The
nature of human nature
The
cultural
anthropologist Ashley Montagu once said that what cultural
anthropologists were really interested in was “the nature of human
nature”. So what do they think it is?
Today, all humans are members of the same species, homo sapiens. We
know what our main features are: upright position freeing our hands,
stereoscopic vision allowing us to see things in three dimensions, a
long period of growing up, the anatomical ability to utter a wide range
of sounds, and, last but not least, a powerful brain as the centre of
our nervous system. These are all genetic features, inherited via our
genes, and are what distinguishes us, genetically, from other animals
and living things.
Before us there were other species of homo (Man) but which are now
extinct. The most well-known of these was Neanderthal Man which only
became extinct about 30,000 or so years ago. Then there were the likely
direct ancestors of our species: homo habilis (which Richard Dawkins
translates as “handy Man”) and homo erectus or upright Man. The
currently available evidence suggested that the first Man, as distinct
from the last Ape-Man, emerged about two million years ago.
But this is partly a question of definition since biologists
distinguish the first Man from the last Ape-Man by brain size – an
inevitably arbitrary, genetic distinction. Anthropologists have
introduced another but non-biological distinction: the generalised
making and use of tools. While the ability to make tools depends on
biology (free hands, good eyesight, more powerful brain) the
actual making of the tools - and what they were and how they were used
- does not; it is learned not inherited and, as such, part of what
anthropologists call “culture”.
It is now generally accepted that the evolution of homo habilis
(toolmaking Man, if you don’t like Dawkins’s translation) into modern
humans was not just a question of biology but also of culture; that it
was a biological-cultural co-evolution. That, as Man made and used
tools, natural selection favoured those with a more powerful brain and
so a greater ability to learn and, crucially, to think abstractly (i.e.
of something not present to the senses). Since abstract thinking and
language are probably indissolubly linked, this depended on the
development of the vocal cords and other parts of our speech organs.
The end-result was us, some 150,000 years ago, on the savannah, or open
grasslands, of East Africa.
Since then the most noticeable biological change was the development of
the different varieties of our species – sometimes mis-called “races” –
as isolated groups of homo sapiens adapted biologically through natural
selection, over many thousands of years, to the different physical
environments in which they lived.
Otherwise human adaptation has been cultural rather than biological:
humans making use of their biological capacities, to build-up a social
tradition so as to better adapt to their environment, which is then
passed on to a new generation through teaching and learning rather than
through genes.
“Cultural anthropology is concerned with the study of man’s cultures.
By ‘culture’ the anthropologist understands what may be called the
man-made part of the environment; the pots and pans, the laws and
institutions, the art, religion, philosophy. Whatever a particular
group of people living together as a functioning population have
learned to do as human beings, their way of life, in short, is to be
regarded as culture” (Ashley Montagu, Man: His First Million Years,
1957).
Culture allows humans to adapt to a new or changing environment much,
much more rapidly than biological adaptation through natural selection
ever could. Cultural adaptation is measured in decades while biological
adaptation is measured in tens of thousands of years. Other animals do
have a culture in the sense of a tradition of behaviour that is passed
on through learning, but none can vary and develop it as humans can.
So, the capacity for adaptation through cultural change can be said to
be a distinguishing feature of our species. It is of course a
biologically-determined capacity, dependent upon in particular a
powerful brain and the capacity to speak and on the extended period of
childhood during which culture can be learned.
This is “human nature”: the set of biological capacities enabling
humans to learn, teach and develop culture, which is a non-biological
means of adapting to the environment in which they find themselves.
Faced with a new environment, humans can and do adapt their behaviour
not their biological make-up. Because culture is non-biological and not
fixed, the cultural anthropologists emphasised that educability,
behavioural adaptability and flexibility was the key feature of human
nature, what made us human:
“The most notable thing about human behaviour is that it is learned.
Everything a human being does as such he has to learn from other human
beings. From any dominance of biologically or inherited
predetermined reactions that may prevail in the behaviour of other
animals, man has moved into a zone of adaptation in which his behaviour
is dominated by learned responses. It is within the dimension of
culture, the learned, the man-made part of the environment that man
grows, develops, and has his being as a behaving organism” (Ashley
Montagu, Man and Aggression, 1968).
This biological capacity for culture, for learning behaviour and
passing on to other humans and to other generations, was clearly an
adaptive advantage and it is this that has allowed our species to
spread and survive in all parts of the world, despite the widely
differing environments. Much less of the behaviour of other animals is
learned (and what is learned is essentially repetitive from generation
to generation) and much more is governed by what used to be called
“instincts”.
This is a word that has long fallen out of favour in scientific
circles, but it would simply denote a fixed response to a given
stimulus – like the literal knee-jerk reaction in humans. Or moths
flying into lights. Another, more complicated response would be
squirrels reacting to the shortening of periods of daylight by going
into hibernation.
What the brain does is to allow a period between the stimulus and the
response. The more developed the brain the wider the range of possible
behavioural responses that the organism can make on the basis of its
own past experience. We are the animals with the most developed brain
and it is one that allows us the greatest choice of behavioural
responses. So much so, the cultural anthropologists argued, that it can
be said that we don’t really have any instincts. According to Montagu,
any “instincts” that might have existed in the pre-human ape-men from
which we evolved would have disappeared in the course of evolution:
“Instead of leading to fixed responses to the environment, man’s
evolution has been such as to make him the least behaviourally fixed
and most generally educable or plastic of all living creatures. It is
this very plasticity of his mental traits that confers upon man the
position he occupies. The acquisition of this capacity freed man from
the constraint of the limited range of biologically predetermined
responses that characterises all other animals” (Human Heredity, 1963
edition)
“ . . . man is man because he has no instincts because everything he is
and has become he has learned, acquired, from his culture, from the
man-made part of his environment, from other human beings” (Man and
Aggression).
The scientific consensus that was established in the 1940s, 50s and 60s
was that it was “human nature” to be able to have a wide range of
behavioural responses to the environment; that human behaviour was
learned not innate; that it was culturally not biologically determined.
This was confirmation that there is nothing in the biological nature of
humans that would prevent us living in the co-operative,
non-hierarchical, society of self-motivated individuals that socialism
would be.
Since then the biological determinists have regrouped and
counter-attacked, claiming that there still are “biologically
predetermined responses” in
humans. They have made some headway in that
biological determinism is more intellectually acceptable than it was
fifty years ago. People like Konrad Lorenz, Robert Ardrey, Desmond
Morris, E. O. Wilson, Richard Dawkins and Steven Pinker – none of
them anthropologists – have been able to achieve some popular success.
But they have only done this by playing to the gallery, exploiting the
fact that most people have a negative view of human nature – inherited
from the Christian dogma of original sin and innate human depravity –
and knowing that they could sell their books by pandering to this
prejudice. Ardrey, Morris and Pinker also appealed to
anti-intellectualism to ridicule and marginalise the scientific
findings of the cultural anthropologists by painting them as an
arrogant, liberal elite.
But they have failed to show how genes could determine human behaviour
(as opposed to setting limits to it). Basically, genes are
self-replicating codes for the production of the proteins in the cells
of which we (and all other life-forms) are made. What they govern is
the development and renewal of our physical, material bodies. They
don’t govern behaviour – that depends, as the cultural anthropologists
have established, on our social and cultural environment.
The biological determinists hoped that advances in genetics would back
up their case, but it is proving to be their undoing. Molecular
biologists are making huge advances in identifying and discovering the
effect of individual human genes. And they are not discovering genes
for any behaviour, only for how the human body develops and renews
itself – and what happens when a gene is faulty or abnormal or unusual.
In which case the person concerned will suffer some, usually crippling
bodily defect, but which genetics holds out the hope of someday being
able to correct.
The findings of the cultural anthropologists still stand. All human
social behaviour has to be learned and so is culturally not
biologically determined. A key distinguishing feature of our species is
behavioural adaptability. Human nature is not a barrier to socialism.
ADAM BUICK
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