Sociobiology
Sociobiology is a
synthesis of
scientific disciplines that attempts to explain behaviour in all
species by considering the
evolutionary advantages of social behaviours. It is often considered a branch of
biology and
sociology, and it also draws from
ethology,
evolution,
zoology,
archeology,
population genetics, and other disciplines. Within the study of human
societies, sociobiology is closely related to the fields of
human behavioral ecology and
evolutionary psychology.
Sociobiology has become one of the greatest scientific
controversies of the late
20th century. Criticism, most notably made by
Richard Lewontin and
Stephen Jay Gould, centers on sociobiology's contention that
genes play a decisive role in human behavior, suggesting there are limitations to reducing traits such as aggressiveness. In response to the controversy, anthropologist
John Tooby and psychologist
Leda Cosmides launched
evolutionary psychology as a centrist form with less controversial focuses.
Sociobiology is the biological basis for animal social behavior. It is based on the idea that animals will act in ways to improve their own inclusive fitness (Kin Selection). It is a selfish genes hypothesis that states the individual is not as important to the population as its genes.
Therefore, animal behavior can be explained by how they act to preserve their genes in the population. It can be used to explain why a lioness will nurse not only her own young, but the young of her close genetic relatives in the pride (nephews and nieces). It can also be used to explain why a new dominant male lion will kill cubs in the pride that do not belong to him. Killing the cubs causes the nursing females to come into heat faster, thereby giving the male lion an opportunity to get his genes into the population much faster.
The sociobiology discussion was started by
Edward O. Wilson's landmark 1975 book,
Sociobiology: The New Synthesis and can be traced to the work of
Robert Trivers and
William D. Hamilton. The book was seen as pioneering the attempt to explain the evolutionary mechanics behind social behaviours such as
altruism,
aggression, and nurturance, primarily in ants (Wilson's research speciality) and other animals, with only the last chapter devoted solely to humans. However, Wilson later wrote a Pulitzer Prize winning book, "On Human Nature", that addressed how human behavior can be explained with sociobiology.
Sociobiologists believe that animal or
human behaviour cannot be satisfactorily explained entirely by "
cultural" or "
environmental" factors alone. They contend that in order fully to understand behaviour, it must be analyzed with some focus on its evolutionary origins. If
Darwin's
theory of natural selection is accepted, then inherited behavioural mechanisms that allowed an
organism a greater chance of surviving and/or reproducing would be more likely to survive in present organisms. Many
biologists accept that these sorts of behaviours are present in non-human
animal species. However, there is a great deal of controversy over the application of evolutionary models to
human beings.
Sociobiologists are often interested in
instinctive, or
intuitive behaviour. They are interested in explaining the similarities, rather than the differences, between cultures. They are interested in how behaviours that are often taken for granted can be explained logically by examining selection pressures in the history of a species.
For example, mothers within many species of
mammals â€" including humans â€" are very protective of their
offspring. Sociobiologists reason that this protective behavior likely evolved over time because it helped those individuals which had the characteristic to survive and reproduce. Over time, those individuals in the species that did not exhibit such protective behaviors likely lost their offspring and ultimately died out. In this way, the social behavior is believed to have evolved in a fashion similar to other types of non-behavioral
adaptations, such as (for example) fur or the sense of smell. Sociobiologists may therefore argue that the evolutionary mechanism behind the behavior is genetic.
Individual genetic advantage often fails to explain more complex social behaviours. However, genetic evolution appears to act on
social groups. The mechanisms responsible for selection in groups are statistical and can be harder to grasp than those that determine individual selection (such as the above example). When explaining behavior in its social groups, the analytical processes of sociobiology use
paradigms and population statistics similar to actuarial analyses of the
insurance industry or
game theory.
Anthropologist Colin Turnbull found another supporting example (described in
The Mountain People, 1972) about an
African tribe, the
Ik, which he said so lacked altruism that the society lost
battles with neighboring tribes. His controversial conclusions raised responses among anthropologists and journalists.
E.O. Wilson demonstrated through logic that altruists must reproduce their own altruistic genetic traits for altruism to survive. When altruists lavish their resources on nonaltruists at the expense of their own kind, the altruists tend to die out and the others tend to grow. In other words, altruists must practice the
ethic that "charity begins at home."
An important concept in sociobiology is that temperamental traits within a gene pool and between gene pools exist in an
ecological balance. Just as an expansion of a
sheep population might encourage the expansion of a
wolf population, an expansion of altruistic traits within a gene pool may also encourage the expansion of individuals with dependent traits.
Twin studies suggest that behavioural traits such as
creativity,
extroversion and aggressiveness are between 45% to 75% genetic.
Intelligence is said by some to be about 80% genetic after one matures (discussed at
Intelligence_quotient#Genetics_vs_environment). Others, such as R. C Lewontin, reject the idea of 'dividing' environment and heredity in such an artificial way.
Here's how scientific sociobiology usually proceeds: A social behaviour is first explained as a sociobiological
hypothesis by finding an
evolutionarily stable strategy that matches the observed behaviour. Stability can be difficult to prove, but usually, a well-formed strategy will predict gene frequencies. The hypothesis can be confirmed by establishing a correlation between the gene frequencies predicted by the strategy, and those expressed in a population. Measurement of genes and gene-frequencies can also be problematic, because a simple statistical correlation can be open to charges of circularity. Circularity can occur if the measurement of gene frequency indirectly uses the same measurements that describe the strategy. Though difficult, this overall process finds favour.
As a successful example, altruism between
social insects and litter-mates was first satisfactorily explained by these means, and it was correlated to the degree of
genome shared by the altruists, as predicted. Another successful example was a quantitative description of
infanticide by male harem-mating animals when the
alpha male is displaced. Female infanticide and fetal resorption in rodents are active areas of study. In general, females with more bearing opportunities may value offspring less. Also, females may arrange bearing opportunities to maximize the
food and protection from mates.
Criminality is actively under study, but extremely controversial. There are persuasive arguments that in some environments criminal behavior might be adaptive [
1]. Some say that
capital punishment may be the traditional way to weed criminal traits from the gene pool. Sociobiology has had several failures in the field of attempting to explain criminal behaviours. For example, its hypotheses for explaining the crimes of rape and, more recently, murder have failed to correspond with police observations and statistics.
The application of sociobiology to humans was immediately controversial. Many people, such as
Stephen Jay Gould, and
Richard Lewontin feared that sociobiology was
biologicially determinist. They referred to
social Darwinism and
eugenics of the early 20th century, and to other more recent ideas, such as the
IQ test controversy of the early
1970s as cautionary tales in the use of evolutionary principles as applied to human society. They believed that Wilson was committing the
naturalistic fallacy. Several academics opposed to Wilson's sociobiology created "The Sociobiology Study Group" to counter his ideas.
Other critics believed that Wilson's theories, as well as the works of subsequent admirers were not supported
scientifically. Objections were raised to many of the
ethnocentric assumptions of early sociobiology and to the sampling and
mathematical methods used in forming conclusions. Many of the sloppier early conclusions were attacked. Sociobiologists were accused of being "super"
adaptationists, believing that every aspect of
morphology and behaviour
must necessarily be an evolutionarily beneficial adaptation.
Philosophical debates raged about the nature of
scientific truth and the applicability of any human
reason to a subject so complex as human behaviour, considering past failures. Furthermore, from a philosophical standpoint, science is distinguished from other pseudo-sciences, such as
alchemy or
astrology, by the
falsifiability of new scientific theories. Critics believe that proponents of sociobiology do not allow their theories to be falsifiable, rendering it a pseudo-science.
Wilson and his admirers countered these criticisms by denying that Wilson had a political agenda, still less a
right wing one. They pointed out that Wilson had personally adopted a number of
liberal political stances and had attracted progressive sympathy for his outspoken
environmentalism. They argued that as scientists they had a duty to uncover the "truth" whether that was
politically correct or not. They argued that sociobiology does not necessarily lead to any particular political
ideology as many critics implied. Many subsequent sociobiologists, including
Robert Wright,
Anne Campbell,
Frans de Waal and
Sarah Blaffer Hrdy, have used sociobiology to argue quite separate points.
Noam Chomsky surprised some by coming to the defense of sociobiology's methodology, noting that it was the same methodology he used in his work on linguistics. However, he roundly criticized the sociobiologists' actual conclusions about humans as lacking substance. He also noted that the anarchist
Peter Kropotkin had made similar arguments in his book
Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, although focusing more on altruism than aggression, suggesting that anarchist societies were feasible because of an inborn human nature to do good. He further argues that the claims of sociobiologists have been stretched far beyond what the evidence can support .htm#TXT2.23]
Wilson's defenders also claimed that the critics had greatly overstated the degree of his biological determinism. Wilson's claims that he had never meant to imply what
ought to be, only what
is the case are supported by his writings, which are descriptive, not prescriptive.
Implications of sociobiology
Some fear the results of sociobiology could justify undesireable social stances. For example, some groups have supported positions of
ethnic nepotism by arguing, as
Richard Dawkins summarized (critically), "
kin selection provides the basis for favoring your own race as distinct from other races, as a kind of generalization of favoring your own close family as opposed to other individuals [kin selection]."[
2] Views such as this, however, are often criticized (as Dawkins did) as examples of the
naturalistic fallacy, when reasoning jumps from statements about what
is to prescription about what
ought to be. (A common example is approving of all wars if scientific evidence showed warfare was part of human nature.) It's also argued opposition to stances considered anti-social, such as ethnic nepotism, is based on
moral assumptions, not
bioscientific assumptions, meaning it's not vulnerable to being disproved by bioscientific advances (
Pinker, 2001, p. 145).
Concepts:
*
Astrosociobiology*
Dual inheritance theory*
Evolutionary developmental psychology*
Human behavioral ecology*
Ethics and evolutionary psychology*
Iterated prisoner's dilemma*
List of publications on evolution and human behavior*
Prisoner's dilemmaWell-known sociobiologists:
*
David Barash*
Pierre van den Berghe*
Cyril Darlington*
Richard Dawkins*
W. D. Hamilton*
Sarah Blaffer Hrdy*
Joseph Lopreato*
Richard MachalekSociobiology: The New Synthesis by Dr.
E. O. Wilson, 1975
The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature by
Steven PinkerThe Selfish Gene by
Richard Dawkins*
*
Sociobiology (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) -
Harmon Holcomb &
Jason Baker*
The Sociobiology of Sociopathy, Mealey, 1995*
Speak, Darwinists! Interviews with leading sociobiologists.
*
Race and Creation -
Richard Dawkins