That was one thought that came to mind as I read this NYT article: "Scientists Square Off on Evolutionary Value of Helping Relatives."   When I saw the headline my Confucian senses started tingling.  Helping relatives is obviously a Confucian idea and, from that point of view, there would be an evolutionary value to it, of sorts.  But I was frustrated by the article itself.  It focused mainly on studies of behavior among ants and other non-human animals:

Why are worker ants sterile? Why do birds sometimes help their parents raise more chicks, instead of having chicks of their own? Why do bacteria explode with toxins to kill rival colonies? In 1964, the British biologist William Hamilton published a landmark paper to answer these kinds of questions. Sometimes, he argued, helping your relatives can spread your genes faster than having children of your own.

For a Confucian, helping relatives is not about genetic propagation; it is a moral practice and obligation.  Indeed, genetics matters not at all to Confucianism.  Yes, we should rasie children in order to extend Humanity to future generations, but that does not require each person to have his or her own biological children.  Adoption is fine for the moral purposes of Humanity. 

And that is when I realized the key distinction.  Most moral theories, Confucianism included, place humans in a different category than animals.  Yes, I am aware of Peter Singer and other animal rights activists.  Those are interesting and important arguments.  But the actual ethical practice of most human communities have long been predicated on a moral distinction between humans and animals.  Most societies condemn cannibalism while accepting the consumption of animal meat. 

That much is fairly obvious.  But it is important to keep in mind when reading evolutionary biologists.  They sometimes come up with statements like this:

Each organism faces a trade-off between putting effort into raising its own offspring or helping its relatives. If the benefits of helping a relative outweigh the costs, Dr. Hamilton argued, altruism can evolve.

"Altruism" is the key term.  Obviously, it is meant here in a biological sense.  But it has a moral connotation.  And the two should not be confused.  In human terms, altruism can certainly evolve.  But that process is not simply a strategy for genetic propagation.  It is a self-conscious process of striving to live a morally good life.  It is guided by ideas and images and symbols.  It is fired by a will to good.  And those very human qualities (which may indeed be shared by some animals in some rudimentary fashion) are not included in the models of the evolutinoary biologists.

Sam Crane Avatar

Published by

3 responses to “Animals are not Human”

  1. Alexus McLeod Avatar
    Alexus McLeod

    Great post! This is exactly the kind of thing I thought when I read Richard Dawkins’ “The Selfish Gene”. There is a basic category mistake being made in that book, I think. The claims there are that genes act in these ways we would perceive as self-serving, amoral, etc. But using moral terminology to describe things outside the realm of ethics is wrongheaded at best, and harmful at worst. It seemed to me to lend itself to a “see, selfishness is not so bad, that’s how we evolved the way we did and why we are here and survive,” which then excuses selfishness in the domain of ethics. But this is just a bad inference. Moral terms like “selfish” simply do not apply to genes, non-humans, etc. So we cannot take activity in these domains as saying anything useful about morality. It’s just like any other category-mistake, like taking seriously that two falling objects are “racing” or two colliding asteroids are “fighting” and thus attributing them agency.

    Like

  2. gmoke Avatar

    Reading Clay Shirky’s Cognitive Surplus, I came across an interesting experiment undertaken in 10 childcare centers in Haifa, Israel. 6 were chosen to impose a fine for late pick-up of children and the other 4 maintained the same system of no fines. The childcare centers with a fine saw an increase in late pick-ups. Even when the fine was removed and those 6 childcare centers went back to their previous arrangements, the incidence of late pick-ups of children remained higher than before.
    The culture was broken by the fine and remained broken even after the fine was removed. Morality is a social and cultural construct. It is not confined to a family, to a genetic strain, even in a Confucian setting.

    Like

  3. Bao Pu Avatar

    If you haven’t read it already, I highly recommend Frans De Waal’s book Primates and Philosophers. He even talks about Mencius in there!

    Like

Leave a reply to Bao Pu Cancel reply