Last year, I wrote a post called From Darwin to Hitler, or not? This post discussed the book From Darwin to Hitler by historian Richard Weikart, who just happens to be a Discovery Institute fellow. The thesis of the book is that Darwin and his ideas -- common ancestry and natural selection -- somehow led to Hitler and Naziism, although the logic connection between the two sets of ideas is extremely murky. Weikart's book has been used by the Discovery Institute (see e.g. here), ARN (see the description of the new video -- also look carefully at the tasteful video cover, posted at left), and other creationist groups to promote exactly this idea, which creationists had already been promoting for decades anyway, just without an official historian behind them.
While it is tempting, and I think legitimate, to dismiss the whole thing as a severe expression of Godwin's Law, there are more sophisticated criticisms. My major points in my post were that (a) Weikart goes out of his way to bash and dismiss the "Haeckel to Hitler" thesis promoted by an earlier historian (Daniel Gasman), noting among other things that Haeckel was a pacificist, but (b) Haeckel has much more direct links to Naziism than does Darwin -- Haeckel was closer in time, location, idealogy, promotion of eugenics, influence on Germany in the early 1900s, etc; therefore (c} Weikart's Darwin-to-Hitler thesis is even sillier than the Haeckel-to-Hitler thesis that Weikart himself criticizes. But I'm just a blogger.
I previously linked to a news story describing a lecture by a University of Chicago historian of Darwin and eugenics, Robert Richards. The news article did not specifically mention Weikart, but I surmised then that Weikart's book was the target of Richards's critique. It looks like I was right, because Richards has now posted the published version of his lecture on his website (pdf). Richards's conclusion?
To be fair to Weikart, his webpage lists his replies to historian critics, including Richards (evidently Weikart has another critic who bashed his book in the Journal of Modern History, although I have not yet read the review in the March 2006 issue of the journal). Weikart's reply is basically "But I didn't mean to tar Darwin and evolution with the odious reputation of Hitler and the Nazis, I put some weak disclaimers to this effect at the beginning of my book." But this is ludicrous. The title of Weikart's book is From Darwin to Hitler, and he has participated in and endorsed the streams of anti-evolution propaganda put out by the Discovery Institute and related groups -- see the links above, and don't miss www.darwintohitler.com -- based explicitly on Weikart's book (which, if memory serves, the Discovery Institute financed in the first place). At best, Weikart is an innocent academic who is being used by the creationists for their own nefarious ends. But it's impossible to believe that he is that stupid, especially since he has regularly shown up at ID conferences and events (and in their videos) to advocate his thesis. Some people think that the fake science of ID is a threat only to biology. But here is another piece of evidence showing that the ID movement is quite willing to twist any academic subject to carry out their mission to take down evolution.[...] The Judgment of "Historical Responsibility" Brücher's attribution of moral responsibility to Haeckel is of a type commonly found in history, though the structure of these kinds of judgments usually goes unnoticed, lying as it does in the deep grammar of historiography. For example, historians will often credit, say, Copernicus, in the fifteenth century, with the courage to have broken through the rigidity of Ptolemaic assumption and, thus, by unshackling men's minds, to have initiated the scientific revolution of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This, too, is a moral appraisal of historical responsibility, though, needless to say, Copernicus himself never uttered: "I now intend to free men's minds and initiate the scientific revolution." Yet, historians do assign him credit for that -- moral credit for giving successors the ability to think differently and productively. The epistemological and historical justification for this type of judgment is simply that the meaning and value of an idea or set of ideas can be realized only in actions that themselves may take some long time to develop -- this signals the ineluctable teleological feature of history. While this type of judgment derives from the moral grammar of history, this doesn't mean, of course, that every particular judgment of this sort is justified. The Reaction of Contemporary Historians How has Haeckel gone down with contemporary historians? Not well. His ideas, mixed with his aggressive and combative personality, have lodged in the arteries feeding the critical faculties of many historians, causing sputtering convulsions. Daniel Gasman has argued that Haeckel's "social Darwinism became one of the most important formative causes for the rise of the Nazi movement." [14] Stephen Jay Gould and many others concur that Haeckel's biological theories, supported, as Gould contends, by an "irrational mysticism" and a penchant for casting all into inevitable laws, "contributed to the rise of Nazism." [15] And most recently, in a book published last summer, entitled From Darwin to Hitler, Richard Weikart traces the metastatic line his title describes, with the mid-center of that line encircling Ernst Haeckel. Weikart offers his book as a disinterested historical analysis. In the objective fashion that bespeaks the scientific historian, he declares, "I will leave it to the reader to decide how straight or twisted the path is from Darwinism to Hitler after reading my account." [16] Well, after reading his account, there can be little doubt not only of the direct causal path from Charles Darwin through Ernst Haeckel to Adolf Hitler but also of Darwin's and Haeckel's complicity in the atrocities committed by Hitler and his party. They bear historical responsibility. It is disingenuous, I believe, for the author to pretend that most readers might come to their own conclusions despite the moral grammar of this history. Weikart, Gasman, Gould, and many other historians have created a historical narrative implicitly following -- they could not do otherwise -- the principles of narrative grammar: they have conceptualized an end point -- Hitler's behavior regarded here as ethically horrendous -- and have traced back causal lines to antecedent sources that might have given rise to those attitudes of Hitler, tainting those sources along the way. It is like a spreading oil slick carried on an indifferent current and polluting everything it touches. Now one can cavil, which I certainly would, about many deficiencies in the performance of these historians. They have not, for instance, properly weighed the significance of the many other causal lines that led to Hitler's behavior -- the social, political, cultural, and psychological strands that many other historians have, in fact, emphasized. And they thus have produced a mono-causal analysis which quite distorts the historical picture. While responsibility assigned Darwin and Haeckel might be mitigated by a more realistic weighing of causal trajectories, some culpability might, nonetheless, remain. Yet is there any consideration that might make us sever not the causal chain but the chain of moral responsibility? After all, Haeckel and, of course, Darwin had been dead decades before the rise of the Nazis. And as Monty Python might have put it, they're still dead. [...] Conclusion It can only be a tendentious and dogmatically driven assessment that would condemn Darwin for the crimes of the Nazis. I will confess, though, that I have not yet made up my own mind about the historical responsibility of Haeckel, with whom I have considerable sympathy. [...] [Robert J. Richards (2005). The 2005 Nora and Edward Ryerson Lecture: "The Narrative Structure of Moral Judgments in History: Evolution and Nazi Biology." Given on April 12, 2005. The University of Chicago Record, May 26, 2005.]
— Robert J. Richards
141 Comments
Sir_Toejam · 17 June 2006
I've never understood why historians felt a need to the apparent source of Hitlers behavior.
you don't need a linneage; all you need are three things to explain Hitler's rise to power:
Ignorance
Desperation
Apathy
Ignorance of information about the how much each of us share, rahter than what divides us. in Hitler's case, he used that ignorance to make the jewish into a scapegoat for...
Desperation - Whenever a group of peope feel threatened, and see a dim future, desperation can motivate behavior that would otherwise seem unlikely. Germany after the treaty of Versailles was a MESS. sending a letter cost 1-2 million marks; buying a loaf of bread cost a "wheelbarrow" full of cash.
Apathy - It became easy to "look the other way" when given promises of a better life to come.
No need to propose any particular historical linneage. The pattern repeats itself throughout history, up to the present day.
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 17 June 2006
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 17 June 2006
Mark · 17 June 2006
I had a weird conversation with a YEC co-worker on this subject. When she made this Darwin-Hitler connection, I asked, "So, are you calling ME a Nazi? Are you saying that I believe in the extermination of Jews, or in eugenics, or anything else, at all, that the Nazis believed? Have you seen ANY evidence that would give support to that concusion?" She pretty much abandoned the idea on the spot, because when directed at any actual human being, it's obviously ridiculous. Her easy capitulation was actually MORE frustrating, because I know she'll still use the argument later. Intellectual integrity doesn't seem to be a vital component of that worldview, so being thoroughly refuted, even to the point of admitting that your argument is illogical, doesn't preclude using it later if it serves the cause. Ad hominem arguments, however, are okey-dokey.
Nick (Matzke) · 17 June 2006
Tom Curtis · 17 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 17 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 17 June 2006
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 17 June 2006
My standard response to all the "Hitler is the result of evolution" crapola can be found at:
http://www.talkreason.org/articles/Hitler.cfm
Adam Ierymenko · 17 June 2006
"My standard response to all the "Hitler is the result of evolution" crapola can be found at:
http://www.talkreason.org/articles/Hitler.cfm"
Ahh... but that there is facts and reason. Facts and reason come from the Devil.
Registered User · 18 June 2006
I hope everyone here will pre-order my book, From Goehring to Weikart: the History of Propagandists, Intelligent Design, and Liars for Jesus".
The best chapter I can tell you about is the one where Weikart gets Casey Luskin drunk on wine for the first time. It's called "Cathedral of Tears" and when you read the transcripts you will freak.
Bob O'H · 18 June 2006
LackOfDiscipline · 18 June 2006
Good article Rev. Dr. I was not aware that Hitler justified much of his crimes via Divine Right.
Sadly, it's expected that the creationists/IDers would assert that a "philosophy" (evolution) that produces mass violence is evil, while they completely ignore the fact that religious literature is the inspiration for much of the violence through history. I guess, as usual, there is simply no reason to expect them to apply any form of logic in the first place.
Popper's Ghost · 18 June 2006
a maine yankee · 18 June 2006
Who does the DI blame for all those "tyrants" and mass murderers before 1859? Vlad Tepes, et al.
Could it be they all had precognition of The Origin? Were the witch hunts a precursor of natural selection? History, bloody history, makes so much sense now.
Alan B. · 18 June 2006
To the extent that any theory of eugenics is based on evolution, it would seem to me to be based on the principles of microevolution, understood by plant and animal breeders for centuries prior to Darwin. The connection between macroevolution and eugenics (never mind Nazism) has never made any sense to me.
TomS · 18 June 2006
A couple of points:
The early 20th century was known as the period in which "darwinian evolution" was out of favor with scientists.
It was called the "Eclipse of Darwinism". It seems to be that the various social/political movements of that era
relied more on "mendelism" or even "lamarckianism" or just simply the kind of folkloric beliefs about "blood
lines".
Our contemporaneous anti-evolutionists make a point of telling us that they accept "micro"evolution -
evolution "within kinds" - and reject only "macro"evolution. There is no way that anyone can tie major
evolutionary events (such as the natural origin of the bacterial flagellum) to these social/political movements.
If there is any evolution implicated, it is most clearly evolution within "human kind".
If the anti-evolutionists want to suggest that acceptance of evolution has evil consequences, then they
ought to tell us how they can reconcile this with their acceptance of "micro"evolution.
science nut · 18 June 2006
Registered User wrote:
"I hope everyone here will pre-order my book, From Goehring to Weikart: the History of Propagandists, Intelligent Design, and Liars for Jesus."
May I suggest a book cover to parody the one with Darwin and Hitler? How about a cover showing pictures of Dr. William Dembski and Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels? ...and a fading picture of all the DI fellows in the background!!!!
doyle · 18 June 2006
One point that might be made: Darwin discovered something that turns out to be true. He didn't develop a school of thought or a branch of philosophy. He can be "blamed" for nothing. If it were true that various people abandoned morality in the face of this truth, that doesn't make evolution less true. It is also true that the earth does not sit on the back of a turtle, and revolves around the sun. But to fundamentalists, (potentially) dangerous truth = false. Here, the creationist/ID message can be seen most starkly: we must suppress knowledge for the good of the people.
the pro from dover · 18 June 2006
Charles Darwin was an opponent of eugenics despite the fact that it was a product of his cousin Francis Galton. The theory of natural selection depends on diversity of inherited characteristics. Those species that are the most successful will have the greatest variety of potential adaptations. This will permit some of their populations to enter new ecologic niches and successfully compete with the occupants of these niches. This was his "wedge strategy". Then when barriers (usually physical ones) separated those populations from the original parental stock then over time these divergences of characters would prevent these separate groups from interbreeding when they later became reintroduced by some other natural event.
This is how a new species is created. The idea of a "purity of race" was diametrically opposed to natural selection which depended on variability and Darwin fought it whenever it came up, starting with Herbert Spencer. A lot of the Coulterization of the abuse of the word "evolution" is like terrorist bombers like Timothy McVey justifying their actions because they were told that "the big bang" was the "scientific truth" in physics class which is scientific proof that explosions are beneficial.
Torbjörn Larsson · 18 June 2006
My personal reaction, which I'm sure has been repeated any number of times before, was "Whaaat... Wasn't hatred of jews and that particular miscegenation based on Hitler's and the culture's belief in christianity? Which, btw, is the basis for creationism. Can DI play that game much longer?"
I also thought Hitler and his closest associates was flirting with pantheism and german mythology ("aryan races") as mentioned elsewhere, but reading Lenny's article I'm not so sure anymore.
Keith Douglas · 18 June 2006
Laser · 18 June 2006
The Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC shows a short film about Hitler's rise to power. According to the film, Hitler derived much of his anti-Semitic rhetoric from some writings of Martin Luther. I wonder how Weikart missed that?
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 18 June 2006
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 18 June 2006
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 18 June 2006
Sean Walker · 18 June 2006
Oppressive Totalitarian Regimes are a direct result of evolution.
When's the Discovery Institute going to write books about Al Queda and Sadam?
Oh, that might fly in the face of their logic and it would require an original argument. I guess it will be a long time in coming.
haliaeetus · 18 June 2006
J. G. Cox · 18 June 2006
Roger Albin · 18 June 2006
People interested in this complicated topic might take a look at the work of the late George Mosse. A leading expert on Nazi ideology, Mosse wrote some interesting essays on 19th century racism. One of his basic points is that 19th century racism often involved the deliberate rejection of scientific rationalism.
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 18 June 2006
haliaeetus · 18 June 2006
Yeah, I recall reading somewhere Joe was somewhat of a anti-semetic bigot who favored appeasement of Hitler. Did he help the Third Reich financially - and/or profit from it - as did Prescott?
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 18 June 2006
I don't think Kennedy had any direct financial ties. Just an apologist and appeaser.
Carol Clouser · 18 June 2006
Folks,
Having carefully read all the above posts and Lenny's lengthy talkreason article, I can only conclude that you all miss the point. YOU JUST DO NOT GET IT! And you cannot battle your oppenents if you do not understand them.
The point is not what Hitler or Darwin said or didn't say, what they believed or didn't believe. We all know that people don't always verbalize precisely what they mean, and don't always mean what they verbalize, especially when they have hidden agendas up their sleeve.
The point, my friends, is this: Evolution is based on the idea that nature operates on the basis of Nazi-like tactics. Survival of the fittest implies that ethics, morality, right and wrong, are all tossed to the wind and the ONLY thing that matters to the development of life is how "fit" (albeit with all the comlexities that word entails, something that is usually glossed over) an organism is.
When I see a video clip of 6 or 7 hyenas getting their food by ripping flesh from a live zebra, for example, I can only shake my head and say to myself - what on earth did that poor zebra do to deserve such a fate. And the even larger question then becomes - what kind of God is this who builds his universe on the basis of this kind of process? By glorifying this into a mulit-billion year process upon which the fundamentals of life are based, evolution comes face to face with these Nazi-like tactics and implies that the process of building life is God-less.
Now, you might say that this is going on anyway, right in front of our eyes, even before Darwin was born. True. But with humankind around, a religious person can convince himself that this is one of the defects in the world that God has assigned to us the task to rectify. Humans and only humans are the ones with the free will (as opposed to those hyenas) and the partnership with God to civilize and perfect the planet.
I say this as a friend of science and evolution in particular. Those of you who know me, know that I accept evolution as a fact of life (and know that the Bible does too). So don't start throwing mud my way, it will do you no good. Deal with the issues.
Glen Davidson · 18 June 2006
Actually, Carol, Nazi tactics are not the general mechanism(s) of evolution. The selfish gene rules, not warfare against other societies. This is why the Nazi's (and Hitler's) use of pro-individualistic Nietzsche was such bad philosophy (btw, it's absurd to suggest Hitler was a Xian in anything but registry, given his appeals to highly atheistic Nietzsche, and Goebbel's reports of Hitlers verbal attacks on Xianity).
On the other hand, if one selfish person decides to kill an ethnic group, don't look to evolution to oppose it. Evolution is indeed amoral, and humans appear to have exterminated many groups (one reason we exist).
However, religion has very often been a part of the struggle of one group to prevail over another. Thus we do not look to religion to save us from ourselves--nor do we really have much reason to suggest that secularism will make us wonderful beings either. That is to say, religion is often considered to be "the solution", but hasn't been in the entirety of recorded history.
The one thing I think we should acknowledge is that no one has "the solution" to the violence that our humanity typically finds appalling (at least in our well-fed state). To claim that secularism or science per se will save us is probably wrong (Nazis tended to favor both), much as saying religion will save us is absurd.
Finally, though, I doubt that we will deal with our problems by denying what we are, substituting an idealistic religious vision in its place. This would only set us up for more rounds of violence.
The Holocaust happened exactly where the Enlightenment made its smallest impact in Europe. For ourselves, that is a powerful argument in favor of the societies that embody Enlightenment ideals. I will concede that it is not much of an argument to those who think religion has the answers.
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/b8ykm
Registered User · 18 June 2006
Carol Clouser, the disengenuous book promoter, writes:
The point, my friends, is this: Evolution is based on the idea that nature operates on the basis of Nazi-like tactics.
Ah yes. This is the part of Darwin's theory that is often forgotten. The cooperative herding behavior of buffalos didn't evolve as a mechanism for protecting themselves from carnivorous predators.
In fact, the herds are buffalo Concentration Camps organized by wolves with the help of those appeasing prairie dogs.
Tune in next week when Carol tells us about the Final Solution for the aphid problem.
Registered User · 18 June 2006
Glen D
it's absurd to suggest Hitler was a Xian in anything but registry
No more absurd than suggesting the same for the professional liars, propagandists and gay bigots at the Discovery Institute, or the people who carried out the Spanish Inquisition.
Let's face it: the argument that American Christianity is a near bankrupt religion is not a particularly difficult one to make. If Hitler ever said he was Christian then that's pretty much all it takes to be one. For all we know, he prayed for forgiveness in that bunker, found Jesus, and is up there in Heaven right now. Who's to say? Anyone here know otherwise?
I didn't think so.
Arden Chatfield · 18 June 2006
JS · 18 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 18 June 2006
have i ever mentioned how much BS the Clouserbot can produce on a single thread before?
I think I have.
Oh well.
"Clouser, Clouser, Clouser!"
carol clouser · 18 June 2006
Glen,
Warfare per se is not what makes Nazism stand out. It is wholesale cruelty visited upon the weak, the defenseless, and the less powerful that makes Nazism stand out in its barbarity and evilness. In doing so Hitler (may his name and memory be erased) gained nourishment and encouragement from evolution where he saw this type of behavior given the imprimatur of nature (and God) as described by science. If long necked giraffes survive at the expense of the short necked ones who cannot reach to the upper branches of trees, and the long necked fellows don't even think about altruistically sharing with their weaker brethren and as a result they wither away, than that is in the spirit of Nazism.
Vyoma · 18 June 2006
carol clouser · 18 June 2006
Vyoma,
I don't see why you are having difficulty with my "point". But I will try and rephrase it so that even you can understand. What evil minded people see in evolution is that the (God's designed) natural world is based on the proposition that it is OK to engage in Nazi-like tactics, so long as the "fit" do it to the less fit for the sake of their becoming more fit. And equating humans to animals is absolutely part of the fabric of evolution, as you probably know. This was an endorsement the Nazis derived from evolution. I have even heard it in interviews with gang members and mafia hit men. "It is the way of the world," say they.
haliaeetus · 18 June 2006
From what I've gleaned from my readings, Hitler was a follower of Luther, and was trying to remake the Church in the image of Luther's anti-semitism.
Was Luther a "Christian?" By all accounts he was.
haliaeetus · 18 June 2006
John Monfries · 18 June 2006
This kind of guilt-by-later-"association" thinking spreads well beyond the English-speaking world. Last year in Indonesia, I came across what seems to be a translation into Indonesian of a book by the well-known Turkish creationist Harun Yahya. The title was "Bencana Kemanusiaan Akibat Darwinisme", (The Human Tragedy Arising from Darwinism), and the cover showed photos of such famous soul-mates as Darwin, Hitler, Stalin, Mao and Mussolini. The insidious thing about this is that - as far as I can see - no truthful information about evolution gets into Indonesia, so people like Yahya have the field to themselves.
Arden Chatfield · 19 June 2006
Jim Harrison · 19 June 2006
No thug ever needed to read the Origin of Species to learn how to excuse his actions by claiming "that's the way of the world."
By the way, trying to blame 16th Century religious leaders (Luther) for 20th Century political monsters (Hitler) may or may not be useful rhetoric. It's pretty hard to defend as a historical explanation, however, unless you think that historical figures, like Neoplatonic Gods, transcend time and control future human beings by remote control.
Sir_Toejam · 19 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 19 June 2006
Popper's Ghost · 19 June 2006
Popper's Ghost · 19 June 2006
Vyoma · 19 June 2006
Vyoma · 19 June 2006
Caledonian · 19 June 2006
Laser · 19 June 2006
TomS · 19 June 2006
Today's anti-evolutionists accept evolution within "humankind".
That's just "micro"-evolution, so they repeatedly tell us.
The claim that acceptance of evolution gives support to
evil clearly has reference only to micro-evolution,
evolution as it applies to humans.
There are no conceivable moral consequences to the
acceptance of "macro"evolution, such as the origins of
the vertebrate eye.
How can one be a pro-micro-evolutionist, and argue that
micro-evolution gives support to evil?
Carol Clouser · 19 June 2006
Caledonian,
"Stand out from what? Those traits are pretty much the standard for human societies throughout history. Does the name 'Jericho' ring a bell, Clouser?"
Now, why would you bring up Jericho of all places? To make yourself, the Christian anti-semite that you are, feel better about the unmitigated and uninterrupted evil behavior of your coreligionists throughout the millennia toward the Jews, by saying to yourself "everyone including the Jews behaved this way".
Well, it does not work. This is an old ignorant anti-semitic canard. The fact that you have to go back over three thousand years to dig up some dirt against the Jews speaks volumes all by itself.
And the argument is devoid of any merit. According to most scholars and archeologists, absolutely nothing happened at Jericho. And if you are taking the Bible as your reliable and dependable source, then logic dictates that you consider all that it says about those events. Are you ready to do that? Whenever you are, just let me know.
Vayoma and Popper's Ghost,
Everything you say is correct and my original statement still stands.
STJM,
It is not my job to teach you basic history. Go get a well rounded education for a change.
k.e. · 19 June 2006
Glen Davidson · 19 June 2006
Glen Davidson · 19 June 2006
Arden Chatfield · 19 June 2006
Vyoma · 19 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 19 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 19 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 19 June 2006
Glen Davidson · 19 June 2006
Some zionists might be the equal of creationists, indeed. But Einstein was counted as a zionist (I don't believe he denied that he was, though I could not back up the claim), and seemed to have more concern for the Palestinians than we have seen in too many zionists (to be fair, Israel has been more sensitive to Palestinians lately, though they have a long way to go). Zionists like those at Tikkun, while they are not especially my preference, are often strong critics of, say, Shamir's policies.
I say this hoping to help head off a potential unnecessary fight over Jews, Israel, problems from both sides of the conflict, and events which occurred in ancient Israel. It's rather off-topic anyway, though it isn't surprising that these issues do come up on this thread.
I certainly have sympathy with Sir TJ's point about past genocidal wars, conflicts, and outright exterminations.
However, this is one reason why I don't like too much blame being placed upon religions for their sins and, well, atrocities. Humans have done very bad things, and evolution is what mostly explains, but does not excuse, these things. Enlightened religionists and non-theists can both get past the past if they are more interested in the future than in old vendettas. This is why I was reluctant to bring up Biblical genocides, but really it is too much to suggest that scientific evolution was a positive causal factor in Hitler's evil (though non-scientific evolution did), when religion (many religions, of course) has played a role in too many atrocities (I'm not saying that ideology and cultural identity wouldn't have sufficed in past genocides if theology hadn't been present to use, but it was present and it was used).
Genocides have been all too frequent, and even in our time we have too often turned a blind eye (Darfur?). We are limited, quite obviously, and we have a substantial violent inheritance from our primate forebears. If we stick with the Enlightenment, rather than falling for superstitious "causation", we will work to understand genocide and attempt to prevent these, without especially blaming anybody except those directly responsible.
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/b8ykm
Glen Davidson · 19 June 2006
Sorry, I meant "Sharon" where I wrote "Shamir".
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/b8ykm
Carol Clouser · 19 June 2006
Vyoma,
"I said that you weren't making a valid point. I'm glad that we can agree on this."
I was referring to the substance of your remarks pertaining to evolution and Nazism, not the sideshow of whether you think I am making a point or not.
"I'm glad that you agree that evolutionary biology and Darwinian theory are in no way culpable for any attempt by Nazis to use them as a justification for committing atrocities,"
I never said they were culpable. I said the Nazis used evolution, in THEIR minds, as an endorsement of their tactics, and so do other types of evil doers, and that this is the case irrespective of what Hitler or Darwin said or didn't say.
"and I'm glad that you assent that your contention that Darwinian theory equates human, reasoning animals to those that cannot reason was unfounded."
I never equated humans to animals nor did I ever imply that Darwinian theory does. In fact,the Nazi argument from animals is far stronger than from humans precisely because the animals, unlike humans, cannot (we assume) reason. Their behavior is thus perfectly "natural". I did say that "equating humans to animals is part of the 'fabric' of evolution" by which I was referring to the proposition that humans are refined apes. This does tend to blur the wide chasm between these respective species.
"It's nice to see that you are capable of giving up so egregious an argument as you are considering how vehemently you have attempted to defend the points which you have now wisely rejected."
You are ignoring the end of my sentence, to the effect that "the original statement still stands". And indeed it does. I am giving up NOTHING, except having a rational discus ion with YOU.
STJM,
I can tell that your understanding of the holocaust is skewed and distorted by the way you keep repeating the word "zionist". You obviously do not know what the term means. You really need to bone up in this area. Read some Elie Wiesel or something. I do not want to get into this here and now.
Vyoma · 19 June 2006
Scott · 19 June 2006
I think I get what Clouser is trying to say. Leaders of certain groups have taken the notion of the phrase, "survival of the fittest", and twisted it to say that, "We [our group] are [obviously] the fittest, therefore we are [obviously] intended by Nature to survive, and so we should hasten the demise of those who aren't as "fit" as we are." Better yet, they get to claim a "scientific" justification for their political views. I think this is the darker side of eugenics. It is obviously a misuse of the evolutionary notion of "fitness", but it is a common one.
But as I see it, this notion of imposing one's will on others is completely independent of Evolution. Many groups in history have claimed a special place in creation, proclaiming to the faithful that anyone who is not one of "us" is [obviously] not "fit" [or blessed enough or moral enough or intelligent enough] to survive, and it is therefore acceptable (even desirable) to do bad things to those who are not "us".
But claiming that Evolution *causes* such human behaviour is confusing natural "causality" with a very human "justification". One could just as easily claim that a belief in Alah "causes" such behaviour, or that a belief in God "causes" such behaviour. It's like saying that the hyenas got together and *decided* that the zebras were less "fit", and so needed to be eaten.
Darth Robo · 19 June 2006
Just stumbled across this (unintentionally) amusing post.
Carol wrote:
"Evolution is based on the idea that nature operates on the basis of Nazi-like tactics. Survival of the fittest implies that ethics, morality, right and wrong, are all tossed to the wind"
As had already been pointed out, the Nazi's were not the first or only ones to use these tactics.
"When I see a video clip of 6 or 7 hyenas getting their food by ripping flesh from a live zebra, for example, I can only shake my head and say to myself - what on earth did that poor zebra do to deserve such a fate."
"But with humankind around, a religious person can convince himself that this is one of the defects in the world that God has assigned to us the task to rectify. Humans and only humans are the ones with the free will (as opposed to those hyenas) and the partnership with God to civilize and perfect the planet."
Humans are the only ones with free will? And any animal "lower" than us doesn't? Surely it's a mistake to confuse a lesser intelligence with a lack of free will.
And could you (or God) also elaborate on how we would attempt make Hyena's more civilized? I suppose one could try to hand them a knife, a fork, a napkin and a nice dinner suit then they would just turn around and LAUGH AT YOU. Before ripping you to shreds. (Ramen)
Sorry if I'm a bit harsh, but equating Hitler with "Darwinism" is fallacious at best and it kinda bugs me. I wouldn't throw all religious people together just because Hitler was religious.
Bill Gascoyne · 19 June 2006
I always want to ask the people who associate Darwin with Nazis if they make a similar association between the Beatles and Charles Manson. I wouldn't put it past some of them.
Carol Clouser · 19 June 2006
Vayoma,
I will go over this one more time, a special treat for you.
"This doesn't even make sense. According to everything you've now said, it's your assertion that the Nazis used Darwinian theory as an excuse to commit attrocities and misrepresented what was actually propounded in the theory. In which case, who cares? How is this any different than attrocities wherein justification is made on any other basis?"
You are twisting my words here and misrepresenting what I wrote. I said nothing about the Nazis making "excuses", nor did I say that they misrepresented evolution. Unfortunately, they understood evolution correctly and accurately. Then they proceeded from there to certain conclusuion that they deemed to be supported by evolution. And therein lies the tragedy.
Who cares? Why, I do and so should you! How can you not care? What planet are you from? How is this different? It is connected to our work as scientists and we need to take responsibility. Besides, it is an argument in the hands of our opponents in the religious communities.
A better question you may have asked would have been: What can we as scientists do about it? I have some thoughts on this issue but you are not yet ready to hear them. First you need to care.
"And no, humans are not "equated" to apes in On the Origin of Species nor anywhere else I've ever encountered outside of the straw men set up by Creationists of various stripes. The whole point of evolutionary biology --- and I repeat this for a second time --- is to explain the differences between organisms, not to dismiss them. Humans are not "refined apes" anymore than moose are "refined deer." The whole point of Darwinian theory right through the modern synthesis and up to the latest molecular biology is to demonstrate the difference between organisms. What part of this are you failing to comperehend?"
You are flat out wrong. Evolution is as much about similarities as it is about differences. And to say otherwise is unadulterated silliness. This is applicable both to genetics and behavior.
"Evolution demonstrates relatedness and ancestry. It shows us how little change is really necessary for organisms to diverge in radical ways while allowing us to reconstruct life's history and make predictions about its future."
The "how little change" part of your statement is true but has only been realized recently. And this has nothing to do with the topic at hand.
Carol Clouser · 19 June 2006
Darth Robo,
"Just stumbled across this (unintentionally) amusing post."
Glad you enjoyed it. Hope you learned something from it too.
"As had already been pointed out, the Nazi's were not the first or only ones to use these tactics."
But they were a major user based on race (loosely speaking) and the concept of genetic superiority (fitness).
"Humans are the only ones with free will? And any animal "lower" than us doesn't? Surely it's a mistake to confuse a lesser intelligence with a lack of free will."
Truly "free will" does require some level of reasoning in order to transecend instinct and selfishness.
"And could you (or God) also elaborate on how we would attempt make Hyena's more civilized? I suppose one could try to hand them a knife, a fork, a napkin and a nice dinner suit then they would just turn around and LAUGH AT YOU. Before ripping you to shreds."
You think you're funny. Did you think of providing food so they are not hungry enough to be willing to put up with all that hard work to obtain their food? We should do it for the Zebras! Join PETA and prevent this cruelty to animals, not by humans, but by other animals.
Or to get even funnier, perhaps to protect the zebras we eliminate the uncivilized hyenas (they are thieves too), therby ridding the world of this cruel and uncivilized element. I think lions are far more civilized. They try to kill in seconds and usually succeed. In any event, I was speculating as to how theologians might resolve this problem of God's universe being naturally based on so much cruelty and suffering (on the part of creatures with no free will). But the problem is much bigger with evolution. Then this unsavory business went on for billions of years in the absence of humans, as opposed to a mere few thousand years and in the presence of humans. This is also why fundamentalists see evolution as Godless.
Vyoma · 19 June 2006
the pro from dover · 19 June 2006
A little more about giraffes. The phenomenon of giraffes strrrrrreeeeeetttttching their long necks to get those tender tidbits ia a zoo related pseudophenomenon. Even if their necks were proportional to their bodies giraffes would still tower over all other browsers. In fact those long necks don't give any giraffes survival value over their shortnecked brethren because of a feeding advantage. The advantage is in sex. Giraffe males use their long necks in combat over rivals and can inflict grevious wounds with them. When faced with a predator they fight them with kicks but they fight rivals with their necks and heads. Lamarck loved giraffes because they were the perfect example of acquiring a characteristic that would adapt them to their environment. Wrong. Darwin was much more intersted in a giraffes tail and had nothing to say about the neck. Wise man. The expression "survival of the fittest" is not a Darwin original. It comes from Herbert Spencer. Spencer was a good friend of T.H.Huxley (also referred to as "Darwin's Lenny"), and it's use was suggested by A.R. Wallace to Darwin because it was already in wide use in England and people understood it better than "natural selection". This was a mistake in retrospect because it is reproduction not survival that matters in the end (although you must survive to reproduce-as long as your not an aphid). This also explains why on the veldt one frequently sees shortnecked male giraffes with their manes in a combover with gold chains around their necks driving Miatas. I will not make the obvious comparison of the neck of the giraffe to the shoe size of the human male.
Darth Robo · 19 June 2006
Carol wrote:
"But they were a major user based on race (loosely speaking) and the concept of genetic superiority (fitness)."
I still maintain that Nazi's weren't the first ones to do it. The slave trade ("based on race (loosely speaking)") is a good example of tossing "ethics, morality, right and wrong" to the wind. This was practiced by many countries centuries ago under the preconception of superiority. Maybe not "genetic" superiority specifically, since genetics wasn't discovered by that time. But basically it was the "I'M better than YOU" excuse. Yet you still equated evolution with the Nazi's. I understand why fundamentalists see evolution as Godless. I also understand why they're wrong. I apologize if I missed the point about theologians dealing with the cruelty and suffering issue.
"Truly "free will" does require some level of reasoning in order to transecend instinct and selfishness."
Just curious, but on this "scale of free will amongst animals", with humans presumably being placed at the top, just how can we measure the amount of free will other animals have? Which animals do have free will and which don't? This sounds like the "I'M better than YOU (animals)" thing to me.
Sir_Toejam · 19 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 19 June 2006
Henry J · 19 June 2006
Re "(although you must survive to reproduce - as long as your not an aphid)."
Or a male praying mantis. ;)
Henry
Carol Clouser · 20 June 2006
Darth Robo,
No need to apologize. With many intervening posts, it is sometimes difficult to keep one's eye on the ball.
Measuring free will? Interesting question. One would need to first define the term precisely, then do a study. I personally am having trouble accepting free will for humans, let alone animals.
Vayoma,
Not trying to pull rank on you in the tragedy department, but I too have lost many close relatives to the Nazis (may their memory be obliterated).
I have described my background at length in other threads. I have a Ph.D in physics, but probably know more about biology than many biologists do about physics, the fundamental science. I was a working research physicist for a few years, many years ago, but the visicitudes of life eventually animated me into secondary education, serving as the director of science in a large northeastern (US) school system. For the last few years I have worked as a freelance editor of scholarly books, focused primarily on science and religion topics.
TJM,
Your attitude and tactics demonstrate that YOU are incapable of dealing with, let alone ever accepting, alternate views, at least on matters that even remotely interface with science. Your brain is stuck in concrete, much like any fundamentalist's.
I am under no obligation to present you with any evidence for anything. You are free to believe or not believe anything I say about anything. I couldn't care less. Happy mud throwing!
Sir_Toejam · 20 June 2006
Vyoma · 20 June 2006
Roland Anderson · 20 June 2006
Yes it's true. All members of the SS were required to swear an oath of undying loyalty to Charles Darwin with their right hand on a copy of the Origin of Species and their left hand on a portrait of Ronald Fisher. If Darwin had not existed then there would have been no genocides or crime of any kind, and all of us would be living in a flowery meadow where everyone lives like brothers and sisters and Pimm's is on tap, just like the world was before 1859. All deprivation, violence and unhappiness is caused by humankind's despair at the idea of being related to chimps.
Now please can someone explain why this means that the theory of evolution does not account for the diversity of life on Earth?
kyangadac · 20 June 2006
It's probably late in the day to buy into this thread but there are some fairly dubious assumptions being made on both sides of the argument here.
Firstly, Darwinism and the eugenics movement which it inspired(see below) were not confined to Germany but were the common currency of European's especially those of Anglo origin from about 1870 on.
I (and others - see Richard Broome's 'Aboriginal Victoria' Chapter 9, M.U.P. 2005) can clearly identify the effect of the spread of Social Darwinism during the 1870's in Australia. By the 1890's the validity of racial superiority was so unquestioned that, Aborginal people were deliberately excluded from the Australian Constitution on the grounds of their supposed racial inferiority. This was finally corrected in the referendum of 1966.
The eugenic ideas of Nazi Germany were widely admired in most countries of European origin during the 1930's.
The idea of racial superiority is present in the writing of both Darwin and Wallace. The idea that Darwin and Wallace were writing some value free science is just hogwash. They were both completely aware of the political implications of what they were writing. From their point of view identifying humans as all belonging the same race(in spite of skin color)established their liberal credentials. But they had no compunction in regarding 'natives' as inferior races to be bred out.
A practice that was institutionalized in Western Australia from 1915 to 1944.
Darwinian evolution is a paradigm not a value free discovery. Scientists who pretend otherwise are as blind as creationists.
Aureola Nominee, FCD · 20 June 2006
Maybe a little less equivocation between "Darwinism", "Social Darwinism", and pure and simple racism would be advisable.
k.e. · 20 June 2006
kyangadac · 20 June 2006
k.e. · 20 June 2006
Aureola Nominee, FCD · 20 June 2006
I'd be really interested in finding out whether "countries of European origin" were any less racist around, say, 1815 or so, before big bad ugly "Darwinism" reared its head.
Paradigm, my rear end!
kyangadac · 20 June 2006
Nick (Matzke) · 20 June 2006
Aureola Nominee, FCD · 20 June 2006
kyangadac:
I am still waiting for you to explain how e.g. the British Empire was any less racist in 1815 than it was in 1875.
If the shameful treatment of Australian Aboriginals was linked to "Darwinism", one would expect that treatment to arise after Darwin published his magnum opus.
Laser · 20 June 2006
Nick, regarding your points:
1. I agree that anti-Semitism didn't start nor did it end with Luther, and that the Holocaust Museum film didn't put all (or much) of the blame at his feet. Still, just because someone has been dead for 400 years doesn't mean their ideas aren't influential. Why do people say things along the lines of "So-and-so has been dead for hundreds of years, so they had no (or little) influence"? Descartes has been dead for 400 years, and his ideas are still influential. People still read the works of Plato, Aristotle, and others, even though they have been dead thousands of years. Sun Tzu's The Art of War is required reading at West Point--how long has he been dead?
2. Fair enough.
3. I second your nomination.
Torbjörn Larsson · 20 June 2006
I realise, especially after reading the thread, that it is only partial true to claim that christianity was the reason for Hitler's and Germany's racism. Racism based on building an ingroup is older of course. But on a similar note I think Glen is wrong when he says that "To claim that secularism or science per se will save us is probably wrong (Nazis tended to favor both), much as saying religion will save us is absurd" since religion has this exact modus operandi. A relative morality doesn't include ingroups as a basis, and I think any morality that does is bad.
Carol and kyangadac wants to confuse the use of science as a tool with a social and political background in which these ideas were spawned and are used. One can always discuss the proper use of a tool, but I can't see them doing credible cases for their contentions.
Specifically in Carol's case the fact that nature such as in evolution and ecology shows that diversity is a result and is more robust shows that racism and eugenics are contrafactual to our theories. Other similar areas are markets of different kinds where selection breeds diversity. Logically Carol should blaim them too since they support the general picture.
Glen Davidson · 20 June 2006
Jim Harrison · 20 June 2006
The comments section of an internet post is no place to contest deeply embedded folk-notions about how history works. But maybe it's worthwhile to at least raise the suspicion that blaming Hitler on Darwin is goofy not only because Darwin is a weird choice for villain, but because of the dubiousness of the whole business of "blaming individuals for the calamaties of ages."
So far from being responsible for Hitler, Luther doesn't have all the much to do with what Lutheranism became after his death, which, by the way, church historians have been telling us for some time now. If there's ever a day of judgment, Luther will have plenty of explaining to do for what he wrote and did in his own time, but it's worse than unjust to blame him for what people would do with his name centuries later. It's a mistake.
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 20 June 2006
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 20 June 2006
the pro from dover · 20 June 2006
Darwin was unquestionably a cultural elitist but his writings clearly show that he did not believe "savages" to be constitutionally inferior to white Europeans at all. Wallace was even more vocal in his belief in the equality of all races even though he believed human intelligence to be divinely designed. Compared to attitudes even 100 years later they were pretty darn enlightened. Actually the idea of "survival of the fittest" probably came initially from T. Malthus although H. Spencer was the one who popularized it.
Henry J · 20 June 2006
Re "Stop zebra cruelty! Kill all the hyenas!"
Then when the zerbras have overpopulated and are either starving or raiding farm crops, what then? ;)
--------
Re "If the shameful treatment of Australian Aboriginals was linked to "Darwinism", one would expect that treatment to arise after Darwin published his magnum opus."
Was H.G. Wells involved?
Henry
Nick (Matzke) · 21 June 2006
Here's a thought: perhaps we could blame Hitler for Hitler.
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 21 June 2006
And the people who elected him.
Aureola Nominee, FCD · 21 June 2006
...and the people who elected the politicians of other countries who cheered the "law and order" Hitler brought to chaotic Germany.
Carol Clouser · 21 June 2006
Henry J,
"Then when the zerbras have overpopulated and are either starving or raiding farm crops, what then?"
Then we cull the herd HUMANELY. I am sure you can figure out ways of doing so.
One thing we ought not do is hunt for sport and in disregard of the suffering that causes. And I am proud to say that my people do not engage in such activity nor does the Hebrew Bible allow for it.
k.e. · 21 June 2006
Wow
Give me a
breakgenocide Carol.Documented over and over in your Bible.
kyangadac · 21 June 2006
TomS · 21 June 2006
IF evolution is a description of nature acting with Nazi-like tactics ...
IF it is, and I deny that it is ...
An anti-evolutionist who accepts the operation of evolution within a "kind" has as much of a problem
as anybody else.
The only difference would be that a person who accepts the scientific description can say, "I don't
let what happens in the natural world dictate my morality." The "evolutionist" notes that death is
sometimes a factor in the changes that take place in living things. Rather like the destruction of
earthquakes and volcanos sometimes result in new lands being formed. It just is, and is not a
recommendation for us to destroy things.
While the advocates of creationism/intelligent design - how do they account for the Nazi-like tactics
of living things?
After all, they don't deny the reality of "micro"evolution, which is where the Nazi-like tactics
supposedly take place.
The creationists/IDers don't deny the reality of death or of micro-evolution. They repeatedly tell us
that they accept evolution as long as it doesn't involve "new information", or "major new bodily
functions", or "the origins of biological units larger than the species". They don't deny that "loss
of information" takes place as the evolutionists describe it. They don't deny the operation of
natural selection within a "kind", such as "human-kind". They don't deny competition between
individuals.
If the world of life is purposeful and value-laden, then what lessons are we to draw from the
Nazi-like tactics of micro-evolution?
If, and I repeat IF, we are to grant the description of the world of life in micro-evolution as using
Nazi-like tactics, what do these anti-macro-but-pro-micro-evolutionists (that is, the
creationists/IDers) have to say about it?
Carol Clouser · 21 June 2006
Tom S,
"An anti-evolutionist who accepts the operation of evolution within a "kind" has as much of a problem as anybody else."
You make a strong point there, much stronger than the flailing in the wind and the mud throwing by the other commenters, including the poster Nick Matzke.
But careful examination reveals some key differences between the camps. In evolution the process (1) has been going on for billions of years, (2) the process has been going on long before human beings - with their sense of morality and uniquely endowed with free will to do much about the cruelty - appeared, and (3) the process is dominant in being responsible for sculpting the form and function of all life on earth, including humans themselves.
In creationism (an approach I do not share) the process (1)has been going on only for a mere few thousand years, (2) has not occured in the absence of humans on the planet in a position to react, and (3) does not play as dominant a role as in evolution and is not responsible for the appearance of humanity itself.
I addition, evolution focuses much on the dynamics of this process, whereas creationism is more muted about the whole business.
Sir_Toejam · 21 June 2006
Carol Clouser · 21 June 2006
K.e.,
The ignorant, anti-semitic canards you peddle can only be due to your swallowing whole all the lies and misunderstandings eminating from those folks about the Hebrew Bible, which your cannot yourself read in the original.
Just last week there appeared a major piece in the science section of the NY Times (reprinted from Biblical Archelogy Review) that scientifically (carbon dating) laid to rest all the drivel we have heard for decades from so called "scholars" about there being no evidence supporting the Biblical story pertaining to the existence of the states of Edom and Israel prior to the eighth century BCE. Well, now even they must believe.
Sir_Toejam · 21 June 2006
Popper's Ghost · 21 June 2006
Carol Clouser · 21 June 2006
TJM,
"nor arbitrarily decide the fate of an entire species like a hyena because somebody thinks the way they hunt is subjectively cruel."
HA! "somebody" thinks...."subjectively" cruel...Why don't you do a study on the zebras....ask them what they think about the method.... Perhaps "somebody" thinks the Hutus were only "subjectively" cruel to the Tutsis, to use your example.
And nobody, certainly not I, suggested "deciding" the fate of an entire species.
"You're nuts, aren't you Carol? Admit it."
You should be as nuts as I am.
Do I take it that you are also opposed to the principles (not the tactics) of PETA, fighting to prevent cruelty to animals? Or do you think that only humans ought not be cruel to animals, but animals may be cruel to other animals and we ought not get involved in THEIR affairs?
You don't even begin to show any sign of having a well reasoned, thoughtful and consistent position on this matter.
Sir_Toejam · 21 June 2006
the pro from dover · 21 June 2006
The wealthy mavens of PT need to take up a collection to put Carol and Toey on a deserted island and uh.... see what happens. Any bets?
Sir_Toejam · 21 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 21 June 2006
With your first example in mind, maybe your next try should be putting Ken Miller and Ann Coulter on the same island?
it's about the same comparison.
Carol Clouser · 22 June 2006
STJM,
Here is a quote from the PETA website. It speaks for itself.
"The renowned humanitarian Albert Schweitzer, who accomplished so much for both humans and animals in his lifetime, would take time to stoop and move a worm from hot pavement to cool earth. Aware of the problems and responsibilities that an expanded ethic brings, he said, "A man is really ethical only when he obeys the constraint laid on him to aid all life which he is able to help ... He does not ask how far this or that life deserves sympathy ... nor how far it is capable of feeling." We can't stop all suffering, but that doesn't mean that we shouldn't stop any."
I am not criticising hyenas for being hyenas. And if I didn't distinguish between animals and humans with regard to free will and reasoning ability at least 20 times, then I didn't do so even once. The PETA platform goes far beyond man not abusing his dog. They are oppseed to your eating animals, using their fur or other body parts, experimenting on them in the lab, and so on. Now, I do not support all these goals. The key issue is humankind's responsibility to alleviate cruelty and suffering, both human and animal, as much as possible. That is the contrast between evolution as practiced for billions of years and the expectations set for an ethical, moral and civilized human being.
the pro from dover · 22 June 2006
I'd select Ted Bundy over Ken Miller for Ann any day.
fnxtr · 22 June 2006
Ethyl · 22 June 2006
Holy crap. I hardly ever comment here (though I lurk a fair bit), and I really have to say, Carol, that you're totally out of it. I'm amazed that you don't realize the fact that you contradict yourself constantly and talk complete rubbish without even seeming to realize it, and then you get real real MAD at people who call you out on it.
Also, this stuff about trying to keep animals from being mean to each other is just...I mean, it's just crazy-talk.
Carol, do you really think humans ought to be in the business of trying to keep animals from killing and eating each other? If so, why? Your posted quote from Schweitzer doesn't support that idea, by the way. Alls it says is that people shouldn't harm animals. Which is all PETA says, too, as far as I know. Not too many people think it's worthwhile to try to keep wild animals from killing each other. Wonder why?
Sir_Toejam · 22 June 2006
Carol Clouser · 22 June 2006
Ethyl,
"I really have to say, Carol, that you're totally out of it. I'm amazed that you don't realize the fact that you contradict yourself constantly and talk complete rubbish without even seeming to realize it, and then you get real MAD at people who call you out on it."
Thanks for the introduction. That was real sweet of you.
"Also, this stuff about trying to keep animals from being mean to each other is just...I mean, it's just crazy-talk. Carol, do you really think humans ought to be in the business of trying to keep animals from killing and eating each other? If so, why?"
I never said anything of the sort. I even comlimented lions on their finesse. The issue is cruelty and suffering in the animal kingdom.
"Your posted quote from Schweitzer doesn't support that idea, by the way. All it says is that people shouldn't harm animals."
That is false. Go read it again, carefully this time. Especially the part that says, "A man is really ethical only when he obeys the constraint laid on him to aid all life which he is able to help ... He does not ask how far this or that life deserves sympathy ... nor how far it is capable of feeling." In other words, Schweitzer advocates that humans be proactive here.
"Which is all PETA says, too, as far as I know."
Well, by now you SHOULD know better, since I quoted the PETA folks above saying, "We can't stop all suffering, but that doesn't mean that we shouldn't stop any."
Now, what aspect of this do you disagree with or think of as "rubbish"?
And if you asked the zebras do you think they would distinguish between cruelty perpetrated against them by humans (bad, must be stopped) and that by hyenas (good, natural, keep it up fells)?
"you get real real MAD at people who call you out on it."
Wrong. I DO NOT get mad or angry, as a rule. And you certainly have not "called me out" on anything.
Sir_Toejam · 22 June 2006
Sir_Toejam · 22 June 2006
here.. Carol, I'm a hyena!
convince me of the evil of my ways!
http://home.earthlink.net/~tjneal/hyenas.wav
Torbjörn Larsson · 22 June 2006
Glen says;
"As a non-religious person, I am well aware that religious people did often help to make the environment in which I can be secular and scientific."
I agree. Though I think at the time religion was an economic and political power which either benefited from beneficiary duties, or didn't see any immediate power loss to do so.
Torbjörn Larsson · 22 June 2006
Carol says:
"But careful examination reveals some key differences between the camps. In evolution the process (1) has been going on for billions of years,"
That evolution is a fact have nothing to do with claiming it was a basis for nazism.
""I really have to say, Carol, that you're totally out of it. I'm amazed that you don't realize the fact that you contradict yourself constantly and talk complete rubbish without even seeming to realize it, and then you get real MAD at people who call you out on it."
Thanks for the introduction. That was real sweet of you."
It was an honest assesment from a first time blogger. And it happens to accord with what some older blogger have told you earlier. That should tell you something.
fnxtr · 22 June 2006
Sir TJ:
Quite right, the thrust of most spirituality is an attempt at "better living". The anthropomorphism I'm thinking of is in the depiction of the divine.
Sir_Toejam · 22 June 2006
Ethyl · 23 June 2006
Yeesh.
Carol,
I did read those quotes. Several times. They say nothing, NOTHING about whether animals killing and eating one another is something humans should attempt to put a stop to. They refer solely to the acts of humans towards animals.
Do you think we should try to stop animals from killing one another?
If the answer to the above is yes, can you really not see that that's pretty, um, wacky?
Darth Robo · 23 June 2006
I have to admit, I found it hard to pin down exactly where Carol was coming from with some of her comments. The ones about 'free will' for example. Is this intentional on her part? Anyway, I'm glad it's not just me.
Carol Clouser · 23 June 2006
Ethyl,
"Do you think we should try to stop animals from killing one another?"
That ridiculous question is like asking if I think we should try to stop the tide from coming in. Have you not read a word I wrote in this thread? What is the point of engaging in conversation if people don't listen to each other?
I wonder if the over-sensitivity here to discussing this issue is perhaps related to the performance of nasty experiments on animals that some of the biologists here might be engaged in, now or in the past. By "nasty" I mean anything the animals would strongly prefer not be done. If this discussion is making you feel guilty there, well, you do have free will and the guilt demonstrates that some latent humanity is still present since animals experience no guilt, shame or embarrassment.
Sir_Toejam · 23 June 2006
hmm, I don't catch any guilt in any of the responses to your, to put it mildly, rather odd worldview.
However, I do wonder if you feel any guilt for claiming yourself to be a scientist, and yet hold such an anthropomorphic, emotional view of the world.
I bet you do feel guilt at the level of cognitive dissonance you can't seem to help but display every time you start posting on PT.
Is that why you have stuck here so long? Are you waiting for someone to call you on this?
You've set youself a quandry that neither religion nor science can solve for you Carol.
the dichotomy represented by your horribly clashing worldviews highly suggest you pick one or the other, and stop pretending.
based on the direction and content of most of your posts on PT, I personally think you would be much happier abandoning the science part of your worldview set altogether, even if you did spend a significant amount of effort getting a PhD in physics.
You are not now, nor apparently ever have, pursued a career in science after getting your degree (if you even did). However, your aplogetics on moral issues and Landa's Judaism has been quite clear, and apparently you have spent a very large proportion of your time investigating and promoting these aspects of your worldview set.
so, drop the science pretense, Carol. Embrace your apparent view of how the lion will lie with the lamb, and get on with your life.
seriously.
argystokes · 24 June 2006
Ethyl · 26 June 2006
Ok, Carol. Thanks for proving you're a complete whacko.
"Ethyl,
"Do you think we should try to stop animals from killing one another?"
That ridiculous question is like asking if I think we should try to stop the tide from coming in. Have you not read a word I wrote in this thread?"
So, wait. Is it rediculous because you feel like you've made your point and I'm just not getting it? Or rediculous because you never said such a thing? If it's the latter, you're contradicting yourself again!
So, Carol, do you really think that we should be trying to get hyenas to eat zebras more nicely?
peter · 26 June 2006
Why is poor old Darwin akin to Satan for the Cretinist? Nature isn't cruel because Darwin said so. If you're going to blame people for the observation of scientific principles which might later be abused to inflict harm, you might as well also blame Newton for aerial bombing raids. They could never happen if he hadn't noticed the effects of gravity.
Sir_Toejam · 26 June 2006
Ethyl · 28 June 2006
"no need to ask, really, that was pretty much her starting point.
I really can't say I've ever met anybody who thought we should curb the behavior of predators because they are "cruel" before.
If the Clouserbot is anything, she is unique."
I can't tell what she's saying anymore. At first that sounded like her position, then she posted lots of quotes that seemed to say that only people should be nice to animals, then she seemed to think I was missing something. Unique? Yeah....that's one word that springs to mind. Though...there are others.
Henry J · 28 June 2006
Re "Nature isn't cruel because Darwin said so."
Nor would that cruelty go away if evolution weren't a factor - animals have been eating each other all along regardless of whether they evolved that way or were "intelligently designed" (AKA deliberately engineered) that way.
Henry