Evolutionary Psychology, Sort Of
All God's Chillun Gottun Gotta Have Structure. Most'em, Leastways 

http://fredoneverything.net/FOE_Frame_Column.htm

People seem to need an overarching explanation of things—of origins, meaning, 
purpose, and destiny. Christianity provided these things for a long time but, 
at the close of the Enlightenment, was losing its luster among the educated. 
Too much in Christianity just didn’t make sense in light of continuing 
discoveries. The sciences were more compelling, and a better fit for the 
changing mood of the times.

When the Origin of Species appeared in 1859, it offered a plausible and
 rational alternative to God Did It. Evidence in its favor existed. Selective 
breeding of animals greatly changed them. That this might have occurred by 
natural selection made sense. 

But natural selection did not explain where life came from in the first place. 
The notion of abiogenesis—that life began by accident in remote primal seas—was 
tacked on to Darwin. Scientists passed sparks through flasks of chemicals hoped 
to represent the primal seas, and molecules of compounds usually found in 
living things were discovered afterward. This was exceedingly thin evidence, 
but it pointed in the desired direction, and was accepted.

Finally, in 1964, the 3K background radiation pervading the universe was 
discovered, and described as the result of a postulated Big Bang. We now had 
Genesis without God: the creation of the world, the creation of life, and its 
divergence into all creatures, including us. Instead of debating how many 
angels could
 dance on the head of a pin, we talked of the state of the world 10 ^ -44 
seconds after the Big Bang.

To people thinking logically, as scientists not infrequently do, the three 
elements of this narrative were separable. The world could have come into being 
other than by the Big Bang, yet accidental abiogenesis might have occurred. 
Life might have arisen by means other than in the oceans by inadvertence, yet 
evolution by natural selection might still have occurred. In the minds of many, 
however, all three merged into a seamless creation story, and then acquired the 
emotional importance accruing to ideological dogma or religious faith. 

In many respects it was a religion manqué. Faiths usually have standards of 
right and wrong, of morality, of Good and Evil, but evolutionism didn’t, and 
couldn’t, being in the philosophical sense purely material. The best it could 
do was to try to make moral behavior somehow conducive to the passing on of
 one’s genes. It could not begin to explain consciousness, and so ignored it. 
The central question of religious concern, what happens when we die, 
evolutionism could not even ask, as doing so would imply the existence of 
realms beyond the material.

Though strictly speaking evolution doesn’t imply progress toward anything, 
people want very much to believe that there is purpose or direction in life. 
Thus the ineradicable belief in the non-Christian popular mind that evolution 
is a straight-line advance from the primitive and inferior to the higher and 
better, with (who could have guessed it?) us at the pinnacle. Continuing motion 
toward perfection was sure to come.

Scientific inquiry is separated from ideological rigidity by a willingness to 
entertain questions and admit doubt. The giveaway of ideology is emotional 
hostility to skeptics. Evolutionists today have it in spades. Just as the 
church once reacted punitively to Galileo for
 abandoning the party line, so do ideological evolutionists to those who do not 
accept the dogma of evolutionary political correctness.

An example: In a column I once wrote regarding the alleged accidental formation 
of life, asked: “(1) Do we actually know, as distinct from hope, suspect, 
speculate, or pray, of what the primeval seas consisted? (2) Do we actually 
know what sort of sea or seas would be necessary to engender life in the time 
believed available? (3) Has the accidental creation of life been repeated in 
the laboratory? (4) Can it mathematically be shown possible without making 
highly questionable assumptions? And (5) If the answers to the foregoing are 
“no,” would it not be reasonable to regard the idea of chance abiogenesis as 
pure speculation?”

The response was violent. I found myself accused of “trying to tear down 
science,” of wanting “to undo the work of tens of thousands of scientists.” I 
wouldn’t have
 thought the tearing down of science within the destructive powers of this 
column, but perhaps I am playing with a loaded gun. I pictured smoking shards 
of laser physics, embryology, and organic chemistry lying in dismal mounds on a 
darkling plain.

The evolutionarily correct take apostasy seriously. Razib Khan, who largely 
runs the website Gene Expression (gnxp.com) flew into a rage and deleted all 
mention of me from his web site (to which I had never posted anything). I was, 
he said, arrogant and ignorant and just no damn good. What he actually said 
was, “Anyone engaging in a Fred Reed impersonation, that is, talking about shit 
they know nothing about shamelessly and without any humility in light of their 
ignorance, will now be deleted at my discretion.”

I pondered this flood of unleashed humility, typical of its kind, and thought, 
“Huh? I asked questions. A question is an admission of ignorance. How is that 
arrogant?” And if my
 questions were stupid, why were so many of his readers, who are not at all 
stupid, impersonating me?

His reaction was less that of a scientist to questions than of an archbishop to 
heresy. Why the savagery? He or any other of my circling assailants could 
simply have answered my questions. For example, “Actually, Fred, residual pools 
of the ancient seas have been discovered, and you can find a quantitative 
analysis at the following link.” Or “Craig Venter has in fact replicated the 
chance formation of life, but it didn’t make the papers. Here’s the link.” (I 
made those up.)

I would have responded civilly, “Holy Catfish, Batman! I didn’t know. Thanks.” 
And that would have been that. But no one, not one soul, actually answered 
them. Why, I wonder?

If the answers to all four questions were “no,” it wouldn’t establish that the 
asserted abiogenesis didn’t happen, but only that we didn’t know whether it had
 happened. So why the blisterish sensitivity?

Because (or so I suspect) “no” answers would be conceding that the middle link 
of the Big Bang-abiogenesis-natural selection chain was pure speculation. It 
would be like asking a Christian to say, “Well, we don’t really know that Jesus 
was the son of God, but he could have been.”

Richard Feynman said that "science is the culture of doubt," Never happen. 







      

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