all populations, and may be weak
or absent in some human groups still extant. But in ancestral hunter gatherer
situations – perhaps including pre-modern hominid ancestors – we would assume
that all reproductively successful humans were not just able to infer theory of
mind, but disposed to focus on other humans and their mental contents: almost
everybody in these circumstances was probably a high Empathizer and so it seems
likely that the Systemizing trait was low, and that there may have been few or
zero high Systemizers.
Empathizing - in
its evolutionary origins - is therefore personal in its application, being
specifically directed towards actual human relationships. To have an
Empathizing disposition is to feel rewarded by attention to social matters, and
to use this cognitive style (evolved to deal with humans) as a general model of
understanding. Therefore be a high Empathizer is to see the world through
social spectacles (Charlton, 2000): to have a tendency to focus attention on
social relationships and to understand the world as analogous to social
relationships.
Empathizing seems
to be the natural and spontaneous way for humans to deal-with phenomena they
regard as important: this is seen in the tendency to anthropomorphise large and
important animals, significant places and landscape features, treasured
possessions and so on; and to treat human groups (or modern institutions) as if
they were unified, conscious and intentional organisms.
Re-defining
Systemizing as a preference for focusing on linear sequences of things
Systemizing is
(in its extreme) the disposition to attend to non-human matters – to things
rather than people; underpinned by the tendency to find non-social interactions
more rewarding, hence more motivating, than social matters.
The usual
definition of the trait of Systemizing relates to a preference to analyse the
world in terms of the rules which govern systems: such that the Systemizer is a
person who sees the world as composed of systems, and is interested in
categorization and understanding the rules, patterns or principles that
underlie these systems (Baron-Cohen, 2010; Baron-Cohen, Ashwin, Ashwin,
Tavassoli, & Chakrabarti, 2009). However, while this is clearly an accurate
description of the interests of a high Systemizing personality who also has
high general intelligence, we suggest that this is a potentially misleading
description of the Systemizing trait since it refers to the understanding of
complex systems; that is systems of processes that are governed by rules.
Yet it seems
plausible that an interest in the abstract understanding of the processes of
complex systems is underpinned (and evolutionarily preceded) by the simpler
abstract task of learning linear sequences. So in terms of a personality trait,
the interest in complex systems which is measured by Systemizing questionnaires
may be considered a more advanced type of an elementary interest in simpler
‘strings’ of facts, names, numbers, tasks or procedures.
To create
categorizations, to infer a pattern, and to extract the rules from a system are
higher-level cognitive abilities; possible only to those of relatively high
general intelligence (that is, high IQ). Abstraction of rules is, indeed, one
of the main attributes of ‘g’ which is measured in standard IQ tests: for
example in supplying the next member of a number series, or establishing group
membership, or performing a visuo-spatial task like Raven’s matrices (Deary,
2001; Gottfredson, 2005; Jensen, 1998). Those of low general intelligence are
poor at these tasks (which is why they are used to measure IQ), and this
implies that a focus on understanding the rules of systems is probably only a
practical definition of Systemizing among those of higher intelligence; because
people with a low IQ would not cognitively be able to infer and understand
rules, even if their disposition was high-S.
Therefore, while
inferring categories, patterns and rules certainly count as Systemizing
behaviour, we would favour a more basic and less cognitively-advanced
definition of systemizing: that the Systemizing trait is a disposition to be
interested by things rather than people which is seen at its most basic in
trying to learn linear sequences of abstract facts or actions.
The two main
aspects of Systemizing, we suggest, relate to the nature of content which is
not-social i.e. abstract; and to the content being understood in terms of
linear sequences of facts. Therefore Systemizing relates to:
1. Abstract
phenomena (things not people)
2. Of a specific
identity (these particular things)
3. In a specific
‘organization’ (in this order, or categorized thus)
A modern example
of the Systemizing preference, would be the kind of crazes and ‘obsessions’
which are characteristic of people on the autism spectrum or with Asperger’s
syndrome: learning lists of names and numbers from the telephone directory, or
certain types of dates, or pictures make by highly-literal copying, or learning
all the facts on a non-social themes such as automobile performance or the
performance of a sports team, or literal recollection of sequences from
favourite TV shows or passages from books, or hobbies involving collecting and
arranging – such as stamps, cards or train-spotting.
These and other
pastimes such as crossword or other puzzles, or some types of computer games,
are often about assembling sequences of correct facts or procedures (united by
theme or category) in a correct and specific order or pattern – yet these facts
or procedures may not have any rule-based ‘systemic’ structure. Typically, one
cannot learn these kinds of activity by learning and applying rules; rather, the
activity consists in performing exact sequences of correct responses on
specific material.
Interestingly, an
explanation of Systemizing in terms of the disposition to focus upon ‘close-up’
consideration of abstract linear sequences, bears striking similarities with
the concept of left cerebral hemisphere dominance as described in Iain
McGilchrist’s The master and his emissary concerning autistic traits and
‘attention to detail’ (Baron-Cohen et al., 2011; McGilchrist, 2009); although
at the same time McGilchrist’s evidence and argument renders implausible any
direct equation of left hemisphere with male, right with female. The argument
is complex and we flag it here as a matter deserving further and detailed
consideration.
Systemizing and
psychological neoteny
Indeed, this kind
of behaviour focused on linear sequence of abstract knowledge is characteristic
of children; for instance when they insist on a fairy story being told with
exactly the same words and details. Many pre-adolescent boys, in particular,
have periodic ‘crazes’ on various subjects (aircraft, trains, a type of book, a
type of construction model, a particular sport) about which theme they
voraciously learn everything they can manage.
These
pre-adolescent boy’s crazes are typically not focused on people nor on social
relations, nor are they focused on rule-based understanding; rather they are
fact-based, convergent activities involving listing, collecting, categorizing,
memorizing – based on learning sequences and patterns but not often complex or
dynamic ‘systems’.
This similarity
between pre-adolescent boys and high Systemizing men does not tell us why high
trait-Systemizing may have evolved – does not tell us how high Systemizing may
have improved differential reproductive success in our ancestors - but it may
suggest how high Systemizing evolved: by perpetuation of pre-adult behaviour
into sexual maturity. In other words high Systemizing trait in adults may be a
neotenous phenomenon.
(Neoteny is one
type of the more general class of ‘heterochrony’ in which evolutionary change
is brought about by alterations in the timing of developmental events; Horder,
2001.)
And this may
provide a clue to the proximate mechanism for the evolution of higher levels of
trait Systemizing. Natural selection usually works by quantitative modification
or amplification of some already-existing trait (as when a hand, or an arm,
evolves into a wing in a bat, or a bird; or when a neck, or a nose, become
lengthened in a giraffe, or an elephant). In humans, the evolution of the high
levels of Systemizing seen in modern people suggests that there was some
original trait which underwent evolutionary adaptive modification.
In other words;
if neoteny – or something similar – was the proximate mechanism via which natural
selection led to Systemizing, then we need to consider the trait which was
present in immature humans that may have provided the basis for the evolution
of adult Systemizing.
E-S reciprocity
and sex differentials as a consequence of selection pressure from
post-agricultural agricultural economic factors
The main
observations concerning E and S which an evolutionary hypothesis must explain
are, we suggest, firstly the reciprocity between Empathizing and Systemizing –
that when one is high the other is usually low; and secondly the characteristic
sex differential with S higher on average in men and E higher in women.
In a sense,
reciprocity is an intrinsic property of some personality traits: one cannot be
both highly extravert and highly introverted, cannot be both highly neurotic
and very stable. Similarly, one cannot be fascinated by social relationships
such as to spend most of one’s time and energy on that matter, and at the same
time fascinated by learning about abstract facts and figures and systems so as
to spent most of one’s time and energy on that matter as well.
Most strong
personality traits can, in principle, alternate in dominance over time and with
circumstance – but they cannot dominate simultaneously. So it is an intrinsic
property of E-S being descriptive of a personality trait that the
predisposition towards one extreme of the trait is itself a predisposition
away-from the other extreme.
However, in
addition the E-S personality traits have been persistently observed as different,
on average, between men and women. And most of the most highly empathic people
are women, while most high systemisers are men. This observation invites an
evolutionary explanation. We suggest that the ultimate (evolutionary) cause of
sex differentials in E-S lies in the sexual division of labour among humans;
men and women having different characteristic roles: women focused on child
care and food gathering and preparation, men focused on whatever other tasks
require doing: e.g. hunting, fighting, crafts (Lee & Daly, 1999; Lee &
DeVore, 1968; Ridley, 1997).
Specifically, we
regard Empathizing as a baseline state common to ancestral men and women, and
Systemizing as having been selected-for at a later stage of human evolution,
primarily among men due to the ancestral economic division of labour, and the
economic benefits of having some men who are high Systemizers. We assume that
there were significant material rewards for those men who were both able and
willing to perform Systemizing tasks, and that these extra resources would have
enhanced the survival of the offspring of successful Systemizers.
Post-agricultural
evolution of the Systemizing trait
To recapitulate,
the Empathizing trait refers to theory of mind abilities, which would be
expected to be more evolutionarily ancient than the Systemizing trait, since
they are found in non-human primates. Therefore a disposition towards
Empathizing (theory of mind) are hypothesized to be a feature of pre-human
primate and ancestral hunter-gatherer societies. We believe that Systemizing
came later in human evolutionary history, and was an ability and disposition
that (in a sense) displaced pre-existing Empathizing - on average and among
men.
By contrast,
while it may have been beneficial for men to be somewhat higher than women in
Systemizing in hunter gatherer conditions; it is hard to see any need for, or
evidence for, high levels of Systemizing trait in ancestral-type hunter
gatherer societies, and it is hard to imagine a plausible benefit for a personality
type which is characterized by the kind of high Systemizing which can be
observed in modern Europeans – for instance those of the Asperger syndrome
type. Ancestral hunter gatherers were (it is assumed) well-equipped by natural
selection to deal with most of the non-personal/ ‘thing’-related problems they
would encounter, since they had lived in the same type of environment for up to
hundreds of generations. The social brain perspective suggests that the most
cognitively-complex tasks our ancestors confronted were related to
understanding, predicting and manipulating human social interactions (Byrne
& Whiten, 1988). And for these problems, humans were prepared by their
theory of mind abilities, and the ‘Empathizing’ personality was motivated to apply
theory of mind abilities in relating to the world.
Furthermore,
ancestral hunter gatherers were generalists: apart from a sexual division of
labour, essentially all women were involved in gathering and child care, only
men were warriors and hunters. Any other activities needed to be fitted-around
these requirements, but because the usual group size was small (probably around
15-35 including both the young and the old) there was only a little scope for
specialization of function except in terms of sex and age (Charlton, 2000; Lee
& Daly, 1999).
Systemizing
abilities and interests therefore seems likely to be most beneficial in
post-agricultural, more complex, less ‘natural’ human societies. Indeed,
agricultural societies are usually characterized by some degree of economic
specialization - especially among men (Woodburn, 1982). This is necessary
because of the greater need for learned knowledge and technology – agriculture
is itself a specialist expert activity requiring not just invention but
significant preservation and inter-generational transmission of knowledge
(which is why it was not invented as a stable and continuing social form until
the past 10-15,000 years)
The evolution of
Systemizing can therefore be seen in the context of life history (Rushton,
1985). Woodley (2011) sees ancestral hunter gatherer societies as characterized
by a relatively fast life history – with high fertility, rapid maturation of
offspring and early maturity – and this leading to an un-specialized type of
human – with a narrow range or ‘manifold’ of abilities. This situation may be
associated with strong sexual selection – men investing on average little in
their offspring but competing for multiple promiscuous matings (with uncertain
paternity); presumably men would tend toward early maturity, high vigour and
physical prowess, but a short life and a mainly social intelligence (e.g. men
being charming rather than Systemizing).
By contrast, as
agriculture emerged, and population density increased; it is probable that life
history was slowed due to greater competition between humans (Woodley, 2011) In
such a situation, men especially would seek a niche in which they could excel,
and this would be associated with slower and later maturation – and a wider
range (or manifold) of abilities between individuals - which meant that some
people were better at one thing while other people were expert at different
things. The trend would be towards lower fertility but higher level of parental
investment per offspring – and the father contributing economic investment to
their offspring (about which they would need have had a high degree of
certainty of paternity for this behaviour to be adaptive; Wilson and Daly
(1992), Charlton and McClelland (1999).
How the advent of
agriculture and technological complexity may have favoured higher systemizing
trait in men
In ancestral
‘simple’ hunter gatherer societies there were probably a few tasks which
focused on dealing with ‘things’ and where a personality preference for such
tasks might be adaptive: problems such as navigating across a desert,
manufacturing a spear thrower or stone axe, or preparing poison for a bow and
arrow. Typically such jobs require (in pre-literate societies) learning and
precisely remembering an exact sequence of steps. But such tasks are far more
numerous, and more important, in agricultural societies where there is more
technology, and where farming and the preparation and storage of food must be
learned and repeated exactly year after year (Woodburn, 1982).
Such societies
also typically develop specialists in religious ritual (priests) and in various
crafts – and craft expertise in particular becomes absolutely essential to the
survival of societies (Ingold, 2000; Ridley, 1997). Yet such crafts must be
devised, remembered, and transmitted between generations. Our assumption is
that it was this kind of selection pressure in agricultural societies which led
to the evolution of high levels of Systemizing seen in some members of modern
populations.
Systemizing was
therefore a kind of expert disposition; indeed Systemizing was exactly the
trait that would enable expertise to develop; because expertise was (we infer)
mostly a matter of learning and memorizing accurately precise sequential facts
and procedures. Thus the development of expertise is only partly about ability
to perform a type of task – equally (or more) important is the personality
which is motivated to do such tasks.
In other words,
we suggest that before the development of agriculture, humans were originally
towards the Empathizing end of the trait and that sexual differentiation was
probably very limited; and that the characteristic observed modern pattern of
E-S is primarily a product of economic selection pressures after the
development of agriculture. We suggest, therefore, that the primary
evolutionary cause of the range and reciprocity of E-S and also the higher
average levels of S in men, was the sexual division of labour in a context of
agricultural economic systems.
Adding together
all these factors, our suggestion is that after the advent of agriculture, and
amplified as human societies became more complex, more differentiated by
specialization, and more technologically advanced; those men who were higher in
the Systemizing trait enjoyed greater economic success with benefits in terms
of wealth. This meant that high S men would have more resources to invest in
their children, enabling them to rear more children to adulthood.
This matter of
resources seems, indeed, to have been the major reproductive constraint in
pre-modern societies. Until the industrial revolution, fertility was high in
almost all social groups, but a high proportion of children died in childhood
(e.g. from starvation and infectious diseases) – indeed among the poorest
people, almost all children would be likely to die without reproducing. Those
parents whose children had the lowest child mortality were therefore those with
the highest reproductive success (Volk & Atkinson, 2013). The main factor
that enabled some families to rear above-replacement numbers of children was
wealth (Clark, 2007).
Therefore if
high-S men did indeed (as we suggest) offer a higher probability of economic
success, then under pre-modern conditions this would be highly likely to
translate into greater reproductive success.
Sexual selection
Personality
clearly affects sexual attractiveness, and may therefore be subject to sexual
selection. On the one hand, common sense, personal observation and theoretical
considerations suggest that, on average, women do not find the highly
Systemizing personality (with its preference for things rather than people) to
be (of itself) sexually attractive in men. So, in a society, where young women
chose their own mates and husbands, it seems hard to imagine that Systemizing
would be amplified by sexual selection – rather, it would seem that sexual
selection might tend to prevent an increase in systemizing trait among men.
On the other
hand, individual female sexual preferences are not necessarily an important
factor in determining sexual or marriage partners in the ancient and
traditional human societies. This is because parental choice of a woman’s
sexual and marriage partners was the almost universal norm among pre-modern
human societies, and indeed parental dominance of their daughters’ reproductive
decisions seems to have increased in frequency and strength with the transition
from hunter gatherers to agriculture (Apostolou, 2014).
So, most
historical human societies did not allow much scope for individual female choice
of sexual or marriage partners and young women were essentially allocated to
husbands – mainly by their parents (Wilson & Daly, 1992; Apostolou, 2014).
In such societies, sexual selection, works not between a potential husband and
wife, but primarily between a potential husband and his potential
parents-in-law. What was important was not so much a man being
sexually-attractive to a young women (as may be the case in modern societies),
but primarily an attractive prospective husband and father as judged by the
young women’s middle-aged parents. This opens up considerable scope for
positive sexual selection of high-Systemizing trait, if high-S is associated
with the kind of attributes which parents-in-law are likely to value – that is,
traits that seem like to increase the probability of rearing numerous
grandchildren to adulthood.
Individual sexual
choice seems, in particular, to be very limited in most stable agricultural
societies and there seems to have been an increase in parental control over
marriage between hunter gatherers and agriculturalists, if modern examples of
these societies are taken as a guide (Apostolou, 2014) – and it is our
assumption that it was precisely these stable agricultural societies in which
the Systemizing trait is likely to have arisen and been amplified in men.
A further factor
is that one of the most powerful factors affecting female sexual preference is
male status. Insofar as a high Systemizing trait leads to higher status in a
man, then it may be indirectly sexually attractive – unattractive in itself,
but associated with a higher status that is attractive (Buss, 1995; Symons,
1980).
If the
Systemizing trait is probably (on average) either neutral or unattractive to
individual young women, this suggests that when women are allowed to choose
freely, sexual selection probably works to reduce or eliminate the Systemizing
trait. This would imply that under modern conditions of independent female
choice of sexual and marriage partners, Systemizing would be under a negative selection
pressure; and that this aspect of male personality may well be experiencing a
‘selective sweep’ in which the representation of the trait in the gene pool
will currently be changing from one equilibrium towards another (Miller, 2010).
Another aspect is
that a highly Systemizing disposition would presumably (like all personality
traits) be substantially inherited by female children as well as male children
– even when there are sex differentials (Miller, 2000). So that high-S women
would become more common, as well as high-S men – simply as a by-product of the
economic selection pressure on men. Then, since Systemizing reflects a person’s
interests, and shared interest may be a factor in mate choice; it would be
expected that more highly Systemizing women would tend to regard highly
Systemizing men as relatively more attractive than would high-E women –
especially if the woman was expecting to spend a lot of time with her husband.
(This would be a form of assortative mating, whereby sexual partners are chosen
on the basis of similarity; Miller, 2009.)
Assuming that
high-S was rewarded by greater economic success and therefore the pay-off of
being able to raise more children to viable adulthood – this would result in a
population increasing in average Systemizing with each generation. And
assortative mating between high Systemizers could plausibly be a mechanism by
which ultra-high Systemizing might become a feature of populations – especially
in men (Baron-Cohen, 2006a). Therefore this may be a plausible mechanism for
the emergence of Asperger syndrome at a high frequency and severity – as a
by-product of generations of relatively high-S women choosing high-S men as
partners.
Predictions
The theory leads
to a number of testable predictions:
Systemizing may
be undergoing (in developed societies) on the one hand assortative mating which
amplifies the number of very high Systemizers (Baron-Cohen, 2006a). However, in
the opposite direction, the weakening of parental influence on mating decisions
and the greater operation of sexual selection in the form of individual female
sexual choice would probably generate a selective sweep that would be reducing
the average level of S generation-by-generation.
The male female
difference in E and S may have been quantitatively less in hunter gather
societies than in agricultural or modern societies – and this smaller
differential may be measurable in the modern social groups which have most
recently been living as hunter gatherers; and who therefore have not yet experienced
many generations of the selection effects of complex societies.
The theoretical
model also suggests possible methods of measuring Systemizing and Empathizing
by developing instruments that quantify people’s spontaneous preferences as
expressed in choices between focusing on either on people or else things.
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Friday, 18 March 2016
Reconceptualizing the metaphysical basis of biology: a new definition based on deistic teleology and an hierarchy of organizing entities
Charlton, BG. Reconceptualizing the metaphysical basis of biology: a new definition based on deistic teleology and an hierarchy of organizing entities(2016) The Winnower. DOI: 10.15200/winn.145830.07350
Reconceptualizing the
metaphysical basis of biology: a new definition based on deistic teleology and
an hierarchy of organizing entities
Bruce G Charlton
School of
Psychology, Newcastle University, NE1 7RU, England
Abstract
Modern biology was
initially established by Darwin’s Origin
of Species in 1859 and fully implemented by the Neo-Darwinian synthesis of
natural selection with genetics that solidified in the middle twentieth century.
I will argue that this ‘paradigm’ is based upon fundamental metaphysical
assumptions that render formally-insoluble some of the most important
theoretical problems of biology. These problems include the origin of life, the
major transitions of evolution, the origins of sexual reproduction and of
species, and the basic mechanism behind ‘group selection’. The fundamental
deficit of the current metaphysics of biology is that it lacks a unified and
coordinated teleology (direction, purpose, goals). I advocate a new teleological
and metaphysical basis for biology that is minimally based on a ‘deist’
conception of reality: i.e. that everything is governed by a unified principle
of purpose, order and meaning. Such a teleology suggests a definition of
biology around the concept of development – that is the growth, differentiation,
coordination and interactions of entities; unfolding through time through the lifespan
and across generations. The local and specific implementation of teleology is
suggested to be accomplished by a hierarchy of cognitive organizing entities that are located outwith biological systems.
These putative organizing entities work on biological entities primarily
through building-in purposiveness during development. A deistic system directed
by organizing entities is, of course, not a 'biological' theory; but then,
neither is natural selection a biological theory: both are metaphysical
frameworks for the science of biology.
Fundamental
unsolved problems of biology
From more than two
decades of theoretical consideration of biology, especially evolutionary
biology, I have concluded that there are no satisfactory answers to some of the
most important and most fundamental questions of biology. I will argue that the
fundamental reason for this is the lack of any teleology (purpose) in natural
selection, which is the current dominant biological paradigm. Therefore, I
propose a new teleological metaphysics for biology.
Biology (including
medical research and psychology) has, since the 1950s, become the most ‘successful’
– that is, by far the largest and most heavily-funded and most status-rewarded
of the sciences (Charlton & Andras, 2005). However, it is striking that
this progress has been at the proximate level of mechanisms and technologies,
and not at the level of fundamental understanding.
Indeed, the
triumph of biology was preceded and accompanied by a major act of redefinition
of the subject itself. A little book called What
is Life? by the great physicist Erwin Schrödinger (1944) served as a
catalyst for this change, and was accompanied by an influx of physicists and
chemists into biology, leading to the triumphant discovery of the structure of
DNA and of the coding and transcription mechanisms by which genes make proteins
(Judson, 1979).
But in paving the
way for these discoveries, the definition of biology was implicitly changed
from ‘The science of living things’ to ‘The science of things that reproduce
and are subject to natural selection’. This move away from the livingness of
biology was what allowed non-biologists to take-over the subject at the very
highest level; and since then biology has been dominated by researchers who use
physics, chemistry, engineering (i.e. big, expensive machines of various
types), computers, statistics, economic theory and a range of other
non-biological perspectives and technologies.
As I say, the
triumphs are well known – but the major unsolved problems of biology from 1950
remain unsolved; however, mainstream attention has simply shifted elsewhere and
there is currently perhaps less interest in these matters than at any time
since before biology became a separate science.
Such lack of
interest – and of knowledge – has meant that most people are not even aware,
have not even noticed, that these problems are unsolved. Because, so long as an
‘answer’ to such problems is good enough to survive a couple of minutes
semi-attentive and unfocused consideration by a narrowly-trained micro-specialist
who is not really a biologist, and is adequate to support and sustain a program
of publication and grant-getting (which are regarded as sole and the necessary
requirements of modern science), then this is regarded by modern biological
researchers as sufficient proof of that answer’s validity (Charlton, 2012).
But the problems
remain – and they are so fundamental as to cast doubt on the whole basis of the
‘paradigm’ that defines, controls and validates modern biology (Kuhn -1970 - popularized
the idea of a paradigm governing science – but at bottom, ‘paradigm’ is just a
new, and confusion-generating, name for metaphysical assumptions).
Origins
of life
An example is the
question: What is life? – which is the title of that influential book by
Schroedinger (1944). The current answer is, implicitly: that is ‘life’ which
reproduces or replicates and is subject to natural selection.
But this answer
includes viruses, phages and prions – which hardly seem to be ‘alive’ in that
they lack a dynamic metabolism; and also some forms of crystal – which are
usually regarded as certainly not-alive (Cairns-Smith, 1990). Furthermore, some
economic theories and computational programmes explicitly use the mechanisms of
natural selection - and these are not regarded as part of biology.
Strikingly, there
has been no success in the attempts over sixty-plus years to create life in the
laboratory under plausible ancestral earth conditions – not even the complex
bio-molecules such as proteins and nucleic acids. It has, indeed, been well-argued
that this is impossible; and that ‘living life’ must therefore have evolved
from an intermediate stage (or stages) of non-living but evolvable molecules
such as crystals – perhaps clays (Cairns-Smith, 1987). But nobody has succeeded
in doing that in the lab either, despite that artificial selection can be
orders of magnitude faster than natural selection.
Since there is no acknowledged
boundary dividing biology and not-biology, then it would seem that biology as
currently understood has zero validity as a subject. What are the implications
of our failure to divide the living from the non-living world: the failure to
draw a line around the subject? Well, since there is no coherent boundary, then
common sense leads us to infer in that case either
everything is not-alive or everything is-alive. If nothing is-alive, not even
ourselves, there seems to be no coherent possibility of us knowing that we ourselves are not-alive, or indeed of anything
knowing anything – which, I take it, means we should reject that possibility as
a reductio ad absurdum.
Alternatively, the
implication is that if anything is-alive,
then everything is-alive, including
the mineral world – so we dwell in a wholly animated universe, all that there
is being alive but – presumably – alive in very different degrees and with
different qualities of life. This inference I intend to regard as valid: it
will be my working metaphysical assumption, and is one to which we will return
later.
So; if life is to be
regarded as universal, it seems that the presence of ‘life’ can no longer be
used as definitive of biology; and since reproduction/ replication is also
inadequate, then we need a new basis or principle around-which may be made a
different definition of the subject ‘biology’. I will argue, below, why this new
principle should be ‘development’.
Sexual
reproduction and the major transitions of life
What of sexual
reproduction? How did such a massively inefficient reproductive mechanism arise
in the face of its immediate short-term damage to reproductive success? The
great evolutionary theorist William D Hamilton recognized sexual reproduction
as a major unsolved problem, and worked on it for decades (2001) – but neither
this recognition, nor his attempted solutions in terms of ways to combat
parasites and pathogens, has attracted much interest or acceptance.
And indeed, even
if he was correct, Hamilton did not really solve the problem of how sexual
reproduction arose – but only
clarified its advantages (mainly in terms of resistance to infection) once
sexual reproduction had already arisen, and already become established. The
mechanism of how natural selection managed to cross the formidable
short-to-medium-term barrier of vastly reduced reproductive success (caused by
the need to find a suitable member of the opposite sex with whom to reproduce,
and the approximate halving of potential reproductive units) remains utterly
unclear.
The same problem of
short-term disadvantage tending to undermine long-term advantage also applies
to the ‘Major Transitions’ of evolutionary history – which include sexual
reproduction but also the evolution of the simple (prokaryotic) cell, the
complex (eukaryotic) cell, multicellular organisms, and social organisms (Maynard
Smith & Szathmary, 1997). Each of these transitions requires overcoming the
fact that natural selection operates much more powerfully and directly upon the
lower, simpler and smaller levels of organization that replicate more rapidly;
so that there is a constant pressure and tendency for these lower levels to
become parasitic upon higher levels (Charlton, 1996).
In sum; natural
selection is much more rapidly and powerfully dis-integrative than integrative.
Yet, nonetheless, these transitions did actually occur in evolutionary history.
For example, in a multi-cellular organism, the dividing component cells are
constantly being naturally-selected for neoplastic (e.g. cancerous) change –
such that they cease to cooperate with and contribute to the organism, and
instead exploit it as a ‘host’ environment (Charlton, 1996a). How, then, did
multicellular organisms evolve the many integrative systems (e.g. nervous,
paracrine, hormonal and immune systems) designed to impose cooperation of
specialized cells and suppress non-functional and actively parasitic (e.g.
mutated) cell variants; bearing in mind that all such integrative systems are
themselves intrinsically subject to neoplastic evolution (as well as loss of
function from cumulative damage)?
The same phenomenon
and problem must (according to the theory of natural selection) apply to the
genetic organelles of the complex cell (such as chloroplasts and mitochondria;
Charlton et al, 1998); and also to the individual organisms in a social
organization (such as human society). Yet eukaryotic cells actually did arise –
despite their innate and intractable tendency to self-destruct; and there are
numerous highly evolutionarily-successful social animals among (for instance)
insects, birds and mammals. Indeed, it has been calculated that ants and humans
are the two groups with the greatest biomass among animals on earth, with ants
dominating the tropics and humans the temperate zones – termites are also highly
numerous in the tropics (Ridley, 1996).
The general problem
is therefore that the net effect of natural selection is to break down the
major transitions of evolution before they can be established – unless (as I
will argue later) this tendency is overcome by some as-yet-unknown purposive
(and indeed cognitive) long-termist, integrating and complexity-increasing
tendency.
The
nature of species
Darwin’s first
great evolution book was termed On the
Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection… (1859); and that is a clue
to the next unsolved problem – which is: ‘what is a species?’
Darwin was trying
to explain how ‘species’ (in a very general sense of the major, as well as
minor, sub-divisions of living things) originated. To do this he already had to
assume that he knew, more or less, what species were.
In other words,
natural selection was proposed as a historical mechanism (in practice the only
mechanism) which led to modern species. In yet other words; natural selection
was supposed to explain species – and species was the thing that was explained
(Panchen, 1993). Unsurprisingly, therefore, there has never been a principled
explanation that was based on natural selection of what species actually are
and how they are divided (Hull, 1988). At root, my understanding is that impasse happens because species are
being used both as that which explains, and as that which is explained – which
is circular reasoning.
And, in practice
as well as in theory, all possible suggestions for such a definition are
refuted by data. For example, the idea that species cannot interbreed to yield
fertile offspring is untrue with numerous exceptions - some natural and some
artificially generated. And the systems of differentiating and classifying
species on the grounds of ‘homologous’ anatomy, physiology and genetics do not map-onto
the classification of species in terms of their inferred lineage (e.g.
cladistics) – and the identification of homology has itself (like species)
never been objectively defined (Horder, 1993).
Furthermore, there
is no more evidence now than there was in 1859 that natural selection is
capable of being the sole and sufficient ‘explanation’ for the diversity of
life upon earth. I put ‘explanation’ in quotation marks, because it is
debateable whether natural selection – being based upon contingent and variable
selection acting upon undirected (a.k.a.‘random’) variation (Hull, 2001) - is
actually a real explanation; because then the ultimate explanation is
apparently that there is no explanation. Natural selection does not say ‘why’,
but instead ‘how’ evolution occurs. The nature of change is contingent upon
undirected events shaped by contingent processes, and therefore is essentially
non-predictable in its specifics. In some senses, therefore, natural selection
does not genuinely ‘explain’.
In effect, with
natural selection, at most one can
only say: Many things might have happened for many reasons, but as an
historical fact ‘this’ is what actually happened.
Certainly natural
selection can coherently describe the historical situations leading to
relatively small differences between organisms – perhaps up to the level of
creating new and related species. This was already known to Darwin and was
indeed the basis of his evidential argument – e.g. he described the nature and
scale of effects of artificial selection done by animal breeders, plus some
effects on the shape and size of beaks among Galapagos finches. To this, modern
biologists could add observations on the modification of microorganisms under
laboratory conditions, for instance the evolution of bacterial resistance to
antibiotics. And there are also human racial differences of skeleton, teeth,
skin and hair, brains and behaviours and many others – probably amounting to
sub-species levels of differentiation – again these were (approximately) noted
by Darwin (for instance in the mention of ‘favoured races’ in the subtitle of
his 1859 book).
But all these are
quantitative, not qualitative, changes; changes in magnitude but not in form.
Neither natural selection, nor indeed artificial selection done by Man, has
been observed creating a new genus, nor any taxonomic rank more fundamental
such as a new family or phylum. There is no observational or experimental
evidence which has emerged since 1859 of natural selection leading to major,
qualitative changes in form – nor the originating of a novel form. Nobody has,
by selection, changed a cat into a dog, let alone a sea anemone into a mouse
(or the opposite); nobody has bred a dinosaur from a bird, nor retraced, by
selective breeding, a modern species to its assumed ancestral form. There have,
at most, been attempts to explain why such things are impossible in practice –
why, for instance, the linear sequence of evolution cannot be ‘rewound’.
The
problem of group selection
The final example
concerns group selection. My impression is that the most thoughtful and
perceptive evolutionary theorists intuitively recognized that group selection
was an anomalous residue in the post-teleological paradigm of Neo-Darwinism;
because true group selection (when properly understood) entails a purposive
cognitive mechanism that can predict, can ‘look ahead’ several generations, and
infer what is likely to be good for the survival and reproduction of the
species (i.e. future descendants) rather than for the specific individual
organism under here-and-now selection – and can therefore impose this long-term
groupish direction to evolutionary change, in the face of evolution that
benefits the individual in the short-term (Hamilton, 1998).
Whether or not it
is due to the built-in ‘spooky-spiritual’ aspects of group selection, there has
been and is a powerful and almost moralistic desire within biology utterly to
purge group selection from Neo-Darwinian theory (Dawkins, 1976). However, it should be noted that Hamilton himself did not reject the significance of group
selection; on the contrary, he continued to believe it was real throughout his
later career as is apparent from his essays and commentaries in the Narrow Roads of Gene Land collections
(1998, 2002). However, so far as I know, he did not suggest a distinctive
mechanism for group selection.
Group selection is
most often discussed in relation to ‘altruism’. Altruism is behaving such as to
increase the reproductive success of others at the expense of one’s own
reproductive success (for example, sacrificing a young and potentially fertile
life for the benefit of the group – perhaps in defence against a predator). Altruism
indeed calls-out for explanation, since it is very frequently, almost
universally, observed – e.g. multicellular animals depend on it for continued
existence, social animals depend upon it for the continuation of sociality. But
the proposed solutions – inclusive fitness/ kin selection and various types of
reciprocal benefit (Ridley, 1996) – do not explain the origin of altruism, but instead explain why altruism – once
established, may be advantageous to sustain.
The problems are at
root the same as the previous examples – favouring the long term over the short
term: in this instance imposing cohesion and cooperation that benefits the
whole against the tendency of natural selection to favour the part at the
expense of the whole. For example, preventing the amplification of selfish,
short-termist, parasitic variants and lineages (which are immediately
advantageous, and much more strongly selected-for), so as to pursue the
long-term cohesion, survival and reproduction of the group. Lacking such a
mechanism or tendency, any groupishness and long-termism would continually be undermined,
and would tend rapidly to be undone by the strong selection pressure for
individuals to exploit and parasitize the group (Maynard Smith & Szathmary,
1997).
Hence, despite
half a century of exclusively selfish gene theorizing in mainstream
evolutionary biology; the apparent need for some kind of longer-termist and
group-favouring process remains.
The
necessity for teleology in the metaphysics of biology
Natural selection is an inadequate metaphysical basis
for biology because it lacks teleology - a goal, direction or purpose.
This lack of
teleology means that the potential for meaning - for knowledge - is excluded
from the system of biology, and from any other system which depends upon it.
Thus natural
selection is radically too small a metaphysical frame - it leaves out so much
that is so important, that what remains is not even a coherent subject. This is
revealed in the un-definability of biology and the incapability of biology to
understand the meaning of life and its origins, major transitions and
categories. Without teleology, biology is self-destroying.
Indeed - without
teleology we cannot know. I mean we
cannot explain how humans could have valid knowledge about anything. No knowledge of any kind is possible. If Natural
Selection is regarded as the bottom-line explanation - the fundamental
metaphysical reality (as it is for biology, and often is with respect to the
human condition) then this has radically nihilistic consequences. And this is a
paradox – if natural selection was the only
mechanism by which consciousness and intelligence arose then we could have no
confidence that the human discovery of natural selection was anything more than
a (currently, but contingently) fitness-enhancing delusion.
The reason is that
natural selection is at best – and when
correctly applied - merely descriptive of what-happened-to-happen. Since
tThere was no reason why things had-to-be
as they actually were, and there is no reason why the present
situation should stay the same, then there will be no reason to suppose that
the future outcome is predictable. There is no greater validity to
what-happened-to-happen compared with an infinite number of possible other things
that might have happened - so there is no reason to defer to
what-happened-to-happen, no reason why what-happened-to-happen is good, true,
just, powerful or anything else - what-happened-to-happen is just what led to
greater differential reproductive success for some length of time under
historical (and contingent) circumstances. Nothing more.
Therefore - if
humans are nothing more nor other than
naturally-selected organisms - then there is zero validity to: cognition, emotions,
intelligence, intuitions, morality, art, or science - including that there is
no validity to the theory of evolution by natural selection. None of the above
have any validity - because they all are merely products of what-happened-to-happen
(and are open-endedly liable to further change).
In sum - Without
teleology, there can be no possibility of knowledge.
(This is not some
kind of a clever paradox - it is an unavoidable rational conclusion.)
If, and only if,
biology includes direction and purpose, is the subject compatible with the
reality of knowledge. A new and better metaphysics of biology must therefore
include teleology.
A
deistic and teleological metaphysics
Metaphysics is the
branch of philosophy concerned with basic assumptions – descriptive of the
fundamental nature of reality. Science takes place within metaphysics, and therefore the results of science (any
possible results of science) can neither prove nor refute any metaphysical
description – although some metaphysical systems will more clearly and simply
make sense of (or ‘explain’) science than others.
For example, the ‘evidence’
that these fundamental problems are unsolved amounts only to the fact that they
are as yet unsolved – failure to
explain can never ‘prove’ that an explanation is impossible. Only that nobody
has yet come up with a satisfactory
explanation. Therefore, the ‘proof’ that these biological problems are
insoluble is not any empirical finding but philosophical reasoning.
In this sense
metaphysics (which is to say a ‘paradigm’) is not ‘testable’ by science. This
is because metaphysics itself underpins the definition of science (or a
specific science such as biology); metaphysics determines what counts as a
test, what observations to make and also how to interpret observations. For
instance, no amount of biological research can ever decide whether biology is
1. the science of alive things or 2. the science of replicating things. This is
not possible since definition 1 leads to one kind of biology using one type of
expertise and methods; but definition 2 to another kind of biology with very
different personnel and methods, as we have seen emerge over the past 70 years.
I therefore
suggest that a new paradigm – or, more strictly, a new metaphysical basis or
frame - for biology is required to address these and other fundamental defects
and deficiencies in modern biology; and to place biology honestly, accurately
and fruitfully in context of the total field of human discourse in general. In
a nutshell, I will be arguing that the overall shape of evolution across
history is best explained as a directional process of development – somewhat like
the metamorphic unfolding of a fertilized egg via an embryo towards sexually
mature adult and parenthood. Processes of selection occur within this teleological
development – but are subordinated to the overall goal and contributory,
coordinated sub-goals.
Furthermore, I
will suggest that a teleology of biology having the required properties entails
‘deism’; deism being belief in a single, overall, unifying - but potentially
abstract and impersonal - source of order and meaning for reality.
Deism here refers
to the assumption of some kind of deity; but theism refers more specifically to
the reality of gods or God. It is
necessary, therefore, to distinguish between on the one hand the general idea
of deism, which I regard as essential for a coherent and viable definition of
biology; and on the other hand the idea of theism, with theism being a particular
sub-category of deism, and more specific than is required for the practice of
biology.
Deism and theism
may seem superficially to be identical-in practice; and perhaps both equally
absurd! – at least to the usual atheistic professional biologist; but the
distinction is both significant and important. I personally believe in the
reality of the Christian God; but such a specific belief is not necessary for there to be a useful
and potentially fruitful teleology of biology, as is demonstrated by the many
historical examples of non-Christian biologists. (However, as a generalization,
the long-term success of science as a social system, in particular its
adherence to the principle and habit of truthfulness, may depend rather more
specifically upon scientists having been - at least - raised in a Christian or Jewish milieu,
with their somewhat distinctive doctrinal emphasis on honesty; Charlton, 2012.)
So, the adoption
of deism as an assumption could be seen as constituting a cost entailed by providing a coherent teleology of biology; a cost
which explains the sustained resistance to such a thing and which may explain
why teleology has been for so long and so stubbornly resisted within
professional biology. Because teleology at the price of deism is a cost that
most modern biologists would utterly refuse to pay; since they are, as a strong
generalization, the most materialistic and positivistic and anti-spiritual,
militantly un-religious people the world has yet known! (Indeed, I know of only
two practicing Christians among evolutionary biologists - one of them being
myself; and that only for the past seven years.)
It is no
coincidence that so many of the best known and most effective public dissenters
from Christianity and promoters of atheism since Darwin have been recruited
from a tiny minority of eminent evolutionary theorists – past examples include
Darwin’s ‘bulldog’, the early agnostic TH Huxley; and his grandson, the
humanist and an architect of the Modern Neo-Darwinian Synthesis, Julian Huxley;
current examples include the campaigning anti-religion activists Richard
Dawkins and Daniel C Dennett.
But militant
atheism is not merely a product of being a scientist: biologists are typically much
less spiritual than mathematicians and physicists, who often espouse deistic
ideas. As examples; Einstein saw reality in this ‘deist’ way with an abstract,
impersonal, but unifying ‘God’; Roger Penrose has stated he is a Platonist; the
theoretical physicist Paul Davies won the Templeton Prize for his many writings
from a deistic perspective; and Freeman Dyson, also a Templeton Prizeman, is a
Christian, as was Kurt Gödel.
In sum – even if I
can show that deism is what biology most needs, and even though there is
nothing ‘unscientific’ about such an assertion, deism seems very unlikely to be
welcomed or accepted by the mass of currently active and dominant professional
biologists.
Why
deism specifically?
So, I will assume
that deism is the necessary intellectual ‘cost’ that must be paid to restore
purpose and cohesion to biology; it is minimally-necessary to restore ‘a
spiritual dimension’ to biology; not indeed within
biology – but as the framing
metaphysic of biology. That is, the spiritual dimension is located outside of
biology to give it shape and bounds, meaning, and direction. Biologists needs
not adopt deism as a ‘religion’; but they must at least accept it as a
working-hypothesis.
But the concept of
deism is unfamiliar, as is its distinction from theism. I should therefore
clarify that although this deistic perspective of the primacy of consciousness,
purpose and ubiquitous life is indeed spiritual, it is not necessarily
religious in the sense of associated with belief in any actual religion. A
deist regarding ultimate reality as having the cognitive property of purpose
does not need to take the further step of a belief in ‘theism’, theism being
the belief in a specific God or gods.
The deism that is
entailed by a belief in teleology includes
many possible forms of theism, including belief in a ‘god’ who originally
created everything (and is therefore the source of ultimate cohesion); but the
deity of a non-theistic deist is not necessarily the creator, does not necessarily
intervene in the ‘running’ of the universe, and may be a wholly impersonal and
abstract god that has no specific interest in Men or specific people. Deism
therefore may mean any assumption of any ultimate, but perhaps abstract,
rationality, order, or overall organizing tendency.
Nonetheless,
honesty compels me to suggest that abstract deism has historically, and in the
lives of many individual scientists and other intellectuals, been a metastable state which sooner-or-later
falls one way or the other: either into atheism or theism (belief in a God or
gods). And in that case, I am suggesting that, in the end, an adequate
metaphysics of biology must be compatible-with (if not contiguous with) theistic
religion. However, this move into theism is not a formal philosophical
necessity, but rather a matter of probabilistic human psychology.
At any rate, it may be useful, at this point, further
to clarify why a teleology for
biology entails deism. The reason is that teleology (purpose) in biology is
based on, requires that, reality be coherent, cooperative and
complementary because reality as-a-whole must have purpose. This, in turn,
requires that there is a single and unifying organizing entity to enforce coherence, cooperation and complementarity.
So, for life, for reality, to have purpose, it must hang-together - and for
reality to hang-together requires some unifying conception of deity.
Deism is the assumption that the universe has just
such an organizing principle or entity - which may be a personal supreme
creator god among other lower gods, or one God – which is theism; or the
organizing principle may be something impersonal - a 'god of the philosophers':
in other words an hypothesis which is inferred and assumed (rather than
believed as a matter of faith). An example would be the ‘Platonic’ hypothesis
that there is a coherent primary reality outside of time where dwell objective
and eternal values and archetypal forms – in comparison to which the earthly reality
we observe is only a derived, time-bound, approximate, partial, and more-or-less
corrupt version.
Biology needs a teleology, and indeed the more
specific is that teleology, the more can be inferred from it. However, if
biology is to be a coherent and general science, then its teleology cannot be
more specific than what can be agreed-on by deism. Therefore, scientists can,
and indeed must, minimally agree on a general concept of deity. But beyond that
agreement, there will very probably be disagreement concerning the attributes, nature
and specific purposes of deity. In sum, the teleology of biology as-a-whole
seems to be based on a general and hypothetical deity, but not on any specific
God.
Therefore, deism supplies teleology, but only to
a limited degree. So we need to distinguish between the implications of the
fact of teleology and the specific direction of teleology. The fact of
teleology includes the consequences of there being an ultimate unity and an
expectation of a primary and significant degree of coherence, cooperativeness
and complementarity. I think the acknowledgment of teleology may also provide
the basis for a coherent definition of the essential nature of biology as a
subject – which I will discuss below. But what exactly is the specific aimed-at
destination of teleology may be a subject of disagreement and theorizing; e.g. there
will probably be different ideas of what the direction and purpose of
'everything' as a whole, and at lower levels. And there will also surely be scientific disagreement over the
specific mechanisms by which teleology is implemented at the various levels and
instances of biological organization.
There remains much that requires debate and
investigation, plenty for biologists to do; but all biologists ought to, and need to, be able to agree that there is an ultimate teleology, hence
coherence, to biology.
The
nature and essence of biology as a subject: Development
When biology is
defined in terms of teleology it gives an indication of how the subject may
fruitfully be defined in terms of its focus; because teleology concerns
direction. Teleology, as described above, entails the emergence and coordination
of multiple elements over time in pursuit of purpose. In simple terms,
therefore, the essence of biology as a subject has to do with development; that is with growth and
form, with differentiation and cooperation.
In sum, the core
of biology is ‘life as history’ – meaning here the unfolding through time, including functional interactions - of
entities such as cells, organisms, groups and ecosystems. I would argue that
this understanding of biology has priority over reproduction in general and
gene replication specifically – which have been made the focus of biology for
the past seventy-odd years.
Such a
re-definition of biology around the theme of development would also serve to reconnect
the subject with its deepest intellectual roots in natural history; to rebuild
the subject around a core that is distinct
from chemistry and physics on one hand, and medical research on the other; with
organisms being of interest primarily in terms of their structure, function and
interactions over their lifespan. This would surely be preferable to modern
biology which has become so narrowly focused that it sometimes seems as if the
only scientifically-interesting things that organisms do is replicate or die!
(I will suggest a
further reason why biology might beneficially be defined in terms of
development below when I discuss the causal relationship between phylogeny (evolutionary
history) and ontogeny (development.)
The history of definitions
of biology can be described as beginning with the subject conceptualized as ‘the
study of living things’; then
changing from about 1944 to ‘the study of reproducing
things’; and I now propose that in future biology should become ‘the study of developing things’.
Statement
of the new teleological metaphysics: The hierarchy of organizing entities
The chronological
sequence of the new metaphysics is the reverse of the usual posited in biology.
Current biology usually assumes that matter precedes life; life precedes the
brain; the brain precedes cognition – in other words that a solid brain comes
before cognition (thinking) - including purposiveness - emerged.
By contrast, I
suggest that consciousness and purpose are the starting point – and that
consciousness, with its ultimate teleology, therefore operates upon matter with
the proximate goal of sustaining and developing itself via instantiations in matter - instantiation here meaning the
specific and actual realization of an abstraction: building of abstraction into
solid form. Therefore, (baldly-stated) consciousness ‘organized’ brains.
(The above
conceptualization owes much to the work of Owen Barfield, who was himself
expressing ideas of Rudolf Steiner, who was in turn JW von Goethe’s scientific
editor for the standard collected works – so this theory has its ultimate roots
in Goethe’s biology; see for example Barfield, 1982; Naydler, 1996).
So that (to put
things simply); initially consciousness sufficed to organize undifferentiated
matter into ‘physics’, ‘physics’ into ‘chemistry’, and ‘chemistry’ into what we
recognize as the emergence of biological entities in their most basic forms. And
the directing consciousness which drove biological evolution was further subdivided
and specialized; for example regulating the basic transitions and divisions of
life, and beyond them the further groupings down to species, then particular
human groups.
This system of
consciousnesses can be imagined as an hierarchy of organizing entities – an hierarchy with its apex in deity. These
organizing entities operate to shape and frame the structure of reality,
including biological reality – these entities all being, ultimately,
coordinated and unified by the deity. These organizing entities are inferred to
have various properties including the ability cognitively to model future
possibilities (i.e. to have foresight, to make conjectural predictions) and
choose between possibilities on the basis of innate purpose. In essence, organizing
entities can understand (to some limited but significant extent) the current
situation, and look-ahead towards probable outcomes – and then organize biology
to reach the preferred possible outcome.
These organizing entities
are assumed to have the same kind of role as the human mind does in relation to
the human body; or as a good, wise and competent human leader has in relation
to the society he rules. That is, the ability to infer that if X continues then
Y will probably result – which means the decline or demise of the cell/
organism/ group/ society; but that if instead we do A we should arrive at B –
which offers a much better prospect of survival and continued or enhanced reproduction
(and, importantly, progress towards ultimate teleology) than does Y; and then the
organizing entity has significant (but not absolute) power to impose A upon the
system.
What then,
actually, are these organizing entities – how can we imagine them? I suggest
that different people may picture them in different ways which suit the
workings of their own minds. Some may understand them in a mathematical or
computational way; some see them as akin to ‘laws of nature’; some may
understand them to be fields of force – like Sheldrake’s morphogenetic fields
(Sheldrake, 1981 & 1988) but with a primary role in imposing purpose rather
than form; some may understand them as immaterial but personalized entities –
rather like the medieval astrological model of angels who inhabited (or rather
actually were) the planets and stars – but in a realm beyond and with different
properties from worldly (‘sublunar’) place, and outside of Time, and who
influenced from this realm all manner of events on earth and inside Time
(Lewis, 1966).
I personally have
a very literal, simple mind; and cannot for long refrain from anthropomorphic
representations of any cognitive and purposive entity – in other words, I
imagine these organizing entities as both personalized and material entities, localized
in space and time - although imperceptible and undetectable (at least, by
normal sensory observation). This is of course a child-like way of thinking about
causality (although not really child-ish) – but perhaps not so uncommon as may
superficially appear. After all, neuroscientists are always accusing each other
of treating the brain as if it was inhabited by a ‘homunculus’ (little man)
which is meant to be an error both irrational and shameful – and indeed the
accusers are usually correct in this accusation; because avoiding this ‘anthropomorphism’
while yet retaining a firm and imaginative grasp of science, is all-but
impossible.
Famously, Einstein
reasoned about relativity by imagining a man (a homunculus perhaps!) riding in
a tramcar away from the medieval clock in the Swiss city of Berne at speeds
approaching the speed of light (Hoffman, 1972). If Einstein apparently needed
(or, at least wanted) to do the most advanced and abstract theoretical physics
by anthropomorphic metaphors, then maybe biologists should not be ashamed to
follow his example?
The proximate
implementation of teleology
In summary -
starting from some large scale purposive, conscious and unified deity (perhaps
envisaged as the sun, or the earth/ Gaia; Lovelock, 1989) - organizing entities
direct and shape the first and most basic forms of life, prokaryotic then
eukaryotic cells, followed by the major divisions or classifications of living
things down to (real) species, sexual reproduction, individual organisms and
social groups. (The evolution of Man may, or may not, be assumed to require a
further level of organizing entity – or else the direct intervention of the
deity.)
Organizing
entities are located functionally-external to the biological entities that they
govern – they are not a part of biology. Organizing entities are an external
focus for biological entities – thus can be imagined as a point of reference:
both monitoring and shaping biology. The main role of an organizing entity is
to impose goals, direction, purpose – in a word: teleology. This entails
imposition of form, cohesion, cooperation – and identity. Identity is the
process by which the group is defined – the choice of inclusion and exclusion,
the drawing of a boundary.
It is the organizing
entity that make a group a real group in the true sense of the word ‘group’–
and not merely an arbitrary, temporary or expedient line drawn around a
collection of autonomous entities: it is the organizing entity which makes the
group a unit. Biological unity therefore derives from teleological unity.
A group of many
entities (such as a collection of components in a cell, of cells in an organism,
or organisms in a society) is itself a real and objective unified entity only when it has been organized by a single
purposive, conscious entity.
If this is accepted, and some kind of general
mechanism for teleology is assumed - such as the hierarchy of organizing
entities - then the question arises as to how teleology is imposed? There seem
to be two possibilities - purpose could be continuously imposed from outside a biological entity by the continuous
or intermittent operation of some kind of field, force or form; or else purpose
could be built-in.
While I think it likely that external forms/
fields/ forms have a role, especially in terms of organizing the simpler and
more basic (physics and chemistry) levels of evolution (Sheldrake 1981 &
1988); something additional, more detailed and generative of autonomy seems to be required for
biological entities. Biological purpose seems most likely to be built-in;
specifically that, as an entity is formed and develops, its purposive nature is
built-into the structure and organization (by the action of its organizing
entity) such that there is a degree of agency and self-regulation which is also
coordinated with the overall teleology (probably by means of in-built
complementarity of function).
For example, in multicellular organisms there
may be the mechanisms of cell-suicide or apoptosis - such that if a cell
experiences a mutation that may endanger the organism - perhaps by a neoplasm
such as cancer - then the cell destroys itself (for the good of the whole
organism). There is, in general, considerable altruism built-in at the cellular
level of a multicellular organism such that the existence of multicellular
organisms is essentially an exercise in mutual altruism. Some types of motile
white blood cells such as macrophages (which resemble free living amoebae) will
kill themselves in the process of defending the organism against microorganism
invasion (these dead warriors are found in pus): and this purpose is apparently
built-into them in terms of their core functionality.
The primary reliance upon built-in teleology
also makes it easy to understand the existence, indeed often at high rates, of
the opposite - of behaviours which are non-functional, free-riding, and
parasitic. This is explicable in the sense that teleology - including traits
that are long-termist, altruistic, cooperative and coordinated – is built-into
the organism during normal development, but is nonetheless vulnerable to
disruption by abnormal development and subsequent, later events that disrupt or
destroy these built-in mechanisms. For example, genetic damage or mutations
during the lifespan of the entity: mutant mitochondria in a eukaryotic cell,
cancer in a multicellular organism, the effects of mental illness in human
society.
Therefore, I think it most likely that organizing
entities work to impose teleology during development at the point where
entities are being formed - either originally and/ or when being reproduced.
The teleological behaviours are part of the design specification built into the
entity. Short-term selfishness can, and does, arise in or after development –
and then it is typically dealt with by built-in regulatory mechanisms found in
those ‘normal’ entities who have experienced undisrupted development and
avoided subsequent damage.
The
coherence of everything
It is the
hierarchy of organizing entities which ensures that overall and in the long
run, all directions of all sub-entities are coordinated and integrated. This
can be imagined on the lines of a military hierarchy of orders coming down from
a General (i.e. deity) through the branching ranks of Colonels, Majors,
Captains, Lieutenants, and Sergeants to the foot soldiers (i.e. the layers of
organizing entities).
Vertical, multi-level coordination therefore comes
from the teleology branching-out from a single locus. And horizontal coordination within-hierarchical-levels comes from the
mutual reciprocity and complementarity of functions – imposed on groups of
biological entities by organizing entities.
This is the
organizing principle which enables groups under direction from organizing entities
to be recognized and understood (to some significant extent); it is what
roughly corresponds to intuitions that there is an underlying order to the
world: notions such as ‘the balance of nature’, ‘the circle of life’, the
principle of ‘compensation’, or the earth conceptualized in terms of a goddess
or organism termed Gaia (Lovelock, 1981).
Thus the universe
of reality broadly hangs-together, as we observe it does; and does not utterly collapse
into a chaos of ever-smaller and faster-replicating, more mutually-exploiting purposeless
entities, as we observe it does not. There is a background tendency to
homoeostasis and elaborated specialization and coordination – and there is,
both overall and at each level and each individual unit of organization –
organizing purpose and direction.
Of course, in
particular times and places, natural selection may be amplified, may become
powerful enough to overcome the cohesive and integrative influence of
conscious, purposive entities; and consciousness diminishes, and cooperation,
complexity and order begin to break down. The purpose is then not attained but
instead thwarted.
It can happen at
any level. Ultra-selfish genes (such as transposons or segregation distorters)
may potentially lead to intra-genomic conflict with loss of
informational-identity, functional corruption and cell death; rogue malignant
(or selfishly non-functional) mitochondria may kill their symbiotic host cells;
connective tissues may be naturally-selected to become sarcomas and kill the organism;
or successful psychopaths may exploit, parasitize and lead to the destruction
of their social group.
But the fact of
life persisting; and the observations relating to evolutionary history; entails
that the background reality is teleological and cooperative.
Explaining
the necessity for an intermediating hierarchy of organizing entities
A teleology of
biology can be accepted merely on the basis of deity, and without the kind of
complex, intermediate system of organizing entities which I have proposed – and
leaving aside any speculations on the more detailed way in which teleology I
implemented in practice. In other words, it can be asserted that once a
presiding deity has been invoked as our working hypothesis – then everything
significant that happens in biology can be attributed directly to that deity.
Such a view is
possible and coherent, albeit such a tactic might reasonably be characterised
in terms of vague ‘hand-waving’; so why do I take the further step of inferring
the existence of a hierarchy of organizing entities; and attributing to them
the role of implementing teleology in a much more direct, specific, and
proximate fashion?
Essentially, the
reason for introducing intermediary causes of teleology, adding to the overall
deist unity as the cause of teleology, is firstly in order to explain the
phenomena of development of the organism;
which is also termed ontogeny or
within-organism change through the life span: growth, change of form, selective
cell death, differentiation and maturation. And also secondly to explain phylogeny; that is between-generation,
within-lineage evolutionary change: the history of extinctions, and of new and
changing species.
In different
words, the hierarchy of organizing entities is intended to account for the dynamic aspects of biology: to explain
why biology is full of change; creating, adapting and failing.
Ontogeny and
phylogeny (as types of ‘changing’), happening through time, imply that deity
either cannot or will-not achieve biological form directly and finally; but
either must or chooses to attain form by incremental steps from an initially
very simple situations – one stage building-upon the preceding. To me, this
suggests that deity works by means of intermediary causes.
Furthermore,
biology itself seems to have a hierarchical and multi-branching organization –
both ontogeny and phylogeny display this – that is evident both within
organisms and other coherent entities in the form of development, and also
across the range of biological organisms and other coherent entities in terms
of the systems of biological classification. This suggests that the
organization of biological teleology also has a hierarchical and
multi-branching structure analogous to the taxonomy of living things (the ‘tree
of life’).
If this is
assumed, then it seems necessary that the
hierarchy of organizing entities must pre-exist the structure of actual
biological entities, in order that it is already in-place to organize each
cumulative step in phylogeny.
If so, then the
broad-brush resemblance between ontogeny and phylogeny (Horder, 2008) which was
noted more than a century ago by Haeckel – may have its basis not in Haeckel’s
formulation of ontogeny recapitulating phylogeny, with the history of
evolutionary change (supposedly) being recorded in developmental sequences, nor
by any modification of that idea; but the opposite. I suggest it is a matter of
phylogeny recapitulating ontogeny, in the sense of evolutionary change being driven
by developmental processes.
That is, the
organizing entities work primarily to affect ontogeny, to build-in teleology by
shaping the process of development;
and thereby, as a consequence, these same organizing entities are also
setting-up mature biological entities in evolutionary sequences and
relationships. By affecting development, the organizing entities impose
teleology on evolution.
To be even more
specific, the first member of a new species (or level of biological complexity)
has been shaped by the ordering entities – including by changing its various
heritable structural features (such as genes, and non-genetic cellular
structural formal features such as cytoplasmic structures and constituents, or
cell membrane attributes). Thus ontogenetic change comes first, and then this
is transmitted via heritability first
to initiate, then establish, the step-wise phylogenetic changes that mark
evolutionary history.
Conclusions
and implications
In sum, the new deistic
teleological metaphysics of biology enables the subject to re-defined around
the concept of development. The scheme would not affect the perspective of
biology in terms of the study of evolution specifically by natural selection,
nor in terms of the day-to-day activities of most biological researchers. But
metaphysics is nonetheless vitally-relevant insofar as natural selection would
henceforth be assumed to operate within
purposive cognitive processes that have foresight and are able to organize,
coordinate, and either counteract or use natural selection, as means to the
overall teleology. This background would be assumed – and we would not suppose
that natural selection ‘has the last word’.
Perhaps most
importantly, the new metaphysics of biology escapes the self-refuting paradox
of natural selection; because it can explain how it is that humans could have
valid knowledge of biology itself – as the most relevant example: how humans
might have validly discovered a true theory such as natural selection. If
humans had been merely contingently evolved to optimize reproductive success,
it is not formally impossible but it is vastly
improbable that we could have valid knowledge of anything - including natural
selection; since a mechanism for discovering valid knowledge could only have
happened by undirected chance and when it also happened to optimize
reproductive success in the immediate short term of generations. However, if by
an astonishing coincidence, it happened-to-happen that humans had had
naturally-selected the ability to have valid knowledge – knowledge for instance
of the theory of natural selection; then we could not know we knew this this
for a fact, without a further astonishing coincidence of knowing that we had
happened to evolve this way!
But - if our metaphysics posits the existence
of purposively-unified, conscious, organizing entities outwith the boundaries
of biology, and to that extent independent of (controlling of) the vicissitudes
of natural selection; then valid
knowledge might be assumed to originate from that external source. In
other words, we can know about natural selection and that it is true, only because we ourselves are something more
than merely naturally selected. In sum, the suggestion is that humans have
been cognitively-organized via our
built-in teleology such that objective knowledge is possible for us.
I am, of course,
fully aware that the above purposive metaphysics of biology sounds bizarre,
supernatural and indeed just plain absurd from the perspective of modern
biology! I have, after all, been thoroughly educated-in and acclimatized-to
that world, and have worked within it for several decades, both teaching the
subject of natural selection and publishing many papers; including many which metaphysically-assumed
that natural selection was indeed the last word on things – the exact framing assumptions
that I am here and now criticizing as radically incomplete; for example my
books Charlton, 2000 and Charlton & Andras, 2003 - especially the Appendix
to 2003.
However, stepping
outside of that professional ghetto, I am also aware that this general type and
nature of metaphysical explanation that I am now proposing has a long and
continuing pedigree among mathematicians and physicists – and indeed within a
strand of theoretical biologists which includes such diverse figures as JW von
Goethe and his scientific editor Rudolf Steiner, D’Arcy Thompson, AN Whitehead,
Conrad Waddington (and other members of the prestigious, albeit heterodox,
Theoretical Biology Club of Cambridge University), and in recent years Brian
Goodwin, Stuart Kauffman and Rupert Sheldrake.
Such individuals
(to a variable degree) have recognized that – if it is to be coherent - the
subject and methods of biology must be conceptualized within a larger (and, as
I term it, metaphysical) framework or paradigm which lies outside the
discipline of biology; however the above-named biologists were primarily
concerned with integration, organization and the development of form – while my focus here is on the
need for an externally imposed purpose.
However, I would note that there is a sometimes explicit, but more often unstated
and unacknowledged, teleological assumption behind much of the work in this
idealist, mathematical-geometric and morphological tradition.
The axiomatic
assumptions of this paradigmatic purposive framework are the basis for all
scientific work. Science is always and necessarily subordinated to philosophy,
even when that philosophy is unacknowledged - or even when it is denied. Many
clever and successful - but unreflective - modern scientists believe themselves
to be superior to metaphysics, to have transcended and replaced it with ‘solid’
empirical scientific ‘proof’. All this really means is that they do not
understand, and do not want to know about, their own metaphysical assumptions –
because they want to believe that these are just-plain-true, rather than the
consequence of non-scientific but instead philosophical choices made by actual people at some particular time and
place.
But different
choices yield different consequences; and the choice of natural selection as
the bottom-line explanation of biology has had an intellectually stunting and
transcendentally crippling effect on the discipline – has indeed destroyed the
cohesion and identity of biology, and made it a self-refuting paradox.
My hope is that
this new, teleological metaphysics of biology will provide a framework
within-which biology can operate in a coherent and contextualized fashion;
rather than, as in recent decades, simply ignoring its major problems and
deluding itself with assertions that its partial and incomplete explanations -
based on the dogmatic assumption that natural selection is the one and only
true mechanism of evolution and the bottom line reality of everything - have
universal applicability and eternal validity. However, I think I have
demonstrated that this is merely an assertion, and indeed an arrogant, uninformed,
arbitrary and indeed utterly absurd assertion! Let us then acknowledge that
there are metaphysical choices that have-been and must-be made – and try to
evaluate and compare these choices.
It is necessary to
recognize and make clear that the above metaphysics of hierarchical, purposive
and conscious, organizing entities is not a 'biological' theory. But then,
neither is natural selection a biological theory. Instead, both of these are
potential metaphysical frameworks for biology. Biology cannot exist without a
metaphysical framework – and the current one may not be the best, since it has
so many, such serious, failures to its name.
In conclusion, I
suggest that biology requires wholesale reconceptualization based on a new set
of deistic and teleological metaphysical assumptions.
Acknowledgement. I thank Rupert Sheldrake
for pointing-out that my suggested hierarchy of organizing entities bears
resemblance to the scheme proposed by Alfred Russel Wallace in The World of Life: A Manifestation of Creative Power,
Directive Mind and Ultimate Purpose (1910). (Wallace was – with Darwin –
the co-discoverer of Natural Selection.) Rupert also asked me a couple of
pertinent questions concerning the original draft; in the process of addressing
which, I (by stages) ended-up significantly expanding and refocusing this
paper.
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