Robin
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2004
- Messages
- 14,971
I simply cannot see how "...that we are inherently selfish and unlikely to give if we don't expect to receive." can possibly be referring to systems of evolution where we don't receive any benefit and the idea of 'expectation' is meaningless. And certainly none of the rest of the article uses 'selfishness' in this sense so why would the introduction assay a theme that is never treated in the body of the article?stamenflicker said:I didn't really interpret him saying either of these, but maybe I should re-look at it. The statement in and of itself seems to be referring to the systems of evolution and market economy, not what any individual "I" chooses or to do or does subconciously.
certainly refers to individual selfishness and is certainly a foolish statement. According to Dawkins someone may behave entirely altruistically programmed by selfish genes. How could any of the experiments demonstrated possibly uncover any adaptive advantageIf Richard is behaving entirely selfishly (programmed by his selfish genes), he should accept whatever Steven is prepared to give.
I don't know about oak trees but in plants generally there is altruisic behaviour. Ironically MC Morris gives examples of plant altruism as an argument against neo Darwinian evolutionary theory.Even so, as Dawkins (sort of) admits, we still have to define alturism in the past tense-- meaning actions that have already occurred, and that does have some limitation on the theory in general, as oak trees don't tend to develop altruistically. I'm sure there is a good reason as to why?
http://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/2000/PSCF3-00Morris.htmlMichael C Morris in God's Design Plan in Nature: A Fresh Look at Altruism
Altruism has even been seen in supposedly non-sentient plants. Recent research suggests that plants secrete substances when under attack by insects. These warn other plants nearby so they can prepare their defenses. Similarly, some plants produce estrogen mimics. These inhibit reproduction in herbivores, and therefore benefit all plants in an area, even though the donor still gets eaten.
So there is the problem. If there is plant altruism it is an argument against the theory of evolution by natural selection. If there is not plant altruism then it is an argument against the theory of evolution by natural selection. Heads you win, tails I lose.