Download Social Darwinism

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Philosophy of history wikipedia , lookup

Social contract wikipedia , lookup

Sociocultural evolution wikipedia , lookup

Postdevelopment theory wikipedia , lookup

Social psychology wikipedia , lookup

Social exclusion wikipedia , lookup

Sociological theory wikipedia , lookup

Community development wikipedia , lookup

Social computing wikipedia , lookup

Social theory wikipedia , lookup

History of social work wikipedia , lookup

Other (philosophy) wikipedia , lookup

Tribe (Internet) wikipedia , lookup

Social perception wikipedia , lookup

Third Way wikipedia , lookup

Social group wikipedia , lookup

Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship wikipedia , lookup

Inclusive fitness in humans wikipedia , lookup

Unilineal evolution wikipedia , lookup

History of the social sciences wikipedia , lookup

Social Darwinism wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
SOME CRITICISMSMS OF SOCIAL DARWINISM
J. Wagner
First Year Preceptorial
The central claim of so-called "Social Darwinism," that ruthless competition in human affairs leads to
"evolutionary" improvement, may seem persuasive at first–especially for those who find it politically
appealing. But Social Darwinism, which peaked in the last century and is still influential in popular
thought, is seen by most contemporary biologists, philosophers and social scientists as fundamentally
flawed. Summarized here are some of the most widely recognized shortcomings of Social Darwinism.
1. Neglect of Darwin's evidence for cooperation. Although Darwin recognized social cooperation as
a major factor in the survival strategies of many species, particularly humans, Social Darwinists
generally overlook cooperation in order to emphasize (and presumably justify) ruthless competition.
2. Confusion of evolution with progress. Darwin's theory only claimed that natural selection
produced evolutionary change. Since there is no particular direction implied in this (the gradual
extinction of humankind or of all complex life forms would be an evolutionary event) evolution is not to
be confused with progress in the sense of movement toward a higher or more desirable state. It is
therefore illogical to look to supposed evolutionary principles for moral guidance (technically, this is a
variant of the "naturalistic fallacy"). Contrary to the underlying assumption of Social Darwinism,
evolution has no necessary connection with the advance of happiness, beauty, goodness, or any of the
things humans are interested in promoting. Indeed, the anthropocentrism implied in the Social
Darwinist interpretation could be seen as fundamentally anti-Darwinian.
3. Confusion of descriptive and prescriptive laws. Darwin's theories of change were descriptive
generalizations which, like the law of gravity, would have to be rewritten if events contradicted them.
By contrast, the "laws of nature" proposed by the Social Darwinists appear to be prescriptive laws, as
evidenced by the constant admonitions against "breaking" them. For example, one English Social
Darwinist worried that the Irish, the lower classes, and other clearly "unfit" people might outreproduce the upper-class Englishmen who were obviously more "fit" to exist. A truly Darwinian
concept of fitness is descriptive, determined after the fact by observing which variations have more
reproductive success. Social Darwinists, however, tend to use a different concept of "fitness, which seems
to be determined a priori, in a manner unrelated to any clear scientific criteria and suspiciously
congruent with cultural, national, racial and class chauvinism.
4. Confusion of social and genetic processes. Social Darwinist arguments rest on the sometimes
unstated assumption that differences in social position are based on differences in genetic merit. If
the wretchedness of the poor is based on their biological inferiority, it might conceivably be argued that
they should be kept "in their place" or even eliminated from the population; however, if it is based on
wretched social conditions, it would make more sense to take responsibility for improving those
conditions. The assumption that one's social position is determined by genetic factors is not supported
by scientific evidence.
5. Underestimation of the individual's stake in community. The Social Darwinist portrayal of the
individual as owing nothing to anyone and having minimal interest in the fate of others is an
inadequate account of the human condition. It belittles the fact that we become human through the
medium of culture and society, and it disregards the fundamental premise of all ethics, which is (as
ecologist Aldo Leopold's puts it in another FP reading) "that the individual is a member of a community
of interdependent parts."
Darwin contradicts Social Darwinism:
"As man advances in civilisation, and small tribes are united into larger communities, the simplest
reason would tell each individual that he ought to extend his sympathies to all the members of the
same nation, though personally unknown to him. This point being once reached, there is only an
artifical barrier to prevent his sympathies extending to the men of all nations and races."
Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex, 1871