Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Evolution and Ethics

LLU School of Religion





Evolution and Ethics
Thomas Henry Huxley
Timothy Prewitt
RELE 588 Explorers of the Moral Life
David R. Larson, DMin, PhD
May 19, 14




Introduction
Self proclaimed “Darwin’s Bulldog” Thomas Huxley is known today for his staunch support of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. He spent much of his life researching the relationships animals have with each other. His primary study was on invertebrates and later vertebrates. He worked to classify animals into groups that were previously not well understood. He also spent much of his time in the study of human relationships to apes, and is also well know today for his theory that birds have evolved from small carnivorous dinosaurs. What many people don’t know about Huxley is that he also added much to the study of ethics in light of the evolution of man, writing a series of lectures termed, “Evolution and Ethics”. These lectures were combined in to a single volume of the same title.
Thomas Huxley was born in 1825 to a middle class family. Huxley’s father was a mathematician at the local school, but when Huxley was 10 years old the school was shut down due to financial trouble and Huxley’s father lost his Job. As a result, just 2 years after starting school, Thomas was forced to withdraw due to financial difficulties at home. All of Thomas Huxley’s subsequent education was self-taught. He taught himself German, and is said to have been the primary translator for Charles Darwin when he read scientific material in German. He also taught himself Latin and understood enough Greek to read all of Aristotle in its original language. His studies in biology were also self-taught and he became an expert on invertebrates and vertebrates. Huxley studied medicine as well, tutoring under two of his brother-in-laws, and later studied at the Charing Cross Hospital. At the age of 20, the Royal Navy accepted him as an assistant surgeon based on references and experience alone even without his degree. It was during his time as a surgeon with the navy that Huxley began his work on invertebrates.
During his time in the navy Huxley won many prestigious awards for his studies in biology, and upon resigning from the navy in 1854 he became Professor of Natural History at the Royal school of Mines. During his life he was also Fullerian Professor at the Royal Institution, Hunterian Professor at the Royal College of Surgeons, President of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, President of the Royal Society, Inspector of Fisheries, and President of the Marine Biological Association. To state that Huxley’s resume was impressive would be an understatement.
Huxley is known as one of histories great debaters. The very first debate he ever took part in was the debate with Samuel Wilberforce. Wilberforce was the Lord Bishop of Oxford at the time and had a long history of opposition to the theory of evolution. Though not much survives about the debate it did however stir the population and revealed that evolution could not be so easily swept under the rug as most religious persons formerly thought. It also inadvertently caused there to be a shift from a literal interpretation of the Bible in England and possibly begun the long history of creationism verses evolution debates that have persisted even today. It is interesting to note that Huxley never saw a contradiction between creationism and evolution, and in fact wrote extensively on this subject throughout the book Evolution and Ethics.
Not only was Huxley an expert in the sciences but was also well versed in theology and religion. For instance, Huxley spent a lot of effort on reforming the educational system in Britain, and the current curriculum used by schools across the globe today was widely influenced by him. It might be surprising to note then, that Huxley supported the reading of the Bible in schools. He stated, “"I do not advocate burning your ship to get rid of the cockroaches".[1] Thomas Huxley believed that the Bible was an important work for the modern world, both in its use of language and in its excellent moral teachings. He did, however, propose editing out everything not scientifically accurate contained in the Bible, which was immediately voted down.
Though a strong supporter of evolution and science, Huxley did have a belief in God. Huxley coined the term Agnostic, in describing his beliefs on God. The word agnostic comes from the Greek term Agnost which means incapable of being known.[2] Huxley believed that on the subject of God, it was impossible to know whether or not God existed, since he does not reveal himself and cannot be tested or explored. It is safe to assume then, that had he won his case to alter the Bible, not much of the current Bible we know today would have been left for his school children to read.

Evolutionary Ethics
In 1893 Thomas Huxley wrote a series of lectures entitled, Evolution and Ethics. This book looks at how ethics might have evolved with the evolution of man. The first part of his manuscript starts with a description of evolution and it’s processes. Huxley early on lays down his belief of how God fits in to the evolutionary processes, not only the processes of our world, but the evolutionary processes of the galaxies as well. Huxley believed that space, and everything contained in it, follows its predetermined path of evolution. Huxley states,
“As a natural process, of the same character as the development of a tree from its seed, or a fowl from its egg, evolution excludes creation and all other kinds of supernatural intervention.”
He then goes on to explain that if it turns out that indeed a supernatural being did create the universe, then everything inside of it, including its processes, such as evolution, are created by the supernatural agent and are not interfered upon by the creator because the universe has been created to operate by these fixed laws. Not that a god could not interfere, but that he wouldn’t simply because he would not need to. This argument comes from the idea that God has created the universe to run a certain way, had he desired it to run differently He would have created it that way in the first place.
Huxley gives a description of a cultivated garden, describing how its beauty and design can only exist because the human has kept the native weeds out. The only reason why the garden can still live is because an intelligent being has worked against the natural progression of nature that select for that which grows best. This selection does not often select for what we consider to be the most beautiful combination of things, or the most meaningful design. Obviously, one cannot make up such an allegory without plainly seeing its implications for the existence of man. Natural selection and the progression of evolution does not select for a highly ordered system. Nature is order because of a constant battle between the disordered selections of species. Thus the evolution of man, and indeed any complex organism is the equivalent of Huxley’s exotic garden arising on its own without the need of a cultivator, in other words, it is impossible. In Huxley’s own thought process the creation of man is not likely to happen because nature selects for that which works best in a given environment. A highly ordered, highly complex system that does not follow the laws of natural selection can only come from something with autonomy, such as Huxley’s human gardener.
Huxley points out that human society is not a mimic of evolutionary progression. Inside society the fit can just as easily become unfit because of the way in which we construct our system. The thief does not come from the best, or the worst of society. The majority does not rule, but in fact supplies the ability for a minority to rule. The prowess of a shroud banker can just as easily land him in debtors prison as it can in riches. The politician can just as easily find himself at the execution block for his brilliance instead of in power. This is because our system is like the garden that is constructed by humanity, and we disobey the rules.
Huxley describes the evolution of human society with the perfect ruler determining all. In order to have a perfect system this ruler has to decide who lives and who dies based on their fitness to survive and contribute to the whole. The perfect society works much like a beehive, the fit survive and the unfit die and all work together for a perfectly ordered system. Huxley states though, that controlling society on the grounds of evolutionary progress, although the most efficient system, is an impossible task, because there never will exist a mere human who can determine who should survive and who should die. No man has the mental ability to be that discerning. Not to mention that at some point or another we would all find ourselves unfit for survival. If any politician should look far enough back in his history, for instance, he would find that at a given point in time his ancestors should have met with death rather than life, such as the possibility that Hitler had Jewish and African ancestry. Huxley argues for the need of ethics within an understanding of the evolutionary process. He states that strict observance of the natural laws of evolution cannot be used in society because it would mean banning everything that our societies are constructed on, such as the practice of medicine and healing, since to heal goes against the process of natural selection.
Ethics is a creation of this man made system. It is the product of society, constructed to order the unordered. The Ethics of society goes as far as to exterminate those that nature would deem the most fit, and to condemn those actions that provide for the most success in the animal kingdoms. Those passions that humanity shares with the tiger or the monkey we staunchly suppress as immoral or unethical. This position is needed if society is to successfully create an ordered system in an unordered world. Ethics is necessary and thus the discussion of ethics often closely follows the discoveries of science and the progress of culture. According to Huxley, humanity recognized that in order to live the most fulfilled existence possible they had to create a system contrary to that of the natural process. Foremost in this system is the identification and agreement on issues of justice. For instance, like in a wolf pack, while they pursue their pry there is an unspoken agreement that they should not attack one another during the hunt, so it is with us as we pursue our hunt for a fulfilled life, we generally agree not to destroy each other in the process.
Huxley spends some time discussing the stoics and Buddhists and comparing and contrasting their beliefs about good and evil. Both appealed to nature to describe what was good and what was evil. The Buddhists say that there is no “good” thing; there is just the Brahman, the collective whole. A devout Buddhist who is intent on enlightenment will forsake certain things in life such as food or comfort, in hopes of becoming one with the Brahman. A Stoic believes that the key to enlightenment lies in rejecting all that is evil and becoming a morally right person, because what is good comes from the collective whole, and practicing that which is good will bring you in to harmony with the natural process of reality. Huxley argues that though both systems approach the issue from different perspectives, they arrive at the same idea. Neither one is right because both that which is good and that which is evil evolved alike equally. Because both are a product of evolution, we cannot actually appeal to evolution to ascertain that which is right or wrong, since the ideas of right and wrong were created by us to describe two natural processes. If both evolved equally, evolution cannot help us determine which is most correct, that is like trying to pick which one of your kids is most related to you.
According to Huxley, man creates Ethics in his natural development. Ethics is not a product of the natural process of evolution, but rather a product of our own making. Ethics does not conform to evolution but rather is mans way of fighting against the natural processes. What is ethical, then, does not stem from an understanding of what is “good” or “bad” according to evolution, but rather stems from discerning what the natural course would be and then to work in the exact opposite direction.
To bring this idea into my own field of dentistry lets make up an example. Lets say that a man comes in to my office telling me that he has $10,000 to spend on his mouth and is willing to do whatever I say he needs. Upon examination, I discover that he only needs a cleaning and one filling totaling around $300 worth of work. What am I going to do? Do I prescribe extra work that he does not need simply to benefit myself? Huxley would tell me that I should find out what the natural response would be. According to evolution I ought to do that which is going to further me the most and provide for my own survival, which would mean being deceitful and telling the man he needs more work than he actually does. Because cheating the man is the “natural” thing to do, I ought to do the exact opposite, suppress my desire for self assertion and care more for the person than I do my own survival.
Huxley describes this process in the following quote:
“As I have already urged, the practice of that which is ethically best—what we call goodness or virtue—involves a course of conduct which, in all respects, is opposed to that which leads to success in the cosmic struggle for existence.”
            Huxley goes on to explain that evolutionary ethics isn’t so much worried about the survival of the fittest, but the fitting of as many as possible to survive. Instead of self-assertion, we should have self-restraint, and instead of taking advantage of those around us, we should have compassion for our fellow humans. The primitive man is concerned only with his own well-being and it is appropriate for him to take what ever appeals to him or to kill whomever opposes him. The ethical man is quite the opposite; his ideal is to limit his freedom so that his actions do not interfere with the freedom of others. This closely aligns with the ten commandments of the Bible. They are structured to protect the freedom and rights of others. Thou shalt not steal is a command to protect other peoples rights to own property, thou shalt not kill respects the freedom of others to live.
            Hitler appealed to natural selection as a reason for exterminating the Jews, Blacks, and many more races of people, but this argument would never work under Huxley’s interpretation of evolutionary ethics. Neither would Huxley agree with the Utilitarianism of Peter Singer. Ethics based on an evolutionary point of view does not lead us to support those most likely to survive, or most likely to excel in life, but rather seeks for the betterment of all alike. Evolutionary ethics, such as that proposed by Peter Singer, is based on a system devoid of developed society. Since we do in fact live inside a constructed society (our very own large-scale garden) different rules apply than would apply in the jungles among the wild animals. This protection of the weak is what separates us from being merely savages. Huxley states:
“Let us understand, once for all, that the ethical progress of society depends, not on imitating the cosmic process, still less in running away from it, but in combating it.”
            Huxley did propose population control however. His population control would not take the course of some who suggest the euthanasia of the disabled baby or the unwanted. Huxley believed that life should be protected, no matter how feeble the individual was. It is societies way of keeping the cosmic struggle at bay. However, unchecked population growth threatens to reinsert the struggle for existence in to our garden sanctuary that is society. Uncontrolled population inevitably leads to a shortage somewhere, which leads to the struggle for those goods. The perfect society to Huxley then, is that society that can supply to all according to their needs. It does not mean that all will be equal, but that all will have what is needed for life so that the struggle for existence never mimics the natural world.
Like all ethical systems, Huxley’s version of evolutionary ethics has its inherent problems. It may be noted that determining what is and isn’t the natural response to certain things may often be difficult to discern. For instance, if I have the choice between saving a child, that has a 20% chance of survival, from a burning building or saving an adult’s life that has a 90% chance of survival, which do I choose? My instincts tell me to save the child. That response is a built in response supposedly put there by evolution to protect the young. However, my instincts also tell me that the adult is much more likely to survive and could possible contribute more to society than a burned child could. If I fully commit to fighting the “cosmic process” I would be forced to leave both to fend for themselves, since to choose either one would leave me obeying the laws of nature. Yet even in leaving them to themselves I would be following a natural response. To choose any of the options would force me to obey the laws of nature in some aspect. It could be a trivial point that is grasping at straws, but Huxley never discussed the dilemma of what to do when faced with two equally valid options.

Reflections On Evolution
Huxley’s description of evolution is excellent. He describes a world that obeys certain natural processes. Evolution describes behavioral patterns in man and animal alike, and has revealed much about the development of species. It seems to me that Evolution is a great theory. It may not be a complete theory, but the very fact that man has recognized the natural progression of things in nature is a leap in scientific understanding. Just as most theories are too narrow to explain the whole, so is evolution to narrow to explain all there is to know about our development and purpose in this world. I think that we as Christians are often too afraid of theories. We do not recognize the importance of questions, no matter what form they may take. If it challenges our understanding of our faith it should not be counted a bad thing, but as an opportunity to re-examine our understanding and realign our beliefs according to new knowledge.
Huxley himself goes in to great detail in describing how evolution fits in to understanding our origins in terms of supernatural creation. He never states the creation story as a fact, which I believe is actually very wise, we do not actually know the exact method used in bringing life into this universe, but he goes as far as to say that an original cause is actually needed in the theory of evolution. Huxley stated that specific creation in terms of supernatural involvement might play its role in evolution. He even stated a theory that said that man might have been created separately from the development of other creatures. I find it rather hard to believe myself that humanity arose from the slow evolution of a single celled organism over millions and millions of years. To me it seems highly unlikely; the evidence for it just doesn’t appear to be there. However, Huxley’s point is not necessarily that we all came from single celled organisms, though he was not scared of exploring that theory, but rather that the diversification of the species is a real event that has been observed and tested.
On the other hand, the 6-day creation story is a description of the mechanics of our origins, but it does not actually tell all there is to know about creation. Evolution is a description of the process of creation as well, but it does not tell all there is either. Perhaps, as is often true, the truth does not lie with either separately, but rather both together. Could it be that life was started by spontaneous generation of a fully functional animal and then over many years small changes and adaptations have occurred to give us the great diversity we have today? For the staunch evolutionary atheist I would ask this, is it any less believable to think that humanity was created functional, in a spontaneous generation, than to believe that the entire universe came about in an instant and all of the complexity of the universe expanded and settled in a single event that we term the Big Bang? Both are ex nihilo (out of nothing) and both create massive amounts of complexity. It seems to me that in denying this possibility we may be placing ourselves in a position of trying to fit our observations in a box that cannot contain them.
For the Staunch creationist I would ask this, is it possible that perhaps the Bible story only describes a very simplistic understanding of creation? Is it not possible that God, in all his wisdom and love of beauty, freedom, and diversity, would design in to creation the ability to change and adapt? Is it not also possible that God would use methods of creation already designed in to the universe? May there be a scientific explanation for the creation we see around us that we can actually study and question and find? Something tells me that both sides of this argument would have a hard time denying the possibilities.
I believe that evolution and the idea of the survival of the fittest has much to teach us about our own decisions, morality, and ethical ideas. Evolution reveals many things about what we call sin. The self-assertion, desire for dominance and selfishness of humanity can be explained in terms of the survival of the fittest. We believe that God intended humanity to live in a perfect garden home, that place of sanctuary, in which nature was bent to our will, everything living in perfect harmony, while the cosmic struggle for life was kept out. This idea, combined with the understanding of the progression of nature can lead us to a clearer understanding of our duty to each other, our duty to the natural world around us, and the development of our own ethical system. The simple elegance and simplicity of Huxley’s system, though it may be lacking in areas, may hold keys to helping us discern the validity of other, less obvious and more abstract ideas of ethical systems.



[1] Critique and Adresses p90. 1873
[2] http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/agnostic

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