A lot of smart people I know like to talk about evolution and to use evolutionary biology as a way to explain human behavior as if it were the only the legitimate authority in such questions. Sure, evolution as a theory is fantastic and well-reasoned. But culture, which we don’t understand as well, plays a far more prominent role in modern life and affects us, as humans living in 2010, far more than evolutionary pressure does. It’s easy to see why these people would prefer evolutionary biology as the framework for answering everyday questions, because it is more concrete, more scientific than our present understanding of the role of culture. But that doesn’t mean anything. We know that we are not simply sex-driven, baby-producing, sperm-spraying machines. We are humans. Richard Dawkins, himself an evolutionary biologist, puts it well.
“The joy of being a conscious human being is that we can rise above our origins. We don’t have to ape the nastiness of nature—we can extract ourselves from it and live by our values.”
April 21st, 2010
by Blair McBride
You should look into taking an Anthropology paper sometime, for this type of stuff. I really enjoyed it when I did. Quite a different side to psychology/sociology.
May 3rd, 2010
by Don’t worry: being human is designed to be a work in progress | drm
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