Is a change in the basis of society from one of minority class ownership
to one of common ownership against human nature?

Are human beings naturally lazy, aggressive, hostile to one another? 

Or are we by nature friendly and co-operative, ready to help others when
they are in trouble and share what we have with them? 

Or alternatively, does it make little or no sense to say that we are
anything very specific "by nature", since the society and culture we live
in play a great part in determining how we behave? 

Questions like these have been around for centuries, and they are
important for the socialist case, for if people are bound to behave
aggressively and take more than their fair share, then a socialist
society, based on equality and co-operation, is presumably impossible.

The questions we raised above are part of the debate on human nature. One
recent academic contribution to these issues is the theory of evolutionary
psychology, which attempts to apply Darwin's way of explaining biological
evolution to human behaviour and psychology. Darwin's theory of natural
selection explains how organisms change by adapting to their environment
and so becoming more fitted to survive and reproduce. Evolutionary
psychology uses the same kinds of arguments in attempting to account for
human behaviour and the nature of the human mind which underlies this
behaviour. In the words of leading evolutionary psychologist Steven
Pinker, in his book How the Mind Works:

"The mind is organized into modules or mental organs, each with a
specialized design that makes it an expert in one arena of interaction
with the world. The modules' basic logic is specified by our genetic
program. Their operation was shaped by natural selection to solve the
problems of the hunting and gathering life led by our ancestors in most of
our evolutionary history."

This, to take one of Pinker's own examples, according to evolutionary
psychology our disgust at unpleasant food is not due to any innate dislike
for particular tastes. Rather, it would be an adaptation that emerged as a
safety device: we don't eat things unless we are pretty sure that they are
unlikely to harm us; thus we stand a good chance of avoiding foodstuffs
that may well be poisonous�an invaluable trait in a world where humans
relied on hunting and gathering but were surrounded by masses of
potentially toxic plants and animals.

Hunting and gathering (sometimes known as foraging) is the way that humans
lived for 90 percent of our species' time on earth. People lived in
smallish tribes, moving frequently from place to place, gathering wild
plants and hunting animals. Money did not exist, nor did any form of
government, and there was no distinction between rich and poor. The rise
of settled agriculture about ten thousand years ago put an end to
hunting-gathering communities in most parts of the world, though some are
still just about surviving nowadays.

A lot would seem to rest, then, if the evolutionary psychologists are
right, on the nature of hunting-gathering society: if it was essentially
peaceful and based on sharing, then the human brain and mind would have
evolved to fit in with a peaceful way of doing things, whereas if
hunter-gatherers were often violent, then (on the evolutionary
psychologists' view, anyway) our minds are adapted to survive in a violent
world. Let's quote Pinker again, as he makes the political issues here
quite explicit:

"One of the fondest beliefs of many intellectuals is that there are
cultures out there where everybody shares freely. Marx and Engels thought
that preliterate peoples represented a first stage in the evolution of
civilization called primitive communism, whose maxim was 'From each
according to his abilities, to each according to his needs' . . .

Foraging peoples, to be sure, really do share with nonrelatives, but not
out of indiscriminate largesse or a commitment to socialist principles. 

The data from anthropology show that sharing is driven by cost-benefit
analyses and a careful mental ledger for reciprocation. People share when
it would be suicidal not to . . . warfare itself is a major fact of life
for foraging tribes. Many intellectuals believe that primitive warfare is
rare, mild and ritualized, or at least was so until the noble savages were
contaminated by contact with Westerners. But this is romantic nonsense.
War has always been hell."

Most work in evolutionary psychology takes a similar view, that
hunting-gathering society was built around�or at least marked by�power and
aggression, and that therefore the human mind has evolved along lines
designed to enable us to cope with power and aggression.

More recently, however, an alternative has begun to emerge within
evolutionary plsychology itself. Andrew Whiten of St Andrew's University
has argued that egalitarianism, sharing and lack of domination were the
most prominent features in hunter-gatherer societies, and that it is this
is that lies behind human psychological evolution. In papers such as "The
evolution of deep social mind in humans" and "Egalitarianism and
Machiavellian intelligence in human evolution" (the latter co-written with
David Erdal) he has presented a very different picture from that offered
by most evolutionary psychologists. At a recent conference in Edinburgh,
Whiten argued that our ancestors evolved through sharing and co-operation
in line with socialist ideals, a claim that was even noticed in the press
(Times, 19 August). Let's look a little more closely at his ideas.

Examination of a wide range of studies of present-day hunter-gatherers
shows that they share food, especially meat, and that this sharing takes
place even when food is scarce. This sharing, Erdal and Whiten argue,
occurs because it reduces the risk for all individuals, enabling them to
get by on unlucky days, secure in the knowledge that some time soon they
are likely to be successful in their own hunting. 

Sharing means that nobody has priority of access to food, and this ties in
with the fact that hunter-gatherer societies lack any kind of dominance or
rank. There are no permanent leaders, and anyone who has ambitions for
dominance is ridiculed or ostracised. Co-operation extends beyond
food-sharing and countering would-be chiefs, as it also involves
co-ordination, such as the organisation of hunting expeditions and care
for the sick.

Non-human primates (chimps and gorillas) do have dominance hierarchies, so
the human capacity for egalitarianism is an evolutionary innovation.
According to Whiten possibly people who put time and effort into trying to
dominate others found they had less time to devote to foraging and
enjoyable leisure pursuits, so the would-be leaders discovered that they
were living less well than their more co-operative colleagues. This last
part is speculative, but it does help to emphasise the point that humans
are different from our closest non-human relatives, so that it is quite
invalid to argue that whatever holds for chimps must be valid for people
too.

So what does Whiten's work have to say about the prospects for socialism?
The answer is: not necessarily very much. It would be nice if we could
conclude that human characteristics, as they have evolved over the
millennia, have made us "naturally" egalitarian and co-operative. But what
matters is not whether people are naturally like this or not. More
important is whether our behaviour, influenced as it is not just by our
evolutionary heritage but also by the social conditions we live in and our
cultural response to these conditions, can fit in with the idea of a
co-operative and egalitarian socialist society. Even under capitalism
people often share and work together. Hunter-gatherer societies also show
that people can live in a co-operative way, without bosses or governments.
It might be nice to bolster this by claiming that humans' long egalitarian
heritage means that we are better adapted to sharing than to competing,
but this extra, and more speculative, argument is not really essential.

We may conclude that humans are not condemned to be endlessly competitive
or selfish, and that socialism is not contrary to human nature.
jt
www.worldsocialism.org

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