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Slaughter Of The Innocents?

Books Wednesday, March 12, 2003 . This is a SciScoop post by bunyip

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What compels a task force of scientists to attack an emerging science?  Wilson’s 1975 call for further research in animal behaviour resulted in a wealth of new information – but much of it on "other" animals.  The authors here ignore that work entirely.  The basic issue, of course, is how dependent human behaviour is on the evolutionary process.  It’s impossible to discern what alternative to evolution there is in determining our roots.  Certainly, none of these essays proposes other mechanisms.   What is terribly awkward about these essays is not simply that they’re wrong, but wrong and misleading in so many ways.

While all of these essays are built upon contrived issues and arguments, three stand out as particularly noxious examples of politicized science. [We will pass over the departed Gould's final sally attempting to restore his discredited idea of "punk eek."]  Hilary Rose attempts to discredit Darwin on the basis of his being a man of his times.  Her essay reminds us that there is a clear distinction between a "feminist scientist" and a woman researcher such as Helena Cronin.  Steve Rose carries politicization of science to almost desperate extremes in the concluding essay, asserting evolutionary psychology is an "ideology" [which it most certainly is not].  He, along with the other authors, falls back on the tired and tiresome cliché of EP research as "Just So" stories.  Of all the essays in this set, it is Mary Midgley’s on memes that evokes the deepest emotions.  Hilarity, compassion, resentment, unease, all arise as a result of reading this wandering, facile attempt disparage something she’s wholly unable to understand.  She begins with a wrong definition of the term, then wanders, phantom-like, over the philosophical countryside "in her stout British walking shoes" to arrive – simply lost in her own rhetoric.  Her presence in this collection is an embarrassment to friend and foe alike.

The only value this book has is its demonstration of the mind-set of a few self-deluded and outmoded commentators.  The title itself is a giveaway.  "Arguments Against Evolutionary Psychology" is no more valid than "Arguments Against Cosmology," or "Quantum Physics" or "Paleoanthropology" or whatever science is striving for standards in assessing elusive evidence.  The book does not, can not, even answer its own opening question: "Why is this book important?"  None of these authors work in the field [Midgley, for example is a "philosopher"], and none deal directly with the research involved.  They are outsiders, sniping away at a science they neither comprehend nor are qualified to critique.  How then, do they expect a reading public to take them seriously?  If you must read this book, do so, but don’t encourage such twaddle by spending your money on it.

5 Responses to Slaughter Of The Innocents?

apsmith

March 13th, 2003 at 11:14 am

Steven Pinker talks about the irrational antagonism there seems to be against evolutionary explanations of human behavior in some of his books (it may have been “The Language Instinct” that I remember this from). The Social Sciences have developed under the assumption for the most part that there is no need to think about “animals” – humans are unique and special. And of course we are in some ways; we have properties that are “emergent” and not really understandable by looking only our evolutionary heritage. But rejecting the evolutionary origin of our minds, culture, and habits is as unfruitful as a chemist rejecting the properties of atoms learned from physics, because physicists know nothing about chemical reactions.

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Sweetwind

March 13th, 2003 at 4:10 pm

‘Cuz what I remember from reading The Language Instinct (it was a couple of years ago, I may be misremembering) is Pinker dismissing a theory that local conditions or physiology determine key aspects of language (a “Polynesian islanders have lots of vowels in their language because they live in lush, humid climates where the air is pleasant on their vocal cords, while Germanics have lots of gutteral consonants because when it’s freezing cold they want to keep their mouths clasped shut” sort of thing) on the basis of the negative results of a single study, which looked at a single region for a single short period. Pinker’s flat dismissal made me think that he didn’t hold much with evolution influencing language. My impression of him, from the book, was that he’s a true Cartesian in the tradition of Chomsky. He seemed to hold that “the language instinct” sprang into humans full blown at some point, without much in the way of evolutionary lead-in. (He flat-out ridiculed the idea that we’re learning anything about language from the great ape sign language experiments.) At least, that was the impression I took away from reading The Language Instinct.

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apsmith

March 14th, 2003 at 2:08 pm

and I’ve read some E.O. Wilson in the meantime – I’ll have to go back and check :-) As an “outsider” I seem to recall Pinker’s approach was very much based on evolutionary concepts; on the other hand, I think you’re right that he had little to say about animal capacities for language in general.

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Sweetwind

March 17th, 2003 at 7:02 pm

The Language Instinct is the only Pinker book I’ve read, so perhaps it’s in one of the other ones. :-) And come to think of it he did go on for a while about evolution of the language part of the brain. Like how early humans found the especially articulate folks extra-sexy (which is why all us girls swoon over rickyjames! :->) My reading was certainly colored by what I had read just before that — The Linguistics Wars which was a very entertaining look at what had been going on with Chomsky and the Cartesians vs. the empiricists (and a lot of other stuff). Whether this was a good thing or a bad thing, I don’t know!

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rickyjames

March 26th, 2003 at 12:32 pm

I can see I’ve got to check the comments on older stories more closely than I’ve been doing ;)

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