Darwin Comes of Age
To understand Robert Wright, it is first necessary to define evolutionary psychology, which is the foundation of Wright's theory. Evolutionary psychology contends that most, if not all, of human behavior can be understood by the interests of internal psychological mechanisms. These internal mechanisms are adaptations, or products of natural selection that helped human ancestors survive and reproduce. Evolutionary psychology looks at the challenges early humans faced in their hunter-gatherer environments and the problem-solving they went through to meet those challenges. Based on these problem-solving adaptations, it then establishes the common roots of ancestral behavior and, especially related to Wright's book, how these common behavioral roots are observed and acted upon today. Human behavior, just like physical traits, has passed on from generation to the next. In their brains humans have specific knowledge that helps them adapt to the environment. The brain is subject to natural selection just like any other organ.
As Wright explains in the introduction (9), evolutionary psychologists discern the second level of human nature: Anthropologists find recurring themes in cultures, such as a need for social approval and capacity for guilt. Psychologists explain that these themes alter from person to person, where one person's desire for social approval is low and another person's high. Genetic differences play a role, but more so, genetic commonalities play a bigger role. There is a species-wide developmental program that absorbs information from the social environment, and the brain adjusts correctly to it.
Wright thus explains that humans are genetically created by evolution to replicate their genes. There is a biologically-based human nature where all organs in the body are "adaptations" or "fine products of inadvertent design" (26), which exist today because in the past they contributed to an ancestor's fitness. All these organs, as noted above, are species typical. There may be differences, but on the whole, most of the genes from one organ, such as the lung, are the same as another person's.
Darwin summed up natural selection as "Multiply, vary, let the strongest live and the weakest die" (24). Here, according to Wright, "strongest" does not only refer to the brawniest, but also to other ways of adapting the environment, such as camouflage, and, in the case of this book, cleverness and other mental adaptations. The word "fitness" is the task of transmitting genes from generation to generation within a specific environment. Fitness is the factor that natural selection continually "seeks" to maximize and improve, as it continuously redesigns the species. Fitness is what made humans act as they do today. The human body was made by hundreds of thousands of incremental advances, with each increment being the result of an accident that helped one ancestor to get its genes into the next generation.
Wright then extends this concept to the brain and today's modern mind. Why, he asks, should the organ of the brain be any different from these other organs? Mental organs, which make up the mind, are species typical as well. The hundreds of thousands genes that affect human behavior -- genes that created the brain and control neurotransmitters and other hormones -- have continued to exist from the early ancestors to present time for a reason. That reason is that they goad humans to extend their genes from one generation to the next. Assuming the theory of natural selection is correct, then everything about the human mind should be understood in these terms. The fundamental way that people feel about each other, the basic things individuals think about each other and express to one another, are all part of the makeup of the mind because they were able to pass on genetic fitness.
Male and Female.
Wright explains that differences exist between males and females and their ultimate goals to achieve this state of fitness. To determine what females are inclined to seek in males and males in females, it is necessary to refer back to the ancestral environment. It is important to remember that the behavior observed today is not based on the present environment, but the one that existed thousands of years ago to which early humans adapted. This ancestral environment provides an understanding why females are less sexually reserved than females in any other species and why the reserve for females in the human species is higher than the level for males, regardless of the environment. This is based on the premise that over her lifetime, an individual female is able to have many fewer offspring than an...
Moral Questions and Moral Theory: Organ Donation The issue of organ donation seems as though it would be simple. When a person dies, he or she no longer needs organs and those organs could be used to save the life of someone else (Appel, 2005). However, the issue is not as black and white as that for many people. Some are very against organ donation because they do not believe in
Animal Testing Negatives of Animal Testing Outweigh Its Positives and Therefore Should Not be Allowed Many cures and treatments have been developed in the last three hundred years due to advances in medical technology. These developments are sometimes attributed partly to the fact that scientists and researchers have been able to use animals as "guinea pigs" for testing new medications or treatment methods before passing them to human volunteers. There is strong
Animal Rights and Ethics Ingram (2001) in an article hosted by Stop Animal Exploitation NOW! (SAEN) organization reports accusations of animal rights abuses by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). There are three levels of animal use in research: experiments with minimal distress, experiments with the potential for distress but using pain relievers and experiments with the potential for distress without medication. Detailed regulations in the Animal Welfare Act state that
Animal rights activist and Professor Tom Regan holds the position that it is justifiable to completely abolish the use of animals in science, agriculture, hunting and so on. He justifies this position on the theory of inherent value which he defines as the state in which every being is more than a mere receptable, and he concludes that all who have inherent value are to have it equally. Therefore, if
Animal Research Milgram and the Ethics of Psychological Experimentation Milgram's experiment, while it may be viewed as controversial in a modern context, was ultimately ethical. This is because the American Psychological Association (or "APA") provides five general principles in its ethical code of conduct, the document scientists are meant to use to govern ethical decision-making in experiment design and implementation. Milgram's work does not defy any of these principles, which are given
Intellectually my mind was saying: how could this happen in an open and public place with dozens of people walking in the area? There was also a sense of moral anger at the way that social rules and norms were being so openly being flouted. This feeling was strong and related to the physical sense of disgust and distress that I felt at the situation. Reciprocity The above aspects, the physical,
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now