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Book Reviews
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Monkey
Business
What It Means to
Be 98% chimpanzee. Apes, People and Their Genes.
Jonathan Marks. University of California Press.
Paperback.
Marks’s answer to the
finding that humans share 98 percent of so of their DNA with chimps is
that it doesn’t mean much more than we already knew and certainly not
what some read into it. It confirms that millions of year ago (7
million is the generally accepted estimate) humans and chimps had a
common ancestor. More generally, since all life-forms are built up of
DNA, it confirms Darwin’s view that all those that exist and have
existed on Earth evolved from a single original form. On the other
hand, it does not mean that humans are 98 percent chimpanzee (any more
than the fact that we share 35 percent of our DNA with daffodils means
that we are 35 percent daffodil) and that therefore the study of
chimpanzee behaviour is relevant to the study of human behaviour. As
Marks puts it succinctly, “you can’t get at human nature from
chimpanzees. They’re not human.” We are not naked apes, but clothed
humans; which makes all the difference.
Marks goes for those who think that genes are the most important factor
in human behaviour (the Social Darwinists and the eugenicists in the
past and the behavioural geneticists, sociobiologists and evolutionary
psychologists today), making the simple, but often ignored, point that
we don’t actually know how any gene works. We know that genes produce
proteins for the cells that constitute the body but not yet how this
translates into a person’s physical attributes let alone (if it does)
into any mental traits. What we know at the moment is that certain
defects in certain genes result in certain abnormal conditions (such as
cystic fibrosis), but not how a non-defective gene produces a normal
condition.
This is why, Marks insists, when someone makes a claim to have
discovered a gene for something, for instance homosexuality, they can’t
just point to statistical correlations or even similar brain
structures, they would need to produce a verifiable and verified causal
explanation of precisely how the gene in question translates into the
particular behaviour pattern. As he puts it, “what is widespread is not
necessarily innate” and “genetic conclusions require genetic data”:
“The fact that something is consistently observed does not imply that
it has a genetic cause. We know that. If you want to argue about
science and about genetics, you need controlled data and genetic data.”
He warns modern geneticists about the dangers of making claims that go
well beyond the existing (genetic) evidence, by pointing to the
dominant view amongst geneticists in the 1920s which was racist and
justified the forced sterilisation of “mental defectives” (not just in
Nazi Germany but in America and even in Sweden). They were wrong and
the practical consequences were disastrous. Seeing that we don’t yet
know how normal genes translate into physical attributes, modern
geneticists should, he suggests, show a little more humility before
propagating their speculations about human behaviour being genetically
determined as if it were an established scientific fact.
Marks is also good on the myth of race. “Race”, he says, “turns out to
be an optical illusion”:
“[W]e can, of course, make comparisons between groups of people and
study their differences. The problem is invariably what meaning to
assign to those differences. If we know that there are gradients, not
boundaries; that human variation is patterned locally, not
transcontinentally; that the extremes are not the purest
representatives of anything, but simply the most divergent; that
populations are invariably mixed with their neighbors, and in the last
half-millennium with people from far away; and that clustering
populations into larger units is a cultural act that values some
differences as important and submerges others – then race evaporates as
a natural unit.”
We have to record, however, that in the last five of the book’s twelve
chapters Marks embraces some strange positions, such as defending the
right of a North American Indian tribe to veto research on a 9,000-year
old skeleton found on their former tribal territory as this conflicted
with their “spiritual” values (much as the Mediaeval Church had
“spiritual” reasons for frowning on the dissection of human
bodies). Similarly, he defends the refusal of certain indigenous
people in other parts of the world to have their DNA recorded. Here, if
it true, they may have a legitimate point about it being patented and
used by others to make money, but this is a distortion due to the
existence of capitalism. In principle, there is nothing wrong with
recording the DNA of peoples who have been relatively isolated from the
rest of humanity.
ALB
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Guevarian
Ideology
Che Guevara
Reader: Writings on Politics and
Revolution.
Edited by David Deutschmann. Ocean Press.
£15.95.
The reader comprises speeches and articles that trace the development
and implementation of Guevara’s theories from 1956 to a time shortly
before his death in October 1967. The book falls into four sections
covering the period prior to the Cuban Revolution, Guevara’s work in
the Cuban government, international issues and selected letters.
Guevara’s ideology combined romanticism with elitism. He passionately
believed that an enlightened conspiratorial minority could establish
‘socialism’ and use political power to free the ideas of the uneducated
masses – a theory where mass political consciousness emerges after a
revolution initiated by a small minority or vanguard. In this struggle,
the vanguard is the “the catalysing agent that create[d] the subjective
conditions necessary for victory” as well as the “generator of
revolutionary consciousness.”
Guevara was essentially a guerrilla leader engaged in a war of national
liberation. He believed that only violent revolution, waged in the
countryside, could end colonial exploitation and introduce ‘socialism’
into Latin America. Urban areas were to remain essentially passive
being vulnerable to betrayal and superior military force. The basis of
this struggle was the peasantry, but his attitude is ambivalent,
fearing that peasant ignorance, isolation and hunger for land makes
them unreliable and in need of direction from “revolutionary
intellectuals.”
In the second section on the ‘Cuba Years 1959-65’, we gain an insight
into the difficulties of ‘Democratic Centralism’ and the organisation
of the state-run capitalism that followed the Cuban insurrection. The
economy is based on commodity production where imports are dependent on
maximising exports at competitive market prices. As with the rest of
Latin America the central problem is the “one crop economy,” with Cuba
“slaves to sugarcane.” His speeches call for diversification and
increased output prompting the introduction of ‘emulation,’ involving
setting factory and individual output targets to maximise industrial
output. His theories were greatly influenced by Lenin, who is quoted
throughout his works. In the article entitled, ‘On the Budgetary
Finance System’ Guevara uses a quotation from Lenin in an attempt to
explain how state capitalism is a step towards an eventual ‘socialist’
society, necessitating the introduction of capitalist accounting
methods, price setting, money, factory profit, bonuses and formal
contracts with monetary penalties.
But increasing output means greater incentives and this conflicts with
Guevara’s image of ‘socialist morality’ where work and achieving output
targets is the workers moral obligation, his “social duty.” Cuba, he
claims, is ‘on the road’ to ‘socialism’ while the transition to
‘communism’ a distant vision in the future. At the same time he is
compelled to accept that trading with world capitalism necessarily
imposed severe limitations on his action, in short acknowledging that
the economic conditions dictate the country’s direction. National
defence, nationalisation, industrialisation, agrarian reform and the
development of foreign trade, particularly with Russia, are all urgent
issues that have to be addressed if Cuba is to survive.
In the years following the Cuban Revolution his speeches impart
increasing frustration as the vanguard attempts to impose ‘socialism’
on the ignorant masses that neither understood nor wanted it. In
passionate speeches to students, cadres and trade unionists he
repeatedly stresses the need for education to strive for the ‘socialist
ideal’ and eradicate the bad habits from the “previous epoch.”
The third part of the book is a collection of Guevara’s speeches and
articles on international issues. Not unexpectedly, the rhetoric is
anti-Americanism and anti-colonialist and the message to the people of
Latin America is to follow Cuba’s example and create “many Vietnams” to
expel US imperialism and achieve economic independence. Other speeches
demand fairness in trade and an end to dumping, price fixing, foreign
debt and foreign bases – in fact all the things you might expect from a
leader struggling to administer capitalism in an underdeveloped country
surrounded by a hostile world.
A book of limited historical interest carrying a bankrupt anachronistic
prescription for violent revolution to be orchestrated by a vanguard
and leading inevitably to state-controlled capitalism.
ST
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