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January 30, 2008
by Dinesh D'Souza

side bar side bar side bar side bar side bar A recent issue of the New York Times Magazine carried a long piece by cognitive psychologist Steven Pinker called “The Moral Instinct.”  Pinker's article is part of the Darwinian Cleanup Project. This project is an attempt to plug the holes in Darwinism which has a very hard time accounting for--a) the origin of life, b) consciousness and c) morality. Pinker begins with an interesting comparison between Mother Teresa, Bill Gates and Norman Borlaug (the father of the Green Revolution in agriculture). Pinker argues that while Mother Teresa may have had the noblest intentions, Gates and Borlaug probably did more to help people than the saint of Calcutta. In other words, morality is not simply a matter of intention but also of what one actually does to help people. Excellent point, but what does it have to do with an evolutionary foundation for ethics? Not much.

For the past several decades, leading neo-Darwinists have labored hard to provide a Darwinian basis for morality. The basic idea here is that morality is a form of extended selfishness. The mother who leaps into the burning car to save her children is acting unselfishly from her point of view, but from her genes' point of view, the action is entirely self-interested. The mother is simply trying to ensure that her genes make it into the next generation. Some evolutionists like Robert Trivers extend this logic to explain why we treat even strangers decently and fairly. This is called "reciprocal altruism," which may be translated as "I'll be nice to you, so that you can be nice to me."

This entire framework of Darwinian analysis does not even come close to explaining morality. It confines itself to explaining altruism, and at best it explains "low altruism." But humans also engage in "high altruism" which may be defined as behavior that confers no reciprocal or genetic advantage. A man stands up to give his seat on the bus to an older woman. She is nothing to him, and he is certainly not thinking that there may be a future occasion when she will give him her seat. He does it because he's a nice guy. There's no Darwinian rationale that can account for his behavior.

Consider the true story of the Catholic priest Maximilian Kolbe, who was imprisoned in a German concentration camp for his anti-Nazi activities. Each day the Nazis would choose one person from the group for execution. One of the first persons they selected was a man who pleaded for his life, saying he had a wife and children who were dependent on him and he needed to live in order to look after them. Just as the Nazis were about to drag him from the room, the priest stood up and said, "Take me in his place." The Nazis were baffled and refused, but the priest insisted. The man was equally uncomprehending, so the priest told him, "I don't have a family, I am old and won't be missed like you will." The Nazis finally agreed, and the priest went to his death. The man whose place he took survived the war and returned to his family.

Now what is the Darwinian explanation for Kolbe's behavior? It does not exist. Ernest Mayr, a leading evolutionary biologist, admits that "altruism toward strangers is behavior not supported by natural selection." Richard Dawkins concedes that Darwinism cannot even explain why people donate blood, an action he puts down to "pure disinterested altruism." I enjoy reading Pinker, Trivers and the others, but I don't think that the Darwin Cleanup Crew is going to come up with a comprehensive account of morality. The simple reason is that the evolutionary project is necessarily confined to the domain of survival and reproductive advantage--in other words, to the domain of self-interest--while it is the essence of morality to operate against self-interest. The whole point of morality is to do what you ought to do, not what you are inclined to do or what it is in your interest to do.

For Christians, morality is not merely a survival strategy; rather, morality refers to the laws of right and wrong which exist objectively or in nature.  These laws are ultimately the prescription of God, who created the moral law just as He created the physical laws of nature.   In the Christian view, morality is given by God but recognizable through moral reasoning and conscience; consequently, one does not have to be Christian or even religious to know the difference between right and wrong. 

The Christian explanation for morality shares with the Darwinian view a skeptical or low view of human nature. Immanuel Kant put it very well when he wrote, “Out of the crooked timber of humanity, no straight thing was ever made.”  Consequently it is very difficult to live a moral life without God’s help.  We appeal to God for grace or divine assistance to help us live better and more virtuous lives than we are capable of living on our own. Great sacrificial figures like Mother Teresa and Maximilian Kolbe have always recognized this, and attributed their actions to a divine force larger than themselves.

 

Responses to life.:

Many, many thanks for your superbly written articles, as well as your stimulating subjects. There really isn't another organization like yours that bravely takes on the subject matter you do with intelligence and sound logic. Bravo! Warm regards, - Ms. Darnelle Mason

I enjoyed your Genesis Project series and read them all (6) with much interest... "tothesource" is an excellent site and exciting source of intelligent and creative thought. I very much appreciate the material you publish. - Guran Walker

Those call themselves "Pro Life" bemoan the anniversary of Roe vs Wade. But they ignore the enormous numbers of abortions that took place before it and delude themselves into thinking that making abortion illegal will stop it. There is simply no way to enforce laws against abortion.How will the government stop women who can afford it from going abroad for abortions? Put up blockades at airports and borders? Examine every woman for pregnancy? How will we stop poor women from trying to abort themselves? Put up cameras in every home? Abortion is very common in every country where it is illegal,and many women die or are seriously harmed.If they had access to contraception,many of these tragedies could be avoided.In Brazil,the world's largest Catholic nation,more abortions occur than in America.The Netherlands,which has the world's most permissive abortion laws,also has one of the world's lowest abortion rates.And it is unbelievably stupid for anti-abortion fanatics in America to want to make contraceptives illegal.This would only INCREASE abortions and create a blackmarket in contraceptives.The only sensible thing to do is to try to reduce abortions and prevent unwanted pregnancies;trying to stop it altogether is absolutely impossible. - Robert Berger

Responses to The Beginning of the End:

Judi Brown of ALL in her Communique email calls the Thomson and Yamanaka breakthrough a "hoax" because DNA is necessary in the experiment and it comes from aborted babies. Is this true? Are you alluding to that in your article when you say "..important to pro lifers, to reprogram cells without using DNA derived originally from aborted fetuses.."? Along with so many I was very excited when first hearing about ;the T-Y breakthrough and have been following it and have never seen any mention of what Judi Brown is saying. What is going on, can you clarify this. Thank you. - P. Oswald

Response from Wesley Smith: My understanding about this is that using such DNA is not a necessary part of the iPSC process. That comes from the original article that brought this matter to people’s attention. Nor are iSPC lines ready for therapies. Indeed, they may never be due to potential tumor foundation—which is the same problem that prevent embryonic stem cells from being used in humans. But they do offer the potential to provide everything that therapeutic cloning offers in theory-- without any of the moral deficiencies. And in that, I think, we should celebrate and wish the scientists well as they work to perfect this technique.
http://www.cogforlife.org/reprogramandethics.htm

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We live complex lives. We strive to sort out priorities that sometimes conflict or seem incompatible. A moral framework is needed to help us understand the reality around us. Our Judeo-Christian heritage provides a framework to help us comprehend the choices we make and the conflicts that arise over them. It is not only the main source of our spiritual values, but also many of the secular values we depend on.

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Dinesh D'Souza, the Rishwain Research Scholar at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, served as senior domestic policy analyst in the White House in 1987-1988. He is the best-selling author of Illiberal Education, The End of Racism, Ronald Reagan, The Virtue of Prosperity, What's So Great About America, and The Enemy at Home. His new book What's So Great About Christianity was released in October of 2007.
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