T
Touchstone
Guest
No faith deployed, or needed, not in the sense a theist would use “faith”. The most plausible, economical and empirically grounded hypothesis is a materialist hypothesis. It may not be correct, but it’s got more to commend it, by far, in terms of positive evidence, durability under critical, skeptical scrutiny, and economy than any competing hypothesis.Nevertheless, I love your faith in a blind process to develop such intricate means of survival.
If it takes “faith” to designate the least faith-requiring hypothesis, then I guess I do have faith, but only the minimum possible.
Science is metaphysically grounded. Science cannot get off the ground without the axiom of empiricism, the necessary metaphysical assumption that our senses and experience reflects extra-mental reality to some degree. If you buy that assumption, then you can do science, and adopt a scientific epistemology. And on those grounds, the evidence for human empathy, or greed, or love as the product of evolution is the same as the evidence for having five digits on your hand – it’s all the same animal.There is as much evidence for the evolution of empathy as there is for voodoo. Not that I reject the possibility that empathy has a naturally explicable origin–point being, though, that you are putting faith in a metaphysical reading of science that has little to no objective evidence in its favor.
For empathy in particular, if you ask a biologist, you will hear that even gender itself – dimorphic sexuality – is a predicate for empathy. Male/female pairing produces the context for collaborative raising of offspring, and this is the seed of empathy and altruism. This is a profound step away from the straightforward interest in one’s offspring. If you are part of a breeding pair, your mate has genes you are not interested (intrinsically) in propagating, but because of the advantages in “splitting childcare duties”, you now have a practical interest in the welfare of your mate.
Extending that out, species that have elaborate social constructs are much more efficient at raising a signal offspring to childbearing age; social species have bigger brains as a ratio of their body mass, and among them, monogamous species that have high social engagement have the biggest brains of all. Caring for others in your clan isn’t controversial as an evolutionary adaption. It works, and the more you review the various species, the more this dynamic is validated, empirically.
This is a pretty good scholarly work on the subject, if I were to offer just one to you to start with (it’s a large and deep subject):
Putting the Altruism Back into Altruism: The Evolution of Empathy
From the abstract:
I have the PDF, but per the way that whole racket works, it’s not ethical for me to share it here, or with you privately. You can read an article by the same guy that covers a lot of the same concepts in a more informal way here:Empathy is an ideal candidate mechanism to underlie so-called directed altruism, i.e., altruism in response to anothers’s pain, need, or distress. Evidence is accumulating that this mechanism is phylogenetically ancient, probably as old as mammals and birds. Perception of the emotional state of another automatically activates shared representations causing a matching emotional state in the observer.
sharpbrains.com/blog/2010/02/02/the-evolution-of-empathy/
Don’t need one, and couldn’t use it if I had it. It’s wired into your brain, man! It’s not something you choose. It’s something millions of years of evolution has chosen for you – the only reason you are here to read this post is because those kinds of adaptations took hold in your lineage. If you didn’t have these “absolute morals”, you wouldn’t be here to read this, your ancestors many hundreds of thousands of years ago would have gone extinct for the lack of what you cannot (being scientifically unaware) see any reason to go along with!You’re left with no ground at all. You’ve done nothing but provide an explanation for a fairly prevalent pattern of behavior; you haven’t given anyone a good reason to go along with it.
No, see above. The model doesn’t posit any of these moral imperative as invincible. They aren’t, and can’t be; in many cases they are mutually exclusive (e.g. the value of self interest/self-preservation vs. altruism). That criticism reflects a naïve misconception about human psychology. The values and impulses we have compete with each other, and the strength and prevalence of each varies from individual, as a matter of genetics and epi-genetic factors, but ALSO as a function of the social environment and experiences of the individual. It’s a very (!) complex equation between the base psychology and the real world actions taken, and by no means is the “greed impulse” or the “empathy impulse” the only factor, ever, or even a major/determining factor.The overflowing of prisons makes your assertion that people can’t go against their biology-given morality beyond laughable.
But none of that changes or diminishes the fact that these are the base impulses, the moral absolutes we inherit as part of our evolved psychology that drive and inform our behavior.
I don’t think that’s true – I see Christianity as a subspecies of nihilism, but that’s a different thread. (Hint: eternity negates many of the meaningful aspects of life, just like some forms of secular nihilism).Not everyone is concerned with the well-being of the species, and given that, on your view, they have no long term stake in it, I don’t see them being very likely to become so. I think it’s worth noting that while not all atheists are nihilists, all nihilists are atheists.
That notwithstanding, everyone is concerned at a basic level with the well being of the species, or we would not be a gregarious, social species. As I said above, psychological aberrations do occur, and you don’t have to look far to find cases of psychopathy or anti-social psychologies. But these are the exceptions that prove the rule. We cannot function alone, and must have social relationships, social trust, and social norms to function, to be happy, to reproduce and propagate the species.
I can only interpret this in light of the same problem I identified above, name the misconception that these ideals must be invincible or somehow insuperable. That’s a mistake, that’s not how humans work, and it can’t be because many of the impulses we have directly conflict with and negate the other.Again, you are left with the large number of human beings who do not share your sense of “biological imperative.” And you guys say we live in a fantasy world!
Paradoxically, even and especially the “cheaters” in society have a profound interest in empathy and social trust. Without it, they’d not be cheaters – there’s nothing to exploit without a network of trust and empathy for the interest of others. There’s no “system” for “gaming the system”. Cheaters are parasitic on the system, but the parasite demonstrates the system. Again, the exception proves the rule, here.
It’s exactly as desperate as your clinging to the expectation that a rock dropped from your hand will fall to the ground below. Which is to say it’s nothing more than observing the world and building models that work in explaining and accounting for our experiences.But I digress. At least you admit it’s flimsy. Still, human experience betrays your notions of “facts and evidences about human beings.” Your “absolute imperatives from nature” are really nothing but a desperate clinging to certain accidental behaviors currently present in the human species.
Yes, by all means. This is a point I’d like to marshal in favor of my argument here.If we’re going to claim that morality arises from natural imperatives, consider that neighboring packs of chimpanzees often fight and kill one another over territory.
It’s “perfectly moral” in the sense that it is thoroughly moral. It’s not “moral on human terms”. These are chimpanzees we are talking about, not humans, after all.By your view, then, territorial war is perfectly moral.
This is evolution at work. By killing the cubs of conquered rivals, the genes of their own offspring are better off, or are more precisely more likely to propagate within the pride. Elimination of rivals is a “benefit” in an isolated sense, but it has to be balanced with the possible harm to the overal strength of the community the elimination of those individuals might introduce. In the case of the lions, such practices are advantageous – more benefit than harm for the overall propagation of one’s genes.Lions kill the cubs of conquered rivals. None of this behavior threatens their survival.
It’s “thoroughly moral”, yes, in the same sense as the chimpanzee reference above. But I understand your use of “perfectly moral” to be equivocal in that sense – pointing at some notion of “religious morality” that is a particularly cultural artifact, a product of human being moral beings, as opposed to “not being moral”, in the sense that a bacterium is perfectly non-moral, being a non-social organism.So the idea that we “cannot possibly detach from these ‘hardwired moral imperatives’” is, for want of a nicer word, naive. By your view, whatever particular course of action will ensure the survival of the species at whichever particular point of its development is “moral.” So, to throw out a current example, the Chinese policy of forced abortion to control overpopulation is perfectly moral in your view, right?
-TS