blobru
Philosopher
- Joined
- May 29, 2007
- Messages
- 6,900
A charge often heard in debates over atheism, and there have been a bunch lately: “evolution is amoral!”
Without God, we’re reduced to the scientific world-view, justice based on Darwinism, survival of the strongest [sic], no mercy, law of the jungle, techno-fascism, etc…
The fallacious mangling of “survival of the fittest” into “survival of the strongest” aside, is it even true in the first place that evolution is amoral?
I’ve never heard the charge countered in a debate. Usually atheists concede the point as irrelevant and respond that there are lots of workable, rational substitutes for divine ethics – so what if evolution is amoral?
The more I think about that however, the less obvious it seems.
Evolution says those best adapted to their environment are likeliest to thrive. In most contexts, the “environment” is beyond the control of the species it affects. But not for humans. Particularly the cultural environment we inhabit. Claim: our cultural environment [c. e.] is nothing more or less than the sum total of our behavior.
If this is so, then every action must contribute to the c. e., and has a part in determining what sort of people will be best adapted to it. Roughly speaking, every act of “kindness” makes the c. e. slightly “kinder” via: those who initiate the kindness, those who benefit from it (directly from charity or indirectly), those who reward it (with a commendation, compliment, smile), and those who emulate the kindness. Similarly, every act of “cruelty” makes the c. e. slightly crueler, and so on. (And to forestall some objections, acts intended to take advantage of a “kinder” c. e. would be balanced by acts of “vigilance”, etc.)
Since the c. e. largely determines what sort of conduct is selected for – what sort of people thrive in it – then the theory of evolution, applied to culture, makes every act moral, with real moral consequence. Your every action becomes a “vote” for the kind of citizen you approve of, the sort of society you want to live in. If you’re offended by such & such, then say so, do something, every act counts! (Corollary: by the ToE, “moral” simply is equivalent to “best adapted”.) Evolution does not free you from morality; on the contrary, it binds you to it, because your behavior helps determine what morality is.
By this argument, there is no need for omniscient oversight of our behavior, as theists contend. No need for the carrot of eternal bliss and the stick of eternal torment. Evolution makes us the creators and custodians of our own ethics. I can’t imagine a more moral system than that (note its conclusions are quite similar to Kant’s categorical imperative “Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law” and Sartre’s notion of existential ‘authenticity’).
Rebuttal: “Well what guarantee do you have that free-thinking godless people won’t just choose to behave badly?” None. But no system of ethics can guarantee that. Evolutionary ethics merely makes everyone responsible, and trusts in the wisdom and decency of the majority, just like democracy does. Not perfect I know, but as Winston Churchill once said of democracy: “[It] is the worst system of government in the world, except for all the others.”
Is this going too far? It seems at least plausible to me. I’ve never heard or seen evolution defended in moral terms; maybe it should be…
Without God, we’re reduced to the scientific world-view, justice based on Darwinism, survival of the strongest [sic], no mercy, law of the jungle, techno-fascism, etc…
The fallacious mangling of “survival of the fittest” into “survival of the strongest” aside, is it even true in the first place that evolution is amoral?
I’ve never heard the charge countered in a debate. Usually atheists concede the point as irrelevant and respond that there are lots of workable, rational substitutes for divine ethics – so what if evolution is amoral?
The more I think about that however, the less obvious it seems.
Evolution says those best adapted to their environment are likeliest to thrive. In most contexts, the “environment” is beyond the control of the species it affects. But not for humans. Particularly the cultural environment we inhabit. Claim: our cultural environment [c. e.] is nothing more or less than the sum total of our behavior.
If this is so, then every action must contribute to the c. e., and has a part in determining what sort of people will be best adapted to it. Roughly speaking, every act of “kindness” makes the c. e. slightly “kinder” via: those who initiate the kindness, those who benefit from it (directly from charity or indirectly), those who reward it (with a commendation, compliment, smile), and those who emulate the kindness. Similarly, every act of “cruelty” makes the c. e. slightly crueler, and so on. (And to forestall some objections, acts intended to take advantage of a “kinder” c. e. would be balanced by acts of “vigilance”, etc.)
Since the c. e. largely determines what sort of conduct is selected for – what sort of people thrive in it – then the theory of evolution, applied to culture, makes every act moral, with real moral consequence. Your every action becomes a “vote” for the kind of citizen you approve of, the sort of society you want to live in. If you’re offended by such & such, then say so, do something, every act counts! (Corollary: by the ToE, “moral” simply is equivalent to “best adapted”.) Evolution does not free you from morality; on the contrary, it binds you to it, because your behavior helps determine what morality is.
By this argument, there is no need for omniscient oversight of our behavior, as theists contend. No need for the carrot of eternal bliss and the stick of eternal torment. Evolution makes us the creators and custodians of our own ethics. I can’t imagine a more moral system than that (note its conclusions are quite similar to Kant’s categorical imperative “Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law” and Sartre’s notion of existential ‘authenticity’).
Rebuttal: “Well what guarantee do you have that free-thinking godless people won’t just choose to behave badly?” None. But no system of ethics can guarantee that. Evolutionary ethics merely makes everyone responsible, and trusts in the wisdom and decency of the majority, just like democracy does. Not perfect I know, but as Winston Churchill once said of democracy: “[It] is the worst system of government in the world, except for all the others.”
Is this going too far? It seems at least plausible to me. I’ve never heard or seen evolution defended in moral terms; maybe it should be…

