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Title: Sociobiology or Social Ecology Author: Murray Bookchin Date: 1993 Language: en Topics: social ecology, sociobiology, Murray Bookchin Source: Which Way for the Ecology Movement? Essays by Murray Bookchin
The interface between nature and society has been a haunting
philosophical, ethical, and cultural problem for thousands of years.
Indeed, that it constitutes the stuff from which naĂŻve myths and
thoughtful moral credos have been formed for ages is a fact we are
seldom permitted to forget, if only in a fashion that is patronizing to
presumably less âsophisticated" cultures. After all, were not the
earliest religions âmereâ nature religions and the earliest philosophies
âmereâ nature philosophies? As far back as we can search into humanityâs
rich reservoir of intuitions and rational formulas, our relationship to
nature â indeed, humanityâs place in nature â has been a central theme
of ideas and sensibility. To seek an objective grounding for reason and
ethics that is more than crudely instrumental and subjectively
relativistic has been the alluring goal of human thought for an
incalculable period of time.
It was only with the opening of the Christian era and, centuries later,
with the birth of its wayward child, the Renaissance, that this haunting
interface was slowly edged out of the realm of human speculation.
Christianityâs intensely anti-naturalistic bias essentially replaced an
earlier, richly formed idea of nature with a colorless Supernature as
ruthlessly as the late Renaissance philosophers and scientists (notably,
Descartes and Galileo) were to replace organic strategies of knowledge
with harshly mechanical onesâan umbilical cord between the cathedral and
the laboratory that Bacon was to sanctify in his utopian House of
Saloman. The results of these ideological changes were more fateful than
their creators realized. Human thought was completely deflected from
rational inquiry into the relationship of society to nature â one free
of the religious and philosophical archaisms of the past â into a
narrowly instrumental, means-end rationalism. A distinctly philosophical
credo was established in the nature of the new science that was no less
metaphysical in its presupposition that the archaic metaphysics of
classical thought: a vision of nature as âmute,â âblind,â and
intelligible only in mathematic terms; a vision of natural history as
strictly fortuitous; and perhaps more decisively, an ethical strategy
that was grounded not in objectivity and a search for the inherent
self-organizing attributes that impart meaning to nature and society but
in âeffectivenessâ and in a logical calculus of efficiency that could be
justified only in terms of âsuccessâ and personal proclivities.
Ironically, the Renaissance vision of societyâs interface with nature
had not removed morality as such from the issueâ it has replaced a
committed vision of right and wrong with an essentially uncommitted one.
In its scientistic âvalue-freeâ but instrumental approach to society, it
has in fact provided a means-end rationalism that could as easily
justify fascism as it could socialism â and, sadly enough, a uniquely
vulgar interpretation of âanarchismâ that tends to erupt from time to
time like a fetid ulcer in the Anglo-American culture region * Granted
that medieval teleology with its rigid mythos of an inexorable âfinal
causeâ had permeated speculative thought with the autocracy of a
preordained religious destiny; Renaissance mechanism, in turn, lifted
the burden of âfinal causeâ only to replace it with an equally rigid
mythos of âefficient causeâ with its unyielding determinism and its
autocracy of reductionism. In neither case was freedom serviced and
domination banished. Rather, the same commitment to metaphysical of
unswerving determinism was reinforced over more organic concepts of the
world that gave it meaning without the all-residing presence of a deity
or a machine.
- Consider, for example, an article in defense of contemporary
sociobiology in a recent issue of The North American Anarchist (renamed
Strike) which deals with nature as âblindâŚmeaninglessâŚmuteâ and the
like, and rehabilitates all the vulgarities of mechanical materialism a
la Mettrie or Moleschott. I quote from memory but with a deep concern
that this kind of intellectual primitivism may find its place as
âmaterialisticâ or âanti-theologicalâ in anarchist ideas. We have as
much to fear from kneejerk form of scientism and behaviorism, not to
speak of sociobiology, as well have from theology and mysticism.
These general remarks are not made idly. They are indispensable for
understanding two conflicting interpretation of the interface between
society and nature: sociobiology and social ecology. The historic crisis
in reason, science, and ethics which has reached such acuity in recent
years â with Renaissance mechanismâs underlying tenants of instrumental
rationalism, of quantification as the âlanguageâ of science, and of
physics as its âparadigmâ â feeds into a more compelling material
crisis: the unprecedented ecological deterioration that threatens the
very integrity of complex life-forms, including humanity. None of the
critics of instrumentalism, quantification, and reductionism, from the
phenomenologists to the critical theorists of the Frankfurt School,
could have anticipated that nature itself would raise problems that once
seemed confined to the ideological and social realms. The massive
disequilibrium between humanity and nature created by a terrifying,
exploitive society has thus created the need for a new agenda with roots
in an admittedly very old tradition. We are once again faced with the
problem of how society emerged from nature, the continuities and
discontinuities that exist between the two, the development of a
sensibility and of social relations that accord with these distinctions
(including reason and science as well as alternative communities and
technics), and finally, an ethical that is grounded in nature as it is
in human rationality. In short, the old ghosts, seemingly dispelled by
the Cartesian and Galilean traditions, have come back to haunt usânot,
let me emphasize, for want of the obscurantist ideological needs that
many archaic religions and philosophical systems were meant to satisfy,
but for want of a new perspective on humanity and nature that can
resolved the ecological crisis of our times.
It is against this much larger background of ideas and problems that
sociobiologyâs sudden emergence and utterly reactionary content should
be evaluated. The idea that society has roots in nature is not new.
Until the nineteenth century, the term ânatural philosophyâ was used as
a synonym for the term âscience.â Hegelâs recovery of Aristotelians
physics and biology from the theological trappings of the medieval
Schoolmen (all his own prejudices and idealistic nonsense aside)
exercised an enormous influence in the academic world as a qualitative
basis for the deductive sciences. Nor can we ignore the influence
âdialectical materialismâ has exercised even if only as a source of
sharp intellectual contentions. Issues like âteleologyâ and
âpurposivenessâ in nature, however simplistically defined, are central
concerns of modern systems theory and neo-positivist philosophies of
science, not simply of Teilhard de Chardinâs quasi-theological
ruminations on orthogenesis.
Sociobiology has oozed into these major intellectual crevices of our
times like some ideological pus from a suppurating ulcer. It is evidence
not of a cure to the problems that have emerged but of the disease
itself. It would be a serious error to view sociobiology merely as part
of a persisting endeavor to relate attributes of the organic world to
the social or to explore the biological roots of society in terms of
their continuities and discontinuities. This project is thousands of
years old and has had a highly diversified life of its own. It extends
back to the pre-Socratics and has acquired its most conventional form in
a neo-Bergsonian vitalism and in systems theory. Sociobiology, as the
term is currently used, is a very specific creature in its own right.
More precisely, it is not a discipline; it is a movement, no less
offensive in its crudities than social-Darwinism. Considered as a
movement, sociobiologyâs manifesto can largely be regarded as E. O.
Wilsonâs Sociobiology: The New Synthesis. Its specificity as a âNew
Synthesisâ cannot be ignored. The work of Wilson and his collaborators,
some of whose views approximate pure fascism, must be singled out as a
new attempt to deal with the interface between biology and society,
indeed, to give it the halo of a scientific authority that defies mere
theorizing and speculation. We are no longer dealing, here, with the
Ionian philosophers, Permenidesâ and Heraklitosâ âDike,â Platoâs
Demiurgos, Aristotleâs tour de force in the Physics and the scala
natura, Demokratos, Epikurus, the Stoics, or, for that matter, with
Bruno, Kepler, Leibnitz, Hegel, Kropotkin, Bergson, and the like. We are
talking of a love affair between a new, presumably very âmodernâ and
âsophisticatedâ group of largely Anglo-American biologists and
ethologists on the one hand and genes on the other. The opening chapter
of Wilsonâs Sociobiology is titled âThe Morality of the Geneâ â and it
is the bookâs reductionist and ugly ethos, viewed as a key to society
and human behavior, that must never be permitted to elude us.
Accolades for Wilsonâs âcivilityâ and âappropriate sense of humorâ (to
use Ashley Montaguâs flattering characterization) in the face of very
heated attacks upon his views do not justify an equal degree of civility
and humor from his critics. There is nothing very civil about
sociobiology and certainly nothing very funny about its conclusions.
Indeed, the critical response to Sociobiology has been largely
favorable. This cordial, often enthusiastic reception has been extended
not only by members of the scientific community but by a wide range of
the entire political spectrum from writers for Britainâs fascist
National Front to their counterparts in the happily defunct
âAnarcho-Communist Federation of North America.â
Wilson, however, does not need reborn fascists and self-styled
anarchists to speak on his behalf. He is more articulate and coherent
than many of his fervent supporters. The vividness of his emphasis on
aggression, hierarchy, domination, territoriality, and competition as
genetically innate to all life-forms is so defiantly brash that it has
become conventional to critically single out these issues. In Wilsonâs
writings, very few of the less savory aspects of animal and human
behavior are free of a genetic pedigree, and with his pedigree they
become biologically inevitable, in fact, adaptative to survival. Such
awkward traits as altruism and such patently cultural attributes such as
sympathy emerge as problems, into the âmorality of the gene.â Enough has
been written on Wilsonâs substantive issues raised by his colleaguesâ
works.
Nevertheless, it is difficult to ignore Wilsonâs intellectual strategy.
Sociobiology is shrewdly riddled by a sufficient number of second
thoughts and qualifications to obscure the viciousness of its thesis.
More cautious that such rabidly reactionary acolytes as Richard Dawkins,
whose Selfish Gene has been characterized by so prudent a critic as Mary
Midgley as the âwork of an uncritical philosophic egoist,â Wilson is
careful to take note of the âlimits of aggression,â to poetize over the
âfield of righteousness,â and to acknowledge the âplasticity of [human]
social organization,â with due deference to âsharingâ and âbonding.â But
wherever Wilson seems to relax his genetic determinism in the realm of
culture, he rarely displaces it completely. Sociobiology unceasingly
stakes out limits to non-genetic autonomy. Biological determinism,
specifically in its crassest genic form, is not merely a massive
emphasis but an all-encompassing gospel. Whatever seems to challenge
this calling is conveniently removed from the purview of the book. It
becomes non-existent or didactically dismissed when it cannot be cajoled
by all means â fair or foul â into a genic âparadigm.â
And Wilson is by no means so prudent as to abandon foul means. We shall
have occasion to see that his genetics, far from being on the cutting
edge of genic theories, is in fact rather archaic and shopworn. Nor is
his ethological data free of rather cynical distortion. James C. King,
in his highly informative and restrained criticism of sociobiology,
notes that wedded to Wilsonâs âsingle-gene analysis and genetic
determinism is ⌠an emphasis on conflict and violence.â Wilsonâs nature,
including much of human nature, is ravaged by claw and fang, indeed, by
a pervasive social-Darwinism that is denied rhetorically only to be
smuggled in substantially. This high-pitch of conflict and violence is
far from supported by the scientific âobjectivityâ that is supposed to
render the sociobiological synthesis so new.
A few examples are worth citing. Wilsonâs use of Schneirlaâs data on
cats to demonstrate that parent-offspring relations are marked by
conflict in weaning kittens from their mother has been justly
characterized by King as âclose to distortion and point up the
predisposition of the sociobiologist to see conflict everywhere.â As it
turns out, Schneirlaâs account of this relationship is highly complex:
it involves an intricate alternation of lessening concern between the
feline parent and its offspring which ultimately yields a condition of
interdependence rather than hostility. Even more disconcerting is
Wilsonâs misuse of G.B. Schallerâs data on the Serengeti lions. Adducing
Schallerâs work as evidence, Wilson brashly contends that lion âcubs are
sometimes killed and eaten during territorial disputesâ â and there the
account of high cub mortality is permitted to rest. Actually Schaller
and other authoritative ethologists attribute this high mortality rate
mainly to parental neglect rather than cannibalism. Acolytes of
sociobiology are all the more revealing of their biases when the data
around a particular issue is disputable. Almost invariably their
interpretations of ambiguous facts fall on the side of aggression,
violence, infanticide, and conflict. The more gory the trait, the more
likely it is to invite the purpose prose of dogma rather than the staid
language of âscientific objectivityâ.
All of this raises what is most crucial in sociobiologyâs image of
nature â of life as it is formed, of life-forms interacting with each
other and their abiotic environment, and ultimately of human nature as
it is formed biologically and culturally. Wilsonâs image of nature, like
Freudâs, is unequivocally Hobbesian, a bellum omnium contra omnes.
Methodologically, Wilson is reductionist. What is no less significant,
he has an epistemology that renders his subject matter inherently unruly
and impervious to explanations that elicit any traits of an immanently
symbiotic and mutualistic nature. Human nature, however one chooses to
describe it, is an effect rather than a cause. It is largely the result
of the ever-domineering gene. That there are immanent, self-organizing,
and â yes, let us use the dreaded word, harmonizing â as well as
conflicted â tendencies in nature and society which could form the bases
of a new biosocial approach to evolution remain notions that are
essentially alien to Wilsonâs sociobiology.
It would be very useful, if space permitted to explore Wilsonâs
definitions of âsociety,â âhierarchy,â âdominance,â âaggression,â
âband,â âcaste,â âcommunal,â âcompetition,â and like words that clearly
reveal his orientation toward biosocial, evolutionary, socially
structured, and ethical phenomena. What is striking about most of these
definitions is that, where they have social implications, Wilson firmly
contains them by unrelenting, often rigid, biological terms. On the
other hand, where their biological implications almost beg for
interpretation, they are equated with biologically biased social terms.
What I am saying is that Wilsonâs ruthless reduction of social phenomena
to biology in general and genetics in particular is obscurantist by
definition in the literal sense â by his definition of key terms that
enter into his book. He renders it difficult for anyone but the most
sophisticated reader to use language in such a way that it can reveal
the discontinuities as well as the continuities between biology and
society. Even more irritating, Wilson so crassly biases his language
that the dialectical relations between these continuities and
discontinuities become elusive. The perceptive reader, in effect, is
stranded on a sociobiological island where it is virtually impossible to
consume anything but sand and salt.
This become evident when one turns to Wilsonâs definition of âsociety.â
A âsocietyâ in Sociobiology is a âgroup of individuals belonging to the
same species and organized in a cooperative manner.â The diagnostic
criterion is reciprocal communication of a cooperative nature, extending
beyond mere sexual activities â after which mouthful of words, Wilson
dispatches the reader to Chapter Two of the book.
It is vitally necessary unless one is a mindless acolyte, to know what
Wilson means by âorganizedâ and âcooperativeâ here â two culturally,
philosophically, and ethically laden terms that have far-reaching
implications in social theory, not to speak of biology, where their
meanings may differ so drastically in the same species (such as baboons)
in different ecosystems. One finds, in fact, that Chapter Two in no way
clarified the meaning of these highly charged terms. If anything, Wilson
wanders all over the place. We no more know what âcooperation,â means
than we know the meaning of âorganization.â Wilsonâs definitions are as
arbitrary as they are intuitive. We are urged, in fact, to define the
terms âsocietyâ and âsocialâ sufficiently âbroadly in order to prevent
the exclusion of many interesting (!) phenomenaâ â in whose opinion and
by what criteria Wilson fails to explain.
Accordingly, Wilson is now free to opine on any phenomenon that captures
his fancy â a totally legitimate right if sociobiology is a purely
speculative theory but certainly intellectually outrageous if it is (as
its acolytes demands) a âscience.â We are told, for example, that
âswarms of courting malesâ are not âtrue societiesâ because they are
âoften drawn together by mutually attractive stimuli, but if they
interact in no other way it seems excessive to refer to them by a term
stronger that aggregation.â By contrast, Wilson declares, bird flocks,
wolf packs, and locust swarms are âgood examples of true elementary
societies.â So are parent-offspring relationships if they âcommunicate
reciprocallyâ because they have âoften complex and serve multiple
functions.â Indeed âin many groups of organisms, from the social insects
to the primates, the most advanced societies appear to have evolved from
family units.â
We must pause, here, to examine this fascinating muddle of ideas and
categories. If society is to be so broadly defined that it includes bird
flocks and locus swarms but not swarms of courting males, by what solid
criteria other than Wilsonâs cavalier use of the word âexcessiveâ are
the former distinguished from the latter? All three flocks and swarms
are united by some kind of âattractive stimuliâ; they perform some kind
of âfunctionâ and in the âbroadest senseâ are apparently âcooperatingâ
to fulfill that âfunction.â Taken at face value, Wilson has assigned the
notion of internal organization â that is, some vague idea of âgroup
behaviorâ â as his criterion for distinguishing a âsocietyâ from a mere
âaggregation.â But the swarming of courting males, or for that matter,
the winter congregation of rattlesnakes and ladybird beetles (which
Wilson also consigns to the status of âaggregationsâ) are forms of
âgroup behaviorâ in themselves. The fact is that Wilsonâs criteria in
distinguishing âsocietyâ from âaggregationâ are matters of degree rather
than of king. Courting males, wintering rattlesnakes and ladybird
beetles are not sufficiently âorganizedâ and do not sufficiently
âcooperateâ for Wilsonâs tastes to qualify in his sovereign opinion as
âtrue societiesâ; hence by no standards other than his personal judgment
are they reduced to âaggregations.â
I have emphasized Wilsonâs biases primarily to argue several key points.
Minimally, with bias as its criterion, sociobiology holds to promise of
becoming even a reasonably precise science. If fact, it rates very badly
as a ânew synthesis.â Indeed, its claim becomes all the more arrogant
because it professes to have achieved an âobjectivityâ that is
ostensibly lacking in the âmetaphysicalâ orientations it explicitly
opposes. Actually, one encounters arbitrary judgments everywhere
throughout the sociobiological literature and the writings of Wilsonâs
ethological allies. But what is more importantâand often less
apparentâis that Wilson is seeking something that he never fully finds
in the animal world: society conceived as an institutionalized system of
relationshipsâthat is to say, the conscious fabrication of associative
behavior. Animals may form loosely or tightly aggregated communities,
but differences in degree of aggregation do not determine whether they
are societies. They merely determine how stable these aggregations are
as communities and the range of functions they perform.
The need to distinguish society, a uniquely human attribute, from
community, a generally organic attribute (which, as we shall see, can
apply even to the organization of a single cell), is by no means
academic. Indeed, the tendency to confuse the twoâan error that is
easily make because every society is necessarily also a communityâmars
the work of such widely disparate thinkers as Marx, Darwin, Kropotkin,
and, of course, Wilson. We can ill afford this confusion without
yielding the most disconcerting results. A community organized at
various levels of aggregation by chemical stimuli, by hormonal and
neural relationships, by reproductive functions (mammalian mating rarely
occurs without extrasexual or âreciprocal communicationâ), by learning
specific adaptive functions, and finally, by filial, symbolic, economic,
and consciously cooperative activities (whether they be ritually,
mythically, or rationally expressed) â all of these are patently not
coequal in form or content. To place a beehive, whose basic function is
reproductive, and a town, whose basic function is cultural, under a
common rubric, and then to merely distinguish them by their âdegreeâ of
complexity is not simply intellectually fatuous but ideologically
insidious. Even the âsocializing tendencyâ Kropotkin imputes to nature
can be obfuscatory if it fails to recognize that institutions are never
strictly or even primarily ânatural,â however much they seem to parallel
fairly complex animal interactions. However prevalent mutual aid may be
among nonhuman organisms, social cooperation presupposes will and
intentionality, which is only dimly present in the animal world. By the
same token, the widely touted âdivision of laborâ which is falsely
imputed to all kinds of animal communities, particularly the âsocial
insects,â is an economic fact â a specifically human one â not a
variegated constellation of complementary functions and activities.
To ignore these distinctions is to invite considerable ideological
mischief. Like the notions that nature is âcruelâ or âkind,â âstingyâ or
âgenerous,â âharshâ or âgentle,â we read back into levels of organic
development behavioral criteria that have yet to be consolidated by
human thought. Potentiality is not actuality, any more than tendency is
the fruition of the possibilities it may yield. Society may be latent in
nature, but it only comes into its truth as âtrue societiesâ (to use
Wilsonâs jargon) through the cultural, economic, symbolic, and
subjective interaction of organisms â and let me emphasize, not by the
mere presence of one or two of these traits but by the presence of all
of them, woven into a common mosaic that is visibly and permanently
organized. Social institutions may be rooted in consanguinity or civil
relations; they may be agrarian, with rich natural overtones, or urban,
with strongly political ones â but in essence they are human because
they are fabricated by disparate attributes, minimally conscious,
communicative, and cooperatively economic ones. Bees and wasps are
decidedly not âsocialâ because their modes of organization, however
elaborate and intricate, are massively predetermined by genetic codes.
That is to say, they are rigidly fixed along uncreative,
undevelopmental, and largely biochemical lines. That they actually form
the genic âparadigmâ for Wilsonâs concept of sociality is one of the
most sinister features of sociobiology. Largely reproductive in
function, the âsocial insectsâ represent the antithesis of any concept
of evolution as untrammeled and emergent: they open no fresh or creative
pathways in organic development but rather only an unswerving fixity and
self-replication that form any innovative viewpoint that represent a
blind evolutionary alley.
In fact, a genetic strategy that makes the behavior of the âsocial
insectsâ comprehensible actually renders human society incomprehensible.
So-called primate âhierarchiesâ (a completely libelous term) yield
strictly individual dominance-submission relationships (another libelous
term) on the basis of largely physical attributes â notably, strength,
hormonal fortitude, and possibly even intelligence, although the visible
distinctions between a âsmartâ ape and a âdumbâ one are barely
noticeable in a primate community. It is quixotic ethologists like Jane
Goodall-Lawick, rather than apes themselves, who make these uniquely
anthropomorphic distinctions. The myth of an intragroup âhierarchyâ
dissolves completely once we recognize that an âalphaâ male chimpanzee
is an individual creature, not an institution. His âdominant statusâ
(whatever these words means) lives or dies with the fortunes of the ape,
not with the fortunes of the group. Hence, âhierarchyâ in the most
âcaste-likeâ apedoms or monkeydoms more closely resembles the links in a
chain than layers and consciously empowered community structures.
The difference is a crucial one. A weak, enfeebled, unnerved, and sick
ape is hardly likely to become an âalphaâ male, much less retain this
highly ephemeral âstatus.â By contrast, the most physically and mentally
pathological human rulers have exercised authority with devastating
effect in the course of history and altered its destiny profoundly. The
cry âThe King is Dead! Long Live the King!â expresses a power of
hierarchical institutions over persons that is completely reversed in
so-called âanimal hierarchies,â where the absence of institutions is
precisely the only intelligible way of talking about âalpha malesâ or
âqueen bees.â Sociobiology, with its definitional reductionism, totally
dissolves these crucial distinctions. âHierarchy,â to Wilson, is a
âsystem of two or more levels of units, the higher level controlling the
least to some extent the activities of the lower levels in order to
integrate the group as a whole.â One is tempted to observe that this
âintegrativeâ function must be hot news to an ape or termite. In any
case, the terms âsystem,â âlevels,â âunits,â and âcontrollingââso widely
disparate throughout the animal worldâare precisely the concepts and
categories that Wilson is obliged to explain if the notion of âanimal
hierarchyâ is to have meaning. These explanations are all the more
necessary because âcastesâ of âworker beesâ (another group of juicy
terms) are in no way comparable to the âalpha malesâ among primates.
Wilsonâs fast-and-loose interchanging of âlevelsâ and âunitsâ allows him
to recklessly pirouette around every part of animal ethology, from
beehives to baboon troops. The genetic origins of beehive
differentiation are blissfully transferred to less instinct-governed
primate groups and then, almost joyously, to strictly contrived human
social and political institutions.
From a definitional viewpoint, Wilsonâs terms and categories almost
consistently bed the questions they are required to answer. A âcasteâ is
âany set of individuals ⌠that performs specialized labor in a colony.â
One is impelled to ask what âlaborâ means to Wilson in, say, a beehive,
a wolf pack, a baboon troop, and a Detroit automobile factory. Can all
these âlevelsâ of associations be flippantly subsumed under âlaborâ? And
is âspecialization evidence of a âcaste,â a âprofession,â a
âdiscipline,â a âproclivity,â a âcalling,â each guided by genetic
instinctive, psychological, economic, or creative sources? Or, after
all, as Wilson would have it, are all of them reducible to the mere
expression of âselfish genesâ and an anthropomorphic myth of genic
âmoralityâ?
If one goes through most of Wilsonâs remaining socially charged
definitions, sociobiologyâs landscape becomes increasingly depressing.
Most seriously, Wilsonâs genic limits and biased definitions deny both
nature and societyâs fecundity at bestâor else dissolve them into the
crassest form of social reactionism at worst. Wilsonâs genic âlimitsâ to
human behavior are not ideologically equivocal, even as some of his
critics tend to believe. They are socially and politically reactionary.
In On Human Nature, Wilson closes his tract with lyrical futuristic
speculations that are inherently hostile to any emancipatory conception
of human freedom. We learn that sociobiology âenlargesâ our knowledge of
human nature, that we can erect our values on a more âobjective basis,â
notably, a genetic one in which our âset of trajectoriesâ or
explanations, far from enlarging, âwill narrow still more.â Accordingly,
Wilson, after having immersed us in a claw-and-fang social-Darwinism, in
the very act of denying it rhetorically, opines that âwe already know,
to take two extreme examples, that the worlds of William Graham Summer,
the absolute Social Darwinist, and Mikhail Bakunin, the anarchist, are
biologically impossible. As the Social sciences mature into predictive
disciplines, the permissible trajectories will not only diminish in
number but our descendants will be able to sight farther along them.â
These remarks, which essentially foreclose any creative social
flexibility beyond the specious limits of a chromosome, are evidence of
a totalitarian gall. They constitute a dogma of total surrender to
social conditions as they areâsocial conditions, I would add, that are
closer to social Darwinism today than in almost any period in humanityâs
bloody history. It is easy and rather superficial to criticize Wilson
for his attempts to validate hierarchy, aggression, war, social
domination, and conflict on biological grounds. These notions have been
the flotsam-and-jetsam of sociology for decades. What renders Wilsonâs
sociobiology particularly sinister is that it prostitutes the Hegelian
notion (as vulgarized by Engels) that âfreedom is the recognition of
necessityâ into a genic closure of all natural and social creativity.
Wilsonâs âmorality of the geneâ is not only âselfishâ but suffocatingly
rigid; it not only impedes action with the autocracy of a genic tyrant,
but closes the door to any action that is not biochemically defined by
its own configuration. When freedom is nothing more than the recognition
of necessity, when our expectations ânarrowâ as we discover the geneâs
tyranny over the greater totality of life, we are obliged to make the
best of what we know we cannot do. The possible becomes an expression of
the impossible¸ just as Wilsonâs notion of reason is interpreted as a
mere âepiphenomenonâ of neurology.
If sociobiology has anything to offer, it is a very harsh conclusion:
when knowledge becomes dogma (and few movements are more dogmatic than
sociobiology), freedom is ultimately denied. In Wilsonâs case, the
freedom that is denied is not Summerâs âabsolute social-Darwinismâ â for
Summerâs premises are built into sociobiology by definition, even as
they are passingly rejected textuallyâbut precisely the âextremeâ which
Wilsonâs singles out from all others: the anarchism of Mikhail Bakunin.
Our discussion of the reactionary content of sociobiology should not be
permitted to conceal the problem it seeks to resolve. Biology,
particularly in its relationship to society and ethics, has begun to
acquire enormous, indeed highly controversial, importance. After a
generation in which these two topics have been ruthlessly dissociated
from one another by academics, the issue of objective ethical criteria
and societyâs interface with natureâan issue forced upon us by
ecologyâhas made the need for a new continuum between them an imperative
of programmatic importance. Our âplace in nature,â to use Max Schelerâs
phrase, is no longer to be evoked in wistfully romantic verbiage. It has
become a philosophical challenge to overcome the dualism we inherited
from Hobbes, the moral relativism we inherited from Hume, and the notion
of a âblind,â âmuteâ mechanical nature we inherited from Galileo.
Tragically, the need for meeting these challenges and resolving them is
not forced by sociobiology alone, with its simplistic crudities. Like
all sweeping issues of any historical period, the relationship of
society and ethics to nature has been burdened by serious ideological
tensions which have one-sidedly warped almost every intellectual
contestant. Genic reductionism, in fact, is merely the coarsest weed in
a larger bouquet whose constituents are only slightly less crude than
sociobiology. It is unfortunate to note that a gifted evolutionary
theorist like Stephen Jay Gould, for example, has reacted so sharply to
the recent popularity of creationist theories of life that he denies any
moral content to natural history. The temptation to react against one
extreme, notably reborn Christianity, by evoking an equally questionable
extreme like a mechanistic Darwinism, does no service to theories of
biological evolution.
Mechanistic theories of evolution are as rooted in speculative
prejudgments as creationism. By the same token, the shared failure of
divine creationism and mechanistic evolutionism to resolve the moral and
ecological problems created by our historic cleavage from nature has not
been eliminated by infusing systems theory with a sovereign,
all-encompassing importanceâor worse, by surrounding it with a mystical
halo borrowed from archaic, often quietistic Asian religious systems.
The âCalifornia School of Mysticsâ if I may be permitted to so label
writers like Fritjof Capra, Eruch Jantsch, and for the hovering ghost of
Gregory Bateson, is redolent of a systems theory as unspiritual and
reductionist as the very mechanism it purports to oppose. The lavish
quotations from Taoist and Buddhist literature do not alter the fact
that systems theory is as mechanistic as the Newtonian image of the
world as a clock. Feedback loopsâwhether negative or (in the case of
Manfred Eigen and Ilya Prigogine) positiveâare ultimately rooted in the
mass-energy casualties and mathematical formulations that nourished
Cartesian-Newtonian mechanisms. We should not permit our newly acquired
aversion to a means-end (or âlinearâ) rationalism to cloak the fact that
the âcircularâ rationalism of the California Mystics has simply replaced
the clock with the radar set and the library with magnetic tapes.
âSpaceship Earthâ is still a spaceship, not a fecund, living planet that
nourishes life.
Ultimately, it is not in oscillatory movements of feedback loops or an
ill digested notion of form, âmentation,â and âonenessâ that a new
ecological monism will be formulated. The recovery of the notion of
âdirectiveness,â which systems theory has brought to the foreground of
natural and social evolution, is an advance of considerable importance.
The natural world, in this light, can no longer be seen as âmute,â not
can life and mind be viewed as the accidental epiphenomena of âblindâ
cosmic forces. âNature,â to use a highly abstract term, is fecund, not
passive, and it consists of more than energy and mass (the traditional
âmatterâ and âmotionâ mystique that orchestrated the crude materialism
of the last century). By the same token, Teilhard de Chardinâs
ânoosphereâ is modern Neoplatonism writ large, and Taoist âOnenessâ that
renders âGodâ as the âmind of the universeâ (Jantsch) regresses to a
religious archaismâand dualismâthat classical Hellenic philosophy called
logos.
Ludwig von Bertalanffy, who may well enjoy the distinction of being the
most educated of the systems theorists, prudently distinguishes the most
significant forms of directiveness or âdynamic teleology.â There may be
the simple direction of events to their final state or a purposive
directiveness which Bertalanffy associates with Aristotleâs notion of
âfinal causeâ or âequifinality,â by which he means a given final state
that can be reached in many different ways. Finally, Bertalanffy cites a
directiveness âbased on structureâ which, carried beyond his own limited
examples drawn from feedback mechanisms, suggests a concern with the
nature of the nature of things. More than two millennia ago, Pythagoras
emphasized more pointedly than his formalists (as distinguished from
analytic) heirsâI refer here to systems theorists who have no
substantial knowledge of the classical traditionâthat it is as much in
the nature of substance to direct itself toward form and complexity, to
develop and growâand with growth to achieve increasing subjectivityâas
it is for matter to move. Neither oscillation alone nor accident,
neither mass alone nor motion, but rather development and the
self-organization of substance (all theological qualifications aside)
constitute the innermost properties of being that render a natural
history, and evolution of reality, possible. Hence a cosmic drama, it
could be argued, does exist that is âdirectedâ not be a deity exogenous
to it or by a divine âarchitectâ who fashions it; rather, it would be a
self-directed and self-unfolding drama whose âfinalityâ is as much an
inherent property of substance as is motion. It is not simply by virtue
of feedback loops and homeostatic mechanisms (the last is a well-chosen
word) that substance would unfold self-directively, but rather by virtue
of that delicious Aristotelian-Hegelian word âpotentiality,â the
entelechia of phenomena, that would yield to the world particulars in
their wholeness and fullness as a rich unity of diversity. Hence,
âintegrationâ and âonenessâ would be reworked to convey the notion of a
fecund pattern of interdependent phenomena, an ecosystem whose
development comes from its uniqueness, not its homeostatic oscillations
alone.
We would thus live in a world that is not lacking in meaning. Perhaps
more significantly, such meaning as it had would be liberating in the
sense that it would impart to human goals a purposiveness that brings a
highly self-reflective nature â mentality itself â into the cosmos,
freed from the confines of a purely privatistic and epistemological
approach to ethics. We might say with Hans Jonas that this âOntology as
the ground of ethics was the original tenant of philosophy. Their
divorce, which is the divorce of the âobjectiveâ and âsubjectiveâ
realms, is the modern destiny. Their reunion can be effected, if at all,
only from the âobjectiveâ end, that is to say, through a revision of the
idea of nature. And it is âbecomingâ rather than âabidingâ nature that
would hold out any such promise. From the immanent direction of its
total evolution there could be elicited a destination of man by whose
terms the person, in the act of fulfilling himself, would at the same
time realize a concern of universal substance. Hence would result a
principle of ethics which is ultimately grounded neither in the autonomy
of the self nor in the needs of the community, but in an objective
assignment by the nature of things.â
What is most fascinating, however, is that âNatureâ (metaphorically
speaking) is writing its own nature philosophy and ethics â not the
logicians, positivists, sociobiologists, mystics, and heirs of Galilean
scientism. It is becoming increasingly evident that we are not âaloneâ
in the universe, not even in the emptiness of space, as Bertrand Russell
would have us believe. Owing to what is a fairly recent revolution in
astrophysics (possibly comparable only to the achievements of Copernicus
and Kepler), the cosmos is opening itself up to us in new ways that call
for an exhilarating and speculative turn of mind and a more qualitative
approach to natural phenomena. It is becoming increasingly tenable to
suggest that the entire universe may be the cradle of lifeânot merely
our own planet or planets like it. The âBig Bang,â whose faint echoes
from more than fifteen billion years ago can now be detected by the
astrophysicistâs instruments, may be evidence less of a single
accidental event than of a form of cosmic âbreathingâ whose gradual
expansions and contradictions extend over an infinity of time. If this
is soâand we are admittedly on highly speculative groupsâwe may be
dealing with cosmic processes rather than a single episode in the
formation of the universe. Obviously, if these processes express an
unending form of universal âhistory,â as it were, we, who are
irrevocably locked into our own cosmic era, may never be able to fathom
their reality or meaning. But it is not completely unreasonable to
wonder if we are dealing here with a vast, continuing development of the
universe, not simply with a recurring type of cosmic ârespiration.â
Highly conjectural as these notions may be, the formation of all the
elements from hydrogen and helium, their combination into small
molecules and later into self-forming macromolecules, and finally the
organization of these macromolecules into the constituents of life and
possibly of mind follow a sequence that challenges Russellâs image of
humanity as an accidental spark in an empty, meaningless void. Certain
phases of this sequence constitute a strong challenge to a view in which
the word âaccidentâ becomes a prudent substitute for virtual
inevitabilities. A cosmos interspersed with dust composed of hydrogen,
carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen molecules. Radio astronomers have detected
cyanogen, carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, formaldehyde, formic acid,
methanol, acetaldehyde, and methyl formate in interstellar space. In
short, the classical image of space as a void is giving way to the image
of space as a restlessly active chemogenetic ground for an astonishing
sequence of increasingly complex organic compounds.
From there, it is only a short leap to the self-organization of
rudimentary life-forming molecules. Analysis of carbonaceous chondrites
(a group of stony meteorites with small glassy inclusions) yields
longchain aromatic hydrocarbons such as fatty acids, amino acids, and
porphyrins â the compounds from which chlorophyll is built. In a series
of laboratory studies beginning with the famous Miller-Urey âspark-gapâ
experiment, simple amino acids were formed by passing electrical
discharges through a flask containing gases that presumably composed the
earthâs early atmosphere. By changing the gases in accordance with later
theories of the primal atmosphere, other researchers have been able to
produce long-chain amino acids, ribose and glucose sugars, and
nucleoside phosphates â the precursors of DNA.
Hypothetically (albeit with an impressive degree of supporting
evidence), it is now possible to trace how anaerobic microorganisms
might have developed simple membranes and how, with increasing
complexity, they have emerged as distinct life forms capable of highly
developed metabolic processes. Few working hypotheses more strikingly
reveal the highly graded interface between the inorganic and the organic
than speculations on the formation of genetic structures. Such
speculations bring us conceptually to the most central feature of life
itself: the ability of a complex mosaic of organic macromolecules to
reproduce itself and yet to do so with changes significant enough to
render evolution possible. As early as 1944, Erwin Schrodiner may have
provided a clue to organic reproduction and evolution. In What is Life?
this eminent physicist observed that âthe most essential part of a
living cellâthe chromosome fibreâmay suitably be called an âaperiodic
crystal.ââ The âchromosome fibreâ does not merely repeat itself and grow
additively, like a âperiodicâ crystal; instead, it changes significantly
to yield new formsâmutationsâthat initiate and carry on inherited,
evolutionary developments.
Graham Cairns-Smith has advanced another hypothesis (one among the many
now being proposed and soon forthcoming) that may help clarify the
nature of early reproductive processes. DNA is much too unstable
chemically, Cairns-Smith emphasizes, to have survived the radiation and
heat to which the early earthâs surface was exposed. In an analogy that
could bear improvement, Cairns-Smith compares DNA with a âmagnetic tape:
it is very efficient if provided with a suitably protective environment,
suitably machined raw materials and suitably complex recording
equipment.â This machining equipment, he contends, can be found in the
organic world itself:
With a number of other considerations, this leads [Cairns-Smith] to the
idea of a form of crystallization process as the printing machine, with
some kind of crystal defects as the pattern-forming elements. Bring as
specific as possible, a mica-type clay seemed the most promising
possibility.
Minimally, Cairns-Smithâs hypothesis suggests that life, in its own ways
and following its own genetic evolution, is not miraculously separated
from phenomena existing in the inorganic world. I do not mean to imply
that biology can be reduced to physics any more than society can be
reduced to biology. Insofar as Cairns-Smith suggests that certain clay
crystals could possibly be templates of organic reproductive material
and thereby launch the evolution of secondary and still more advanced
forms of organic hereditary materials, he is also suggesting that nature
may be unified by certain common tendencies. Such tendencies would share
a like origin in the reality of the cosmos, however differently they
function at different levels of self-organization.
My point here is that substance and its properties are not separable
from life. Henri Bergsonâs conception of the biosphere as an
âentropy-reductionâ factor, in a cosmos that is supposedly moving toward
greater entropy or disorder, would seem to provide life with a cosmic
rationale for existence. That life forms may have this function need not
suggest that the universe has been exogenously âdesignedâ by a
supernatural demiurge. But it does suggest that âmatterâ or substance
has inherent self-organizing properties, no less valid than the mass and
motion attributed to it by Newtonian physics.
Nor is there so great a lack of data, by comparison with the
conventional attributes of âmatter,â as to render the new properties
implausible. At the very least, science must be what nature really is;
and in nature, life is (to use Bergsonian terminology) a counteracting
force to the second law of thermodynamicsâor an âentropy-reductionâ
factor. The self-organization of substance into ever more complex forms
â indeed, the importance of form itself as a correlate of function and
of function as a correlate of self-organization â implies the unceasing
activity to achieve stability. That stability as well as complexity is a
âgoalâ or substance; that complexity, not only inertness, makes for
stability; and finally, that complexity is a paramount feature of
organic evolution and of an ecological interpretation of biotic
interrelationshipsâall these concepts taken together are ways of
understanding the natural world as such, not mere mystical vagaries.
They are supported more by evidence than are the theoretical prejudices
that still exist today against a universe charged with meaning.
This much is clear: we can no longer be satisfied with a passive âdeadâ
matter that fortuitously collects into living substance. The universe
bears witness to an ever-striving, developing â not merely a âmovingâ â
substance, whose most dynamic and creative attribute is its ceaseless
capacity for self-organization into increasingly complex forms. Natural
fecundity originates primarily from growth, not from spatial âchangesâ
of location. Nor can we remove form from its central place in this
developmental and growth process, or function as an indispensable
correlate of form. The orderly universe that makes science a possible
project and its use of a highly concise logic â mathematics â meaningful
presupposes the correlation of form with function. From this
perspective, mathematics serves not merely as the âlanguageâ of science
but also as the logos of science. This scientific logos is above all a
workable project because it grasps a logos that inheres in nature â the
âobjectâ of scientific investigation.
Once we step beyond the threshold of a purely instrumental attitude
toward the âlanguageâ of the sciences, we can admit even more attributes
into our account of the organic substance we call life. Conceived as
substance that is perpetually self-maintaining or metabolic as well as
developmental, life more clearly establishes the existence of another
attribute: symbiosis. Recent data supports the view that Peter
Kropotkinâs mutualistic naturalism not only applies to relationships
within and among species, but also applies morphologically â within and
among complex cellular forms. As William Trager observed more than a
decade ago:
The conflict in nature between different kinds of organism has been
popularly expressed in phrases like âstruggle for existenceâ and
âsurvival of the fittest.â Yet few people realize that mutual
cooperation between different kinds of organismsâsymbiosisâis just as
important, and that the âfittestâ may be the one that most helps another
to survive.
Whether intentional or not, Tragerâs description of the âfittestâ is not
merely a scientific judgment made by an eminent biologist; it is also an
ethical judgment similar to the one Kropotkin derived from his own work
as a naturalist and his ideals as an anarchist. Trager emphasized that
the ânearly perfectâ integration of âsymbiotic microorganisms into the
economy of the host ⌠has lead to the hypothesis that certain
intracellular organelles might have been originally independent
microorganisms.â Accordingly, the chloroplasts that are responsible for
photosynthetic activity in plants with eukaryotic, or nucleated, cells
are discrete structures that replicate by division, have their own
distinctive DNA very similar to that of circular bacteria, synthesize
their own proteins, and are bounded by two-unit membranes.
Much the same is true of the eukaryotic cellâs âpowerhouse,â its
mitochondria. The eukaryotic cells are the morphological units of all
complex forms of animal and plant life. The Protista and fungi also
share these well-nucleated cell structures. Eucaryotes are aerobic and
include clearly formed subunits, or organelles. By contrast, the
prokaryotes lack nuclei; they are anaerobic, less specialized than the
eucaryotics, and they constitute the evolutionary predecessors of the
eucaryotics. In fact, they are the only life forms that could have
survived and flourished in the early earthâs atmosphere, with its mere
traces of free oxygen.
It is now widely accepted that the eukaryotic cells consist of highly
functional symbiotic arrangements of procaryotes that have become
totally interdependent with other constituents. Eucaryotic flagella
derive from anaerobic spirochetes; mitochondria, from prokaryotic
bacteria that were capable of respiration as well as fermentation; and
plant chloroplasts from âblue-green algae,â which have recently been
reclassified as cyanobacteria. The theory, now almost a biological
convention, holds that phagocytic ancestors of what were to become
eucaryotes absorbed (without digesting) certain spirochetes,
protomitochondria, and, in the case of photosynthetic cells, coccoid
cyanobacteria and chloroxybacteria. Existing phyla of multicellular
aerobic life forms thus had their origins in a symbiotic process that
integrated a variety of microorganisms into what we can reasonably be
called a colonial organism, the eukaryotic cell. Mutualism, not
predation, seems to have been the guiding principle for the evolution of
the highly complex aerobic life forms that are common today.
The prospect that life and all its attributes are latent in substance as
such, that biological evolution is rooted deeply in symbiosis or
mutualism, indicates how important it is to reconceptualize our notion
of âmatterâ as active substance. As Manfred Eigen has put it, molecular
self-organization suggests that evolution âappears to be an inevitable
event, given the presence of certain matter with specified autocatalytic
properties and under the maintenance of the finite (free) energy flow
[that is, solar energy] necessary to compensate for the steady
production of entropy.â Indeed, this self-organizing activity extends
beyond the emergence and evolution of life to the seemingly inorganic
factors that produced and maintain a biotically favorable âenvironmentâ
for the development of increasingly complex life forms. The traditional
assumption that life has been forced merely to adapt to an independent,
geologically and meteorologically determined âenvironmentâ is no longer
tenable. This dualism between the living and the nonliving world (which
is based on accidental point mutuations in life-forms that determine
what species will evolve or perish) is being replaced by the more
challenging notion that life creates to a great degree its own
environment on a worldwide scale.
Finally, the Modern Synthesis, to use Julian Huxleyâs term for the
neo-Darwinian model of organic evolution in force since the early 1940s,
has also been challenged as too narrow and perhaps mechanistic in its
outlook. The image of a slow pace of evolutionary change emerging from
the interplay of small variations, which are selected for their
adaptability to the environment, is no longer as supportable as it seems
by the actual facts of the fossil record. Evolution seems to be more
sporadic, marked by occasional rapid changes, often delayed by long
periods of stasis. Highly specialized genera tend to speciate and become
extinct because of the very narrow, restricted niches they occupy
ecologically, while fairly generalized genera change more slowly and
become extinct less frequently because of the more diversified
environments in which they can exist. This âEffect Hypothesis,â advanced
by Elizabeth Vrba, suggests that evolution tends to be an immanent
striving rather than the product of external selective forces. Mutations
appear more like intentional mosaics than small, scratch-like changes in
the structure and function of life forms. As one observer notes,
âwhereas species selection puts the forces of change on environmental
conditions, the Effect Hypothesis looks to internal parameters that
affect the rates of speciation and extinction.â
The notion of small, gradual point mutations (a theory that accord with
the Victorian mentality of strictly fortuitous evolutionary changes) can
be challenged on genetic grounds alone. Not only a gene but a
chromosome, both in varying combinations, may be altered chemically and
mechanically. Genetic changes may range from âsimpleâ point mutations,
through jumping genes and transposable elements, to major chromosomal
rearrangements. It is also clear, mainly from experimental work, that
permutations of genetically determined morphological shifts are
possible. Small genetic changes can give rise to either minor or major
morphological modifications; the same holds true for large genetic
changes.
Tragerâs observation that the âfittestâ species may well be âthe one
that most helps another to surviveâ is an excellent formula for
recasting the traditional picture of natural evolution as a meaningless
competitive tableau bloodied by the struggle to survive. There is a rich
literature, dating back to the late nineteenth century, that emphasizes
the role played by intraspecific and interspecific symbiosis in
fostering the survival of life forms on the planet. Kropotkinâs famous
Mutual Aid summarized the data at the turn of the century, and may have
added the word âmutualismâ to the biological vocabulary on symbiosis.
Buchner has written a huge volume (1953) on the endosymbiosis of animals
with plant microorganisms alone. Henry has compiled a two-volume work,
Symbiosis, that brings the study of this subject up to the mid-1960s.
The evidence for interspecific symbiosis, particularly mutualism, is
nothing less than massive. Even more than Kropotkinâs Mutual Aid,
Henryâs work traces the evidence of mutualistic relationships from the
interspecific support relationships of rhizobia and legumes, through
plant associations, behavioral symbiosis in animals, and the great
regulatory mechanisms that account for homeostasis in planet-wide
biogeochemical relationships.
âFitnessâ is rarely biologically meaningful as mere species survival and
adaptation. Left on this superficial level, it becomes an almost
personal adaptive enterprise that fails to account for the need of all
species for life support systems, be they autotrophic or heterotrophic.
Traditional evolutionary theory tends to abstract a species from its
ecosystem, to isolate it, and to deal with its survival in a remarkably
abstract fashion. For example, the mutually supportive interplay between
photosynthetic life forms and herbivores, far from providing evidence of
the simplest form of âpredation,â or heterotrophy, is in fact
indispensable to soil fertility from animal wastes, seed distribution,
and the return (via death) of bulky organisms to an ever-enriched
ecosystem. Even large carnivores that prey upon large herbivores have a
vital function in selectively controlling large population swings by
removing weakened or old animals for whom life would in fact become a
form of âsuffering.â
Ironically, it cheapens the meaning of the real suffering and cruelty
inflicted by society, reducing them to pain and predation, just as it
cheapens the meaning of hierarchy and domination, to deinstitutionalize
these socially charged terms and dissolve them into the individual
transitory links between more or less aggressive individuals within a
specific animal aggregation. The fear, pain, and commonly rapid death
that a wolfpack brings to a sick or old caribou are evidence not of
suffering or cruelty in nature but of a mode of dying that is integrally
wedded to organic renewal and ecological stability. Suffering and
cruelty properly belong to the realm of personal anguish, needless
affliction, and the moral degradation of those who torment the victim.
These notions cannot be applied to the removal of an organism that can
no longer function on a level that renders its life tolerable. It is
sheer distortion to associate all pain with suffering, all predation
with cruelty. To suffer the anguish of hunger, psychic injury,
insecurity, neglect, loneliness, and death in warfare, as well as of
prolonged trauma and terminal illness, cannot be equated with the pain
associated with predation and the unknowing fact of death. The spasms of
the natural world are rarely as cruel as the highly organised and
systematic afflictions that human society visits upon healthy, vital
beingsâanimal as well as humanâafflictions that only the cunning of the
hominid mind can contrive.
Neither cruelty, aggression, nor competition â all anthropomorphic terms
â satisfactorily explains the emergence and evolution of life. For a
better explanation we should also turn to mutualism and a concept of
âfitnessâ that reinforces the support systems for the seemingly
âfittest.â If we are prepared to recognize the self-organizing nature of
life, the decisive role of mutualism as its evolutionary impetus obliges
us to redefine âfitnessâ in terms of an ecosystemâs supportive
apparatus. And if we are prepared to view life as a phenomenon that can
shape and maintain the very âenvironmentâ that is regarded as the
âselectiveâ source of evolution, a crucial question arises: Is it
meaningful any longer to speak of ânatural selectionâ as the motive
force of biological evolution? Or must we now speak of ânatural
interactionâ to take full account of lifeâs own role in creating and
guiding the âforcesâ that explain its evolution? Contemporary biology
leaves us with a picture of organic interdependencies that far and away
prove to be more important in shaping life forms that a Darwin, a
Huxley, or the formulators of the Modern Synthesis could ever have
anticipated. Life is necessary not only for its own self-maintenance but
also for its own self-formation. Complexity and subjectivity are more
than the effects of life; they are its integral attributes.
The grandeur of an authentic ecological sensibility, in contrast to the
superficial environmentalism so prevalent today, is that it provides us
with the ability to generalize in the most radical way these fecund,
supportive, interrelationships and their reliance on variety as the
foundation of stability. An ecological sensibility gives us a coherent
outlook that is explanatory in the most meaningful sense of the term,
and almost overtly ethical.
From the distant Hellenic era to the early Renaissance, nature was seen
primarily as a source of ethical orientation, a means by which human
thought found its normative bearings and coherence. Nonhuman nature was
not external to human nature and society. To the contrary, the mind was
uniquely part of a cosmic logos that provided objective criteria for
social and personal concepts of good and evil, justice and injustice,
beauty and ugliness, love and hatred â indeed, for an interminable
number of values by which to guide oneself toward the achievement of
virtue and the good life. The words dike and andikeâjustice and
injusticeâpermeated the cosmologies of the Greek nature philosophers.
They linger on in many terminological variations as part of the jargon
of modern natural scienceânotably as âattractionâ and ârepulsion.â
The principal fallacies of archaic cosmology generally lie not in its
ethical orientation but in its dualistic approach to nature. For all its
emphasis on speculation at the expense of experimentation, ancient
cosmology erred most when it tried to co-join a self-organizing, fecund
nature with a vitalizing force alien to the natural world itself.
Parmenideâs Dike, like Henri Bergsonâs elan vital, are substitutes for
the self-organizing properties of nature, not motivating forces within
nature that account for an ordered world. A latent dualism exists in
monistic cosmologies that try to bring humanity and nature into ethical
commonality â a deus ex machine that corrects imbalances either in a
disequilibriated cosmos or in an irrational society. Truth wears an
unseen crown in the form of God or Spirit, for nature can never be
trusted to develop on its own spontaneous grounds, any more than the
body politic bequeathed to us by âcivilizationâ can be trusted to manage
its own affairs.
These archaisms, with their theological nuances and their tightly
formulated teleologies, have been justly viewed as socially reactionary
traps. In fact, they tainted the works of Aristotle and Hegel as surely
as they mesmerized the minds of the medieval Schoolmen. But the errors
of classical nature philosophy lie not in its project of eliciting an
ethics from the natural world, but in the spirit of domination that
poisoned it from the start with a presiding, often authoritarian,
Supernatural âarbiterâ who weighed out and corrected the imbalances or
âinjusticesâ that erupted in nature. Hence the dark ancient gods were
there all the time, however rationalistic these early cosmologies may
seem; they had to be exorcised in order to render an ethical continuum
between the natural world and humanity more meaningful. Tragically, late
Renaissance thought was hardly more evolutionary than its antecedents,
and neither Galileo in science nor Descartes in philosophy performed
this much-needed act of surgery satisfactorily. They and their more
recent heirs separated the domains of nature and mind, recreating
deities of their own in the form of scientistic and epistemological
biases that are no less tainted by domination than the classical
tradition they demolished.
Today, we are faced with the possibility of permitting natural
evolutionânot Dike, Justitia, God, Spirit, or an elan vitalâto open
itself to us for ethical purposes on its own terms. Mutualism is a good
by virtue of its function in fostering the evolution of natural variety.
We require no Dike on the one hand or canons of âscientific objectivityâ
on the other to affirm the role of community as a desideratum in nature
and society. Similarly, freedom is a good; its claims are validated by
what Hands Jonas so perceptively called the âinwardnessâ of life forms,
their âorganic identityâ and âadventure of form.â The clearly visible
effort, venture, indeed self-recognition, which every living being
exercises in the course of âits precarious metabolic continuityâ to
preserve itself revealâeven in the most rudimentary of organismsâa sense
of identity and selective activity which Jonas has very appropriately
called evidence of a âgerminal freedom.â
Finally, from the ever-greater complexity and variety that raises
subatomic particles through the course of evolution to those conscious,
self-reflexive life forms we call human beings, we cannot help but
speculate about the existence of a broadly and latent subjectivity in
substance itself that eventually yields mind and intellectuality. In the
reactivity of substance, in the sensibility of the least-developed
microorganisms, in the elaboration of nerves, ganglia, the spinal cord,
and the layered development of the brain, one senses an evolution of
mind so coherent and compelling that there is a strong temptation to
describe it with Manfred Eigenâs term, âinevitable.â It is hard to
believe that mere fortuity accounts for the capacity of life forms to
respond neurologically to stimuli; to develop highly organized nervous
systems; to be able to foresee however dimly, the results of their
behavior and later conceptualize this foresight clearly and
symbolically. A true history of mind may have to begin with the
attributes of substance itself; perhaps in the hidden or covert efforts
of the simplest crystals to perpetuate themselves, in the evolution of
DNA from unknown chemical sources to a point where it shares a principle
of replication already present in the inorganic world, and in the
speciation of nonliving as well as living molecules as a result of those
intrinsic self-organizing features of reality we call their
âproperties.â
Hence our study of natureâall archaic philosophies and epistemological
biases asideâexhibits a self-evolving patterning, a âgrain,â so to
speak, that is implicitly ethical. Mutualism, freedom, and subjectivity
are not strictly human values or concerns. They appear, however
germinally, in larger cosmic and organic processes that require no
Aristotelian God to motivate them, no Hegelian Spirit to vitalize them.
If social ecology provides little more than a coherent focus to the
unity of mutualism, freedom, and subjectivity as aspects of a
cooperative society that is free of domination and guided by reflection
and reason, it will remove the taints that blemished a naturalistic
ethics from its inception; it will provide both humanity and a natural
world with a common ethical voice. No longer would we have need of a
Cartesianâand more recently, a neo-Kantianâdualism that leaves the
natural world mute and mind isolated from the larger world of phenomena
around it. To vitiate community, to arrest the spontaneity that lies at
the core of a self-organizing reality toward ever greater complexity and
rationality, to abridge freedom â these actions would cut across the
grain of natural evolution, deny our heritage in its evolutionary
processes, and dissolve our legitimacy and function in the world of
life. No less than this ethically rooted legitimation is at state â all
its grim ecological consequences asideâin achieving an ecological
society and articulating an ecological ethics.
Mutualism, self-organization, freedom, and subjectivity, together with
social ecologyâs principles of unity in diversity, informed spontaneity,
and non-hierarchical relationships, coheers into an ethics of
complementarity that sees human beings in a rational, ecological society
as playing the creative role of ânatureâ rendered self-conscious. Aside
from the ecological responsibilities this ethics confers on our species
as the self-reflexive voice of nature, it literally defines us.
âNature,â conceived as natural evolution, does not âexistâ for us to
use; it legitimates us and our uniqueness ecologically. Like the concept
of âbeing,â these principles of social ecology require no explanation,
merely verification. They are elements of an ethical ontology, not
ârules of a gameâ that can be changed to suit oneâs personal needs.
A society that cuts across the grain of this ethical ontology raises the
entire question of its very reality as a meaningful and rational entity.
âCivilizationâ has bequeathed us a vision of otherness as âpolarizationâ
and âdefiance,â and of organic âinwardnessâ as a perpetual âwarâ for
self-identity. Whatever its validity in the past, this vision now
threatens to utterly subvert the ecological legitimation of humanity and
the reality of society as a potentially rational dimension of the world
around us. Trapped by the perception of a ânatureâ that stands in
perpetual opposition to our humanity, we have redefined humanity itself
to mean strife as a condition for harmony, control as a condition for
consciousness, domination as a condition for freedom, and opposition as
a condition for reconciliation.
Yet an entirely different ethical, philosophical, and social
dispensation can be read from the concept of otherness and the
inwardness of life. Given a world that life itself made conducive to
evolution â indeed, benign, in view of a larger ecological vision of
âNatureâ â we can formulate an ethics of complementarity that is
nourished by variety and creative participation in the natural world
guided by reason and empathy, rather than one that guards individual
inwardness from a threatening, hostile, invasive otherness. Indeed, the
inwardness of life can be seen as an expression of mutualism, not as
mere resistance to entropy and the terminus of all activity. Entropy
itself can be seen as one feature in a larger cosmic metabolism, with
life as its anabolic dimension. Finally, self hood can be viewed as the
result of integration, community, support, and sharing without any loss
of individual identity and personal spontaneity.
Civilization as we know it today is more mute that the nature for which
it professes to speak and more blind that the elemental forces it
professes to control. Indeed, civilization today lives in hatred of the
world around it and in grim hatred of itself. Its gutted cities, wasted
lands, poisoned air and water, and mean-spirited greed constitute a
daily indictment of its odious immortality. A world so demeaned may well
be beyond redemption, at least within the terms of its own institutional
framework. The thermonuclear fires and the ecological disasters that may
engulf our planet will render it irretrievably inhospitable to lifeâa
dead witness to cosmic failure. If only because this planetâs history,
including itself human history, has been so full of promise, hope,
creativity, it deserves a better fate than what seems to confront it in
the years ahead.