THE END OF NATURE AND THE NEXT MAN

FERGUSON, ANDREW

Two things may be said right at the outset about Francis Fuku-yama's new book, The Great Disruption. The first is that it is a learned and impressive work, ranging easily across disciplines,...

...The modules war with each other, and the outcome of their calculations may be a behavior that is, as the evolutionists say, non-optimal...
...Any intuition to the contrary is merely an illusion—a trick played by our genes as a survival strategy: An organism with a sense of self is more likely to preserve and pass on its genes...
...We are in the realm of story-telling and myth-making...
...The weakening of common values and behavioral norms—the depletion of what social scientists call "social capi-tal"—^was not an exclusively American phenomenon...
...The human organism, in this now-popular view, is thus the means whereby one set of genes interacts to pass itself on to another generation...
...For starters, "the scientific belief" runs counter to the most elemental belief every person has about himself—not to mention about his wife, his children, even his worst enemy...
...And he wants to go farther even than this...
...Something similar happened at roughly the same time throughout the industrialized world...
...The new science is the reasoning of first resort these days for philosophers, sociologists, journalists, television medical doctors, newspaper advice columnists, and all other deep thinkers who would seek to explain the mysteries of human behavior...
...In his 1997 bestseller, How the Mind Works, he proposes that in our everyday lives we should play an elaborate game of "as if," behaving as if we were beings possessing free will, even though the smarter among us know we aren't...
...Fukuyama, however, wants it both ways: to enjoy the extravagant, intellectually amusing theories of the new science and yet to avoid its materialist and deterministic conclusions...
...To call culture an interplay between nature and nurture is only another reflection of our imperfect understanding...
...As Fukuyama notes, there is little here that Aristotle didn't tell us—nothing, indeed, that the average person can't glean from everyday experience...
...Much of it has shown enormous utility, as in, for example, the treatment of aberrant behavior through drugs targeted to specific regions and chemicals of the brain...
...I recently came across the book Luxury Fever, by the Cornell economist Robert H. Frank, linking a person's political views to the levels of the neurotransmit-ter serotonin in the brain...
...Each of us, it's safe to say, has an experience of himself as an autonomous entity, reliant on, maybe even dependent upon, his body, but nevertheless having an existence somehow detached from it...
...But it took as fundamental the very concepts that the new science wants to render meaningless— that human beings are endowed with souls, for example...
...But now scientists—the fellows in lab coats, not the clerics in the funny turned-around collars—are confirming that human nature is real...
...In Fukuyama's rendering, the Great Disruption and the development of the postindustrial economy, with its breathtaking technological advances, are impossible to separate...
...far from the business of testable hypothesis and provable fact...
...Which is to say that, in the view of the new science, morality is based on a pretense—on believing, provisionally, something science tells us is untrue: namely that human beings are autonomous selves, with an independent existence, rather than a collection of fired-up nerve cells...
...It is certainly the most unavoidable...
...Those old virtues—he lists, more than once, honesty, reciprocity (doing unto others), and reliability—are not only necessary but in some way inevitable: "Human beings are by nature social creatures, whose most basic drives and instincts lead them to create moral rules that bind themselves together into communities...
...Strangely, however, Damasio goes on to lament "the inherent tragedy of conscious existence," but never addresses the unavoidable question: If there is no self to suffer and die, whence the tragedy...
...It is indeed...
...But Fukuyama shows that, as a statistiAndrew Ferguson is senior editor of THE WEEKLY STANDARD...
...They will do things that evolutionary theory tells us are contrary to the best interests of their selfish genes...
...The family is formed as an efficient means of protecting and nurturing children...
...cal matter, the 1960s really were The Sixties...
...The bond between mother and child is uniquely strong...
...Where do you suppose that would lead us...
...To this, contemporary evolutionary biology would wholeheartedly agree...
...Wised-up critics lampoon this obsession with the 1960s as facile, of course...
...The theory of evolution rests in large part on the fossil record, against which portions of the theory can be tested...
...Fukuyama doesn't shrink from the judgment that these "bad things"— the breakdown in the family, the loss of trust in authority—^were indeed bad...
...The biochemist Francis Crick, who with James D. Watson discovered the structure of DNA, recently published a manifesto of the new science called "The Astonishing Hypothesis...
...The theory of the selfish gene is finally untestable, but among the new scientists it is now accepted as fact, an essential premise for their speculations...
...A task so grand as reconstituting the social order demands nothing less...
...By the logic of the new science, culture is merely a genetic artifact...
...What's more, they aren't over yet, although it is the optimistic theme of his book that they might at last be drawing to a close...
...Fukuyama does not want to be thought a determin-ist...
...Here is where Fukuyama cites Damasio's Descartes' Error...
...He is attracted to it, as many conservatives are, because it posits something akin to a universal and intractable human nature...
...The attractions of the new science are undeniable...
...The emphasis on mental, as opposed to physical, labor in the new economy lessened the value of brawn, downgrading men's traditional role as breadwinners and clearing the way for women to enter the workforce in unprecedented numbers...
...Perhaps the most startling assertion has to do with the very nature of the human being...
...Altruism is an instance of this...
...This leads the enthusiasts to conclusions that are, to put it kindly, counterintuitive...
...Descartes's error, of course, was his belief in an independent self, and Damasio shows that in the new science there is no need and no room for it...
...Fukuyama's is of a higher order...
...Like "self" or "free will," "nurture" is a provisional word: something pasted over a materialistic process whose intricacies are not yet apparent but will be, as science progresses...
...The neurologist Antonio Damasio, for example, is typical in this regard...
...But he too, in drafting his argument, wants to draw on the new science when it suits his purposes, and abandon it when its consequences are inconvenient...
...The human nature that the new science ascribes to the human organism seems rather banal, or in any case self-evident...
...His discussion is worth quoting at length, for it gives a flavor of how the reasoning works: Damasio argues that the brain creates numerous somatic markers—feelings of emotional attraction or repulsion that help the brain do its calculating by short-circuiting many of the possible choices that lie before it...
...When a thought process reaches a somatic marker, it stops calculating and makes a decision...
...There is, moreover, plenty of anecdotal evidence that more conservative social norms have made a comeback, and that the more extreme forms of individualism have fallen out of favor...
...The scientific belief is that our minds— the behavior of our brains—can be explained by the interactions of nerve cells (and other cells) and the molecules associated with them...
...The new science is rigidly deterministic...
...These demonstrable successes have been mostly limited to specific physiological outcomes, such as the control of schizophrenia...
...There is no human experience, by the light of the new science, that cannot be reduced to a physiological process...
...In the long run, they should also be able to supply sufficient quantities of social capital to keep up with the demand as well...
...So the evolutionary psychologists extrapolate instead from the research of neurophysiologists, who track the physical operation of the brain, from the findings of ethnographers, who study primitive tribes that might resemble our evolutionary ancestors, and from data collected by primatologists, who study chimps as a window into human behavior...
...There are also a large number of possible strategies he can follow, for example, trying to hide the new relationship from his friend or getting the friend's approval in advance...
...We are far from science here, as science is commonly understood...
...Where earlier theorists might have turned to reason or revelation, however, Fukuyama turns to science...
...They see in it the means for explaining human behavior in all its aspects, finding a genetic basis for everything from a mother's love to our capacity to enjoy music...
...Others, like the evolutionary psychologist Steven Pinker, are more straightforward, or more candid...
...We might, as we pick our way through the wreckage of the Great Disruption, want to begin at the beginning, by asserting another of those propositions that the new science denies, even though everyone else knows it to be true: "I think, therefore I am...
...Evolutionary psychology enables the new scientists to account for such aberrations without recourse to non-material processes—say, to an independently operating self...
...When we pretend otherwise, we are merely playing another game of "as if...
...The marketplace intensified the culture of individualism and subverted the authority of communal institutions...
...It is materialistic to its core...
...The evolutionary biologist would put the proposition more blood-lessly: "Men are conditioned by genes and natural selection to behave in ways that sustain communities...
...Though wobbly as a scientific discipline, evolutionary psychology is essential to the materialistic myth of the new science...
...It does this by assuming that natural selection has designed the brain as a series of modules, which function according to conflicting evolutionary purposes...
...Et cetera...
...They are also by nature rational, and their rationality allows them to create ways of cooperating with one another spontaneously...
...It is important to note that Fukuyama, in The Great Disruption, leaves these quasi-metaphysical issues untouched...
...And it was not, as the polemicists sometimes seem to think, a consequence of Watergate, Vietnam, Woodstock, or any of the other cultural markers so dear to the solipsistic Baby Boomer...
...Dawkins's theory has great explanatory power...
...Somatic markers make the decision significantly easier by attaching emotional responses to certain outcomes and foreclosing further rational consideration of the alternative, for example, when the businessman imagines the look on his best friend's face when told about the new client...
...He tries mightily to allow room for the old idea of free will—of human beings acting in ways beyond those programmed by our genes...
...they contain their conclusions in their premises...
...To this end, they have adapted themselves over the eons to various conditions of life, through a process of natural selection...
...The average fellow might be excused for preferring the older myth, if only because it does not, like the myth of the new science, entail the austere premises of materialism or require the denial of a non-material self, acting according to conscience...
...Ethical theory," Pinker writes, "requires idealizations like free, sentient, rational, equivalent agents whose behavior is uncaused, and its conclusions can be sound and useful even though the world, as seen by science, does not really have uncaused events...
...The invention of the Pill sexually "liberated" women and men (but especially men) and undermined one of the grounds for forming families...
...They are less sexually selective, more preoccupied with status...
...At the heart of the new scientific myth is the "selfish gene," a coinage of the British writer Richard Dawkins in his vastly influential 1976 book of that name...
...Conservatives have always had an intellectual inferiority complex in these matters...
...Whether that behavior is moral, whether it signifies virtue, is a judgment that the new science, and materialism in general, cannot make...
...But it is the premise, and conclusion, of the new science that the self, experienced in this way, doesn't exist...
...As recently as two years ago, in Commentary magazine, Fukuyama was writing that "in most academic treatments of society and politics, today's biological advances are considered virtually out of bounds for discussion...
...A human being is simultaneously a machine and a sentient free agent, depending on the purpose of the discussion...
...This is to most people a really surprising concept...
...In asserting that human nature was fixed, that human beings were not perfectible nor even particularly elastic, they have traditionally relied on a myth of their own: the elaborate architecture of natural law, with all its attendant embarrassments—God, the metaphysical soul, and so on...
...The more philosophically rigorous of the enthusiasts can be quite pitiless on the point...
...Fukuyama's explication of the Great Disruption is more thorough than that of the garden-variety op-ed columnist...
...Beyond this, however, the "scientific belief" would also appear to be corrosive of any notion of free will, personal responsibility, or universal morality...
...How long a morality based on such delusions can endure, or how many adherents it can draw, is unclear...
...The Great D-iss^ption is thus, on its own terms, an optimistic book, and it is pleasing to encounter a conservative social critic who does not believe that America is, in fact, going to hell on a rollercoaster...
...The two were in fact intimately connected," he writes, "and with all of the blessings that flow from a more complex, information-based economy, certain bad things also happened to our social and moral life...
...Evolutionary psychology seeks to explain psychological behavior by means of Darwinian natural selection...
...It will doubtless serve as a model for many future discussions of the way we live now, and how it is that we go about undoing the damage done in the Great Disruption—"reconstituting the social order," to use Fukuyama's grander phrase...
...The first is that it is a learned and impressive work, ranging easily across disciplines, combining fact and argument in subtle and unexpected ways, in the much-praised manner of Fukuyama's two earlier books, Trust and The End of History and the Last Man...
...scientists will someday be able to explain it in genetic terms, just as they now believe they can explain a mother's love in genetic terms...
...I'll close with one last example, about Aristotle's claim that man is an inherently political animal: "By nature," Fukuyama writes, human beings "organize themselves into not just families and tribes, but higher-level groups, and are capable of the moral virtues necessary to sustain such communities...
...Fukuyama's argument is subtle and lucid and wide ranging...
...Was it just an accident," Fukuyama writes, "that these negative social trends, which together reflected weakening social bonds and common values holding people together in Western societies, occurred just as economies in those societies were making the transition from the industrial to the information era...
...For human beings often behave irrationally...
...the urgings of conscience are another...
...Conservative polemicists call it, in the shorthand that polemicists favor, "The Sixties...
...This alone is enough to make us question the extravagant claims made on behalf of the new science—claims about the essence of man—which go far beyond the traditional uses to which science has been put...
...The italics, importantly, are his...
...It's worth taking a moment to examine the worldview of the new science—^for it is a worldview—more thoroughly than Fukuyama does in The Great Disruption...
...He makes much use of evolutionary psychology, for example, which operates on the outer frontiers of the new science...
...With sufficient knowledge of the unimaginably complex but ultimately finite set of inputs offered by natural selection and genetics over many millions of years, one could account for all culture as a purely materialistic process—genes scheming to replicate themselves...
...Men, the new science tells us, are different from women...
...This is no longer true, in either academia or the popular press...
...But his maneuvering is not sustainable on the terms that the new science demands...
...Because the new science uncovers only materialistic processes, materialistic processes are all that there is: What materialism cannot explain, cannot exist...
...Thinkers on the left, beginning at least with Rousseau and continuing through to Franz Boas and Margaret Mead, have denied that human nature so defined actually exists, of course...
...As a social critic, Fukuyama wants to draw large conclusions about the nature of human beings—about how they behave with one another, and why they behave the way they do...
...What they have in mind is the erosion of the old virtues, a process that accelerated in that decade with sharply rising rates of crime, illegitimacy, cohabitation, and general incivility, along with equally steep declines in fertility rates, family formation, and public confidence in social and governmental institutions...
...I mentioned that the new science is fiercely, uncompromisingly materialistic...
...Thus does the new science account for an act of altruism and conscience...
...The second thing to note is that, if you're of a certain cast of mind, it is sure to give you the creeps...
...This theory of evolved modularity is untestable...
...We can be reasonably confident about this because we know that private agents seeking their own selfish ends will tend to produce social capital and the virtues associated with it...
...The Great Disruption of the book's title will be familiar to anyone who has had occasion to read a newspaper, watch TV, or step out of doors in the past thirty years...
...But it will still be a place where social behavior is rewarded and anti-social behavior discouraged—because that's the way societies are: Modern postindustrial capitalist economies will generate a continuing demand for social capital...
...Yet it's hard to see, from the philistine perspective of a layman, what all the fuss is about...
...The enthusiasts for the new, comprehensive materialist myth, however, don't stop there...
...But there can be no fossil record of psychological phenomena...
...All human beings are predisposed to using reason, language, and other symbols...
...But the understanding that Fukuya-ma and his fellow enthusiasts urge upon us is uniquely impoverished for the essential task...
...Fukuyama draws substantially on parts of Dama-sio's much-praised 1994 book, Descartes' Error...
...If you opened up Newsweek after the Columbine shootings, you were treated to brain scans of a typical sixteen-year-old—this by way of locating the killers' motivation in their Cingulate Gyrus and Prefrontal Cortex...
...It's what we mean when we use the pronoun "I...
...Specifically, he fortifies his thesis with "a tremendous amount of recent research coming out of the life sciences, in fields as diverse as neurophysiology, behavior genetics, evolutionary biology, and ethology, as well as biologically informed approaches to psychology and anthropology...
...He is not, or does not want to be, a cultural The End of Nature and the Next Man Francis Fukuyama’s Great Disruption by Andrew Ferguson relativist, and the polemicists will be greatly reassured by his painstaking demonstration that many of the old virtues, so badly damaged in the Great Disruption, are necessary for the stable social order upon which democratic capitalism depends...
...Some people will be more sociable than others, some more self-interested...
...As it happens, he does not consider his hypothesis to be at all hypothetical: "'The Astonishing Hypothesis' is that 'You,' your joys and your sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of personal identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules...
...Of course, there is another way to account for the proddings of conscience, an older myth of free will...
...Human beings are at once social and self-interested...
...Only an intellectual, to paraphrase Orwell, would be silly enough to deny these human predispositions...
...I use the term myth in the academic sense, without reference necessarily to its truth or falsehood, but merely to denote a comprehensive story that can account for simply everything...
...They want to make a quasi-metaphysical claim...
...This research is, as he writes, "one of the most interesting and important intellectual developments of our time...
...For the most part, these treatments of the new science are superficial and silly...
...By using the term "moral virtues" Fukuyama smuggles the lexicon of the old, non-materialist myth into the materialistic scheme of evolutionary biology, which has no place for it...
...of under what set of assumptions— under what myth—the reconstitution takes place...
...This is the way a myth works: It accounts for everything while simultaneously denying whatever it cannot account for...
...It explains why human beings are self-interested, yet capable of love: A mother adores her child because it contains her genes...
...How then are we to make such judgments, as we go about the business of reconstituting the social order...
...It would be nice to have a morality based on something more enduring than "as if...
...Just as crucial, however, is the question THERE IS LITTLE IN SOCIOBIOLOGY THAT ARISTOTLE DIDN'T TELL US—NOTHING, INDEED,WE CANT GLEAN FROM EVERYDAY EXPERIENCE...
...Not so, alas...
...Fukuya-ma shys from materialism...
...All myths are question-begging in this sense...
...That's why it's an important book, and why it may give you the creeps...
...He gives the example of a business owner who is trying to decide whether to do business with the archenemy of his best friend...
...With its ubiquitous popularity, the new science has become the reigning myth at the century's end...
...At every step of Fukuyama's analysis, similar problems arise, none of them acknowledged by him...
...It is at this point that some enthusiasts for the new science get skittish and exercise a rhetorical sleight of hand...
...No respectable biologist," he writes, "would deny that culture is important and often exercises an influence that can overwhelm natural instincts and drives...
...The society that emerges from this process of "renorming" will likely not resemble the Ozzie and Harriet daydream that traditionalists are alleged to fancy, but neither will it be the amoral chaos they fear...
...Is it unfair to ask whether Crick really believes his own children are nothing more than "a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules...
...But the theorists of the new science, and indeed many of its practitioners, are far more ambitious...
...You can understand why Fukuyama wants to make this claim...
...Dawkins's belief was that "the genes created us, body and mind," and that, further, it was the goal of genes to replicate and disperse themselves as widely as possible...
...According to Fukuyama, this natural tendency of human beings to right themselves after a period of social upheaval explains why we are seeing, in the 1990s, a reversal of many of the Great Disruption's disastrous trends, with crime plummeting, divorce rates falling, and illegitimacy leveling off...
...This makes it all the more gratifying for conservatives when science shows that the human organism is fashioned by natural selection and genetics to behave in certain ways...
...Kinship ties will be weaker, sexual mores looser, the labor market more fluid than the Nelson family would remember from the 1950s...
...What the new biology suggests to sensible observers is not biological determinism, but rather a more balanced view of the interplay of nature and nurture in the shaping of human behavior...
...Its inherent problems are obvious...
...And again: "We need to state the idea in stronger terms...
...It had to do with processes that run deeper in history and are, luckily, less ideologically fraught...
...Fukuyama is right: The rediscovery of human nature is the great intellectual development of our era, and it is particularly crucial as we undertake the "reconstitution of the social order...
...The theory of the somatic marker is elaborate, elegant, and absolutely unverifi-able...
...they will form groups, in other words, when it is in their interest to do so, and it nearly always is...
...A purely rational-choice approach to the problem will necessitate an extremely complex calculation of what economists call "expected value" of the business he thinks he will do with the client but also the costs to his friendship...
...The old myth of natural law had a means for making moral judgments, of course...
...Like many popularizers of the new science, he declines to explore its premises or follow it to its conclusions...
...Unfortunately, it isn't true...
...Examples fall in the lap almost every day...
...But it has the virtue of preserving the closed system of the materialist myth...
...Yet deny them our intellectuals have, in the social sciences and elsewhere, for much of this century, and their denial has formed an intellectual justification for the Great Disruption...
...In his book, Fukuyama demonstrates often, and inadvertently, that much of the new science is indeed a myth—a speculative theory, conjured up to explain certain phenomena, which is finally untestable and hence unscientific...
...There's nothing new in that, of course: Science investigates material processes, and explains them in material terms...

Vol. 4 • June 1999 • No. 39


 
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