Page
1
Page
2
Page
3
Page
4
Page
5
Page
6
Page
7
Page
8
Page 9
Page
10
Page 11
Page 12
Page 13
Page
14
Page
15
Page
16
Page 17
Page
18
Page
19
Page 20
|
Pathfinders
Why Gould was wrong, 
and why Dawkins might be even more wrong
A science writer who knows how to communicate to a lay audience is a
rarity. But to find two in the same field, battling each other’s ideas
in the public domain, is a real treat, and the long-running
contest on evolutionary theory between the late Harvard palaeontologist
Stephen Jay Gould and the Oxford ethologist and biologist Richard
Dawkins was a gem of the first rank. If the modern science-inclined
public has better than a cartoon Darwinist grasp of the complex story
of evolution it is in no small thanks to these two outstanding writers.
Their disagreements
were neither feigned nor frivolous. They argued
about whether evolution worked at the level of the species animal or
group (Gould) or the individual gene (Dawkins). They argued about
whether evolution went in fits and starts (Gould) or as a continuum
(Dawkins). They argued about whether evolutionary mutations were as
often as not meaningless aberrations or freaks of ‘historical
contingency’ (Gould) or purposeful and deterministic adaptations
(Dawkins).
While the debates were never quite this simplistic, it’s fair to say
that the two men followed distinctive trends in their thinking. For
Gould life was largely a series of existential accidents, without
purpose or goal, and with many evolutionary jokes and anomalies thrown
in. One has only to consider the Permian extinction, which killed 95%
of all species on the planet, to understand how capricious nature can
be. And that was only one of five great extinctions, each clearing the
decks for an explosion of new and unprecedented life-forms, each a
blind roll of the dice. As Gould was fond of saying, if you rewound the
tape of evolution back to the beginning and replayed it, humans would
probably not appear, and nothing would come out the same.
For Dawkins, in comparison to this a galloping determinist, such
randomness was anathema. Though never a crude ‘adaptationist’ of the
sort Gould ridiculed, the sort who looks for an evolutionary purpose
behind everything, Dawkins would still tend to look for the angle. And
there are reasons for thinking there are reasons for things. As James
Marden, professor of biology at Pennsylvania State University put it,
when writing of ‘constructal theory’ in August 2006:
"Our finding that animal locomotion adheres to constructal theory tells
us that -- even though you couldn't predict exactly what animals would
look like if you started evolution over on earth, or it happened on
another planet -- with a given gravity and density of their tissues,
the same basic patterns of their design would evolve
again,"(http://www.dukenews.duke.edu/2005/12/locomotiontheory.html)
Thus, for Gould, the world was a matter of sheer luck, for Dawkins, a
matter of rules. What made it interesting was that they were both
right. But what makes it even more interesting is to reflect how their
vastly different approaches manifested themselves when considering the
festering problem of religion.
If the world was a random lottery of chance, as Gould saw it, with
species doing their best to keep their fingers crossed and fit into
whatever niche they could find, then surely one’s only hope was to make
the best of a bad lot and accommodate oneself to the world in whatever
way one could. Seeing that society was redneck-deep in religious
ignorance and superstition, and seeing that the outnumbered forces of
reason and science had no realistic prospect of defeating them, then
the best survival strategy must surely be to reach an accommodation
with them.
Thus the idea of ‘non-overlapping magisteria’, or NOMA. The term
‘magisterium’ is ecclesiastical, meaning ‘area of authority’. The idea
was that science had its area of undisputed authority, and religion had
its area, and provided that science did not interfere on the priests’
turf and religion didn’t interfere in science, everyone should be
happy. Gould was hoping at best for some form of symbiotic equilibrium,
which was a faint hope, and also something of an irony. If there was
one man alive who was least likely to believe in the viability of
long-term equilibrium in anything, it was Gould. Thus, the chief
proponent of the idea that such ‘equilibria’ in nature were forever
getting themselves ‘punctuated’ to devastating effect (the extinctions,
for example) now found himself uncomfortably proposing the very
opposite.
Needless to say, Dawkins treated Gould’s notion of NOMA with
undisguised derision, branding it the ‘Neville Chamberlain school’ of
appeasement (The God Delusion, p. 67). For, argues Dawkins, the
religious side would never stick to their side of the partition, partly
because beliefs such as the belief in miracles require real-world
alterations to the laws of physics, and partly because the canting
hypocrites constantly seize and flourish any scrap and gobbet of
scientific evidence that appears to support their nutty ideas. But
Dawkins doesn’t merely distrust the religious theologians, he actively
despises them and refuses to accord their area of ‘authority’ any
respect at all. Where Gould appeared to ‘bend over backwards to be
polite’, Dawkins retorts: ‘I don’t think we should even throw them a
sop’.
Delightful and refreshing as this undoubtedly is for thinking atheists
everywhere, others, scientists among them, are bemused by Dawkins’s
belligerence. But, unlike Gould, in Dawkins’ world there are rules. And
if the world is built on a base of rules, then it follows that there is
an optimal or correct structure or order, and a sub-optimal or
incorrect structure. Two different structures would be mutually
exclusive, and therefore inevitably in conflict, a conflict only
resolvable upon the death of one or other of them. It is in consequence
an evolutionary directive for incompatible
systems to attempt to
destroy each other. For Dawkins, if science doesn’t kill religion,
religion will surely kill science.
The same argument can be had among socialists, some arguing that
religion can be ‘accommodated’, others that it must be destroyed. Not
surprisingly, Gould and Dawkins didn’t agree about politics either.
Gould was a progressive liberal with socialistic tendencies, not unlike
the class-savvy Carl Sagan. Dawkins is a conservative who identifies
the processes of capitalist trading as being prefigured in our
‘altruistic’ or ‘dealing’ genes, and whose conception of social history
betrays no recognition of the role of class struggle. Thus he
celebrates, in The God Delusion, how the ‘zeitgeist’ has changed
remarkably, but in the absence of the dynamic of class can offer no
explanation for it beyond feeble references to ‘charismatic leaders’
and ‘role-models’. This failure to grasp the real forces of social
relationships, more than anything else, is what sidelines Dawkins’
polemic against religion. Gould may have been wrong in trying to
compromise, but in his better understanding of the totality of the
conflicts in capitalism he had his eye on a much larger picture. For
Gould, as for Sagan, the imperative was not mutual ideological
destruction, but consensual growth. Put simply, you have to take people
with you, or they will desert you. For socialists too, who rely on a
consensual understanding to effect socialist change, it’s not just a
matter of beating the other guy in the argument. For all his engaging
chutzpah, Dawkins is arguably fighting the wrong battle, in the wrong
way, in the wrong war.
|