Friday, 26 April 2013

Behaving Like Animals



Is human nature a beast that needs to be tamed? Should we ‘throw out Darwinism in our social and political lives’? Or are we naturally altruistic, empathetic and moral?

In Frans De Waal’s new book, The Bonobo and the Atheist, he takes on the thinkers who believe that morality has to be imposed on our brutish natures and catalogues the growing evidence that disproves them. I interviewed him about the book for the Pod Delusion podcast; you can listen to us here.

There is a long history of thought that the natural world is a merciless struggle for survival and that humans decided to live together ‘by covenant only, which is artificial’ (Hobbes), that natural selection is ‘a Hobbesian war of each against all’ and ethics are humanity’s cultural victory over the evolutionary process (Huxley), that civilization is achieved through the renunciation of instinct and the action of the superego – which men are more capable of than women (Freud), that children have to be trained to be sociable through fear of punishment and desire for praise (Freud, Skinner, Piaget), that moral behaviour is achieved through reason alone (Kant).

These ideas have their origins in Judaeo-Christian teaching that morals have to be imposed from above, that in our ‘natural state’ we are unfit for society (or heaven) because of original sin.

What they all have in common is a kind of dualism between our ‘better angels’ and the beast within, our Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

The idea persists even now, albeit stripped of its religious origins. A lack of understanding of the difference between predation (of other species) and aggression (towards our own species) has led to the popular and persistent image of humans as ‘killer apes’. Matt Ridley has written that we are potentially but not naturally moral.

Richard Dawkins has said that ‘we, alone on earth, can rebel against the tyranny of the selfish replicators’ (The Selfish Gene) and that ‘in our political and social life we are entitled to throw out Darwinism, to say we don’t want to live in a Darwinian world’.

Some disagree. Darwin is one of them. He wrote that ‘any animal whatever, endowed with well-marked social instincts (…) would inevitably acquire a moral sense or conscience, as soon as its intellectual powers had become as well developed, or nearly as well developed, as in man’ (Descent of Man). Stephen Jay Gould wrote in 1980 ‘Why should our nastiness be the baggage of an apish past and our kindness uniquely human?’ Philosopher David Hume believed that moral sentiments come from ‘a tender sympathy with others’.

De Waal agrees with them. He does not believe in any inner dualism, in the need to choose to be moral or to accept moral instruction from above (gods, philosophers or authority figures) because altruism, empathy and morality are innate in us. What’s more, they also exist in other social animals. They are part of an evolved package of behaviours that make it possible for us to be social animals.

He calls the idea that civilization and morality are imposed on a violent, immoral, selfish nature Veneer Theory and concludes ‘Everything science has learned in the last few decades argues against the pessimistic view that morality is a thin veneer over a nasty human nature’.

Human morality is ‘firmly anchored in the social emotions, with empathy at its core’ (De Waal, Our Inner Ape). The desire to treat others well comes from altruism which, in turn, comes from empathy.

He is not idealizing humans or other animals. Conflict is inevitable. It is how and why we resolve it or avoid it that matters. He also underlines the difference between humans and some other social animals, writing: “What is so interesting about human prosociality is precisely that it is not of the "eusocial" kind, which promotes sacrifices for the greater genetic good. We, humans, maintain all sorts of selfish interests and individual conflicts that need to be resolved to achieve a cooperative society. This is why we have morality and ants and bees don’t. They don’t need it.”

For many years, De Waal’s claim that other animals display altruism and empathy was ignored or rejected. What his latest book achieves is to put onto a firm evidential basis the fact that the roots of our social behaviour can be seen in other animals. The question is no longer whether animals have empathy but how it works.

Research has shown that moral decisions light up areas of the brain in humans and other animals that deal with emotions and – significantly - the evaluation of others’ emotions. When VEN cells in humans are damaged there is a loss of self-awareness and empathy; these cells exist in apes, cetaceans and elephants – but not monkeys.

A recent study ‘highlights the fact that, similar to humans, sensitivity to the emotional states of others actually emerges very young in bonobos and may not require so much complex cognitive processing as has previously been assumed’. Small children comfort other distressed children, even before they have developed the language skills to be instructed to do it.

There is strong evidence in other animals of reconciliation and consolation after conflict - kissing, embracing and grooming for example, to restore social bonds. They are aware of unfairness – what economists call inequity aversion – which makes good sense in the avoidance of conflict. This has been seen in animals as diverse as capuchins, elephants, canids and corvids. They co-operate and form social ties, both of which improve survival chances – female baboons with the best social ties have the most surviving offspring, for example.

Co-operation is strongest in meat-eating animals as hunting requires co-ordination and meat-sharing to provide a reward. Vegetarian animals are much less co-operative because they don’t need to be.

Social animals show gratitude and revenge – remembering the behaviour of others and paying them back. They target their helping, which requires being able to see a situation from another’s point of view. They are able to delay gratification, which shows self-control – a characteristic thought to be only human.

He acknowledges that humans have more complex and developed social skills; we alone analyse, discuss and codify our behaviour. He says ‘I am reluctant to call a chimpanzee a “moral being.” This is because sentiments do not suffice. We strive for a logically coherent system’.

Human morality and laws show ‘a move towards universal standards combined with an elaborate system of justification, monitoring and punishment’ – for example the Geneva Convention and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In animals there is what is called motivational autonomy – they don’t think about why they do something – for example, they don’t make the link between sex and reproduction or between sharing and surviving.

The fact that it is social animals alone who display similar behaviour to ours is the key. It has been suggested by Dawkins that ‘humans are nicer than is good for our selfish genes’. But we give help roughly at the same level as we need it; tigers are solitary animals who neither need nor give help, for example. Behaving pro-socially makes society work and affords the benefits of social living to the individual.

Being altruistic makes us feel good and helps us survive but is it then selfish to behave socially? Are we all really hypocrites? Is it selfish to care for our young, treat others well and to push to the front of the queue?

The big difference is that queue-jumping is a consciously chosen act whereas instinctive behaviour doesn’t involve thought so the term ‘selfish’ doesn’t work as a measure. As De Waal has written, ‘Imagine the cognitive burden if every decision we took needed to be vetted against handed-down principles.’ We may think about our impulses and choose whether or not to act on them but we do not need to learn or be forced to behave well all the time. We often rationalize our moral decisions post hoc.

Part of the problem of resistance against altruism and empathy in other animals is human exceptionalism, the idea that humans are in some way special, set apart. This too has its roots in religion, with humans as God’s special creation, the only creature possessed of a soul.

De Waal notes that religions developed in countries where there were no other primates have the strongest tendency to set humans outside nature – they have no animal gods or animal-headed human gods.

The idea has persisted for a surprisingly long time in a secular form both in science and the humanities but is slowly being eroded. De Waal has written: ‘Humanity never runs out of claims of what sets it apart, but it is a rare uniqueness claim that holds up for over a decade. This is why we don’t hear anymore that only humans make tools, imitate, think ahead, have culture, are self-aware, or adopt another’s point of view’.

We are not unique and we are not Jekyll and Hyde. We are complicated animals.


One section of the book which looks at atheism has been strongly criticized by some atheists, including AC Grayling, who accuse De Waal of being an apologist for religion. My analysis of Grayling’s highly flawed argument is here.






12 comments:

  1. Dogs also have sensitivity to the emotional states of others. Do you think the could be amongst the moral animals?

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  2. I haven't read De Waal so by all means accuse me of ignorance . . .

    But the fact remains that there is good and bad in all of us. From the evolutionary perspective, this is because sometimes it pays to be nice, and at other times it pays to be nasty. Sometimes it pays to cooperate within a group, and then another time it pays to hit someone over the head with a rock and nick all their food. Thus there is a grain of truth in the concept of original sin. But only a grain.

    I'm very sceptical of the stance that man is naturally good, because this can lead to naive political solutions which end in tears. For me, Pinker's Blank Slate remains the definitive text on human nature.

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    1. - this is why he makes it very clear he doesn't idealise humans and that there will always be conflict. He isn't saying we're naturally good, he's saying that all social animals have good impulses as well as bad and that good behaviour doesn't have to be forced on us because it's instinctive.

      He has recorded and reported instances of animals cheating within groups and we all know that humans cheat (in the broadest sense). A blank slate relies too much on nurture, not nature.

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    2. "Good behaviour doesn't have to be forced on us because it's instinctive.

      That's the bit that is nonsense. Because we're aiming for something far higher than the animals, namely a civilised and well ordered society. For this to work, there has to be education, correction, the rule of law, etc. Very much a top down imposition of morality. If we don't like that imposition, then we can argue collectively and democratically to change the rules. But relying on our natural animal instincts is only going to fit us for life in the jungle.

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    3. As I quoted above: 'Small children comfort other distressed children, even before they have developed the language skills to be instructed to do it.'

      and

      'He acknowledges that humans have more complex and developed social skills; we alone analyse, discuss and codify our behaviour. He says ‘I am reluctant to call a chimpanzee a “moral being.” This is because sentiments do not suffice. We strive for a logically coherent system’.

      Human morality and laws show ‘a move towards universal standards combined with an elaborate system of justification, monitoring and punishment’ – for example the Geneva Convention and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In animals there is what is called motivational autonomy – they don’t think about why they do something – for example, they don’t make the link between sex and reproduction or between sharing and surviving.'

      It isn't saying that we don't need rules, punishments etc. Other social animals have those too.

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    4. So what is he saying exactly? First he misrepresents Dawkins and Pinker and describes those misrepresented views as "crap" – his word. Then he hedges his bets all ways, so he can't be accused of too much naivety. But when the dust has settled, what has he actually added to our understanding? Humanity is facing some really complex and intractable problems. De Waal's solution: look at chimps! To which I want to scream: BUT WE'RE NOT F***ING CHIMPS!!!

      It's like you want to build a house with water, gas, electricity, heating, sewerage. And De Waal is there going: "look at this mud hut, that should give you a few ideas."

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    5. That's really not what he's saying but you need to read the book before we can discuss it, otherwise this could go on forever.

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  3. Oh man, I've just listened to the podcast. This is so disappointing.

    He's just set up a whole series of straw men, to then demolish and so position himself apart from the rest. If he thinks that the "selfish gene" implies unalloyed selfishness and nastiness, then he's clearly only read the title of that book and nothing more. In that endeavour, he's far from alone. Confusing proximate and ultimate causes? Sorry, but Pinker is right on top of that. This is really basic stuff. It's like Mary Midgely all over again.

    On what sets us apart from the animals, I was interested that you said the arts, Tessa. I would have said language is the crucial distinction (never forgetting that we are and will always remain animals). To say that the human brain is basically the same as the chimp brain, but three times bigger is completely wrong. The human brain contains dedicated modules, including that all important language module, which chimps simply lack. There have been endless attempts to "talk to the animals" which have all ended in failure. Animals are only capable of basic communication which is absolutely not on a par with the constructs of language. The functionality derives from how the brain is *wired up*. We can't just say that we've got similar looking bits to chimps.

    I'm sorry that you didn't give him a much harder time, Tessa. I guess you can't invite him on and then kick him in the nuts. But I'm not going to waste my time on his book when he makes such basic errors, and so casually misrepresents the views of some really important thinkers in order to promote his own bad science.

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  4. He doesn't say that the selfish gene . We are neither all good nor all bad - see my comment above.

    Language is a form of communication - a much more complex form but still on the continuum, as he makes clear. There is no implication that the human brain is just a bigger chimp brain.

    No review of a book is going to give the whole picture - you do need to read what he says and look at the evidence he provides to understand the complexity of his ideas.

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    1. Quotes from the podcast:

      "Between 1970 and 2000 approximately, there were all these ideas (and Dawkins's ideas and the selfish gene are very much along the same lines) that we are inherently selfish and bad . . ."

      That is a complete misrepresentation.

      "If you look at the details of the human brain, the human brain has no parts that you don't find in a monkey brain. So the human brain is three times bigger than the chimp brain (which is good and which I think helps us and increases our intelligence so to speak) but the human brain doesn't contain any parts or any mechanisms as far as we know that is totally different."

      That is basically blank slate thinking and is completely wrong.

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  5. Reading the response/debate above highlights both assertions regarding the psychological origins of empathy and morality. It is rather like a "Nature versus Nurture" debate. There is both in all of us. I have my own intuitions on this subject and I would look to see my intuitions confirmed or denied by someone who has studied the subject, but I am all too aware that intuition isn't always good science, even if it often kick-starts a serious investigation into a complex phenomena.

    More from me another time when I have actually read and listened to the podcast etc!:-)

    PS - It is interesting that the responses to the blog can often be as thought-provoking as the blog and often more so than the original subject! :-D

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  6. Interesting article here on the problem of human uniqueness, human brains and chimp brains, with particular reference to language. http://nautil.us/issue/1/what-makes-you-so-special/where-uniqueness-lies

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