Social Darwinism and  Libertarianism
 
 
An important but flawed article. A number of inexplicable mistakes by
someone who's grasp of history / intellectual history  is shaky at  best.
 
However, and this is completely overlooked in the article, which  
nonetheless
has a logic that strongly suggests this, where Social Darwinian thinking is 
most obvious today is in "purist" Libertarianism.
 
How so?  When the one-and-only Good is individual liberty, and  laissez 
faire
economics is its practical manifestation in society,  then the "law of  the 
jungle"
applies, and the only social standard that is relevant is  competitiveness. 
The results of competition are, by definition, how things "should  be."
 
Forget co-operation, forget community, forget rational planning, forget  
morality,
and forget social and behavioral science. And religious faith is  
meaningless
except, maybe,  as a matter of personal devotion.
 
Above all, overlook the many failures of markets, including gross  
criminality
that markets without strong morality always generates.
 
This is what Libertarianism ultimately boils down to
 
Libertarians are really good at not seeing the implications of their  
theory.
 
Yes, Libertarians have free speech right, and few things are as important  
in
a democracy  -which just about all other systems simply "don't  get."
This should not, in any way, be minimized, it is crucial.
 
Unfortunately, this is just about the only thing that Libertarians get  
right.
 
 
 
Billy
 
 
 
==========================================
 
 
 
Daily Explainer
September 13, 2013
George Dvorsky
 
How the pseudoscience of Social Darwinism nearly  destroyed humanity
 
 
Following the publication of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species in  1860, 
many political theorists and opportunistic politicians applied his  findings 
to human society. In the 20th century, these ideas were put into  practice — 
and it nearly destroyed us. Here’s why Social Darwinism was one of  the 
worst ideas ever.
 
Charles Darwin’s  theory of natural selection was unlike any that had 
preceded it, the shockwaves  of which are still being felt today. Even 
Copernicus’
s terribly upsetting notion  — that the Earth revolves around the Sun — 
only mildly perturbed our sense of  the universe and our place within it. The 
same could be said about Newton’s  clockwork physics and Einstein’s 
relativistic interpretation of the cosmos.  These axiomatic shifts certainly 
changed the way Western society looked at  itself, but not to the degree that 
Darwinian natural selection did. 
God is Dead 
Indeed, Darwin’s  dangerous idea penetrated deeply into a hypersensitive 
realm that had stubbornly  languished beyond human understanding: The origin 
of life.
 
Darwin’s theory  served not merely as an explainer for life on Earth — it 
was also a veritable  God killer. What’s more, it “reduced” humanity to the 
level of animals, forever  disrupting the _Judeo-Christian_ 
(http://io9.com/does-the-new-pope-believe-in-evolution-453874239)  notion that 
humanity 
existed in an exalted  place between God and the natural world. Humanity, it 
was suddenly realized, was  not privy to the whims of God, but rather to the 
laws of nature. Moreover, the  human species wasn’t static.  
For the 19th  Century intelligentsia, this further reinforced burgeoning 
notions of  materialism, the sense of social change and progress, and the 
inexorable  struggle for survival. Feeding off earlier notions posited by the 
likes of  Thomas Hobbes (who argued that the original state of nature is 
nasty, brutish,  and short), Thomas Malthus (whose theories on human population 
growth served as  a kind of proto-sociobiology [false]) Auguste Comte (a 
positivist [included in  this list, why???]), and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (who 
presented an earlier, but  inaccurate, theory of evolution), many thinkers 
began to apply Darwinian notions  to human individuals, society, and races. In 
the absence of God, went the  argument, humanity needed to act to ensure its 
fitness and ongoing survival.  Darwin’s thesis seemed to provide a blueprint 
on how this could be done.  
And thus began the  transference of Darwinian theories from animal species 
to social groups and  races — a development that would lead to catastrophic 
results.  
The Right Idea At  The Wrong Time 
As a term, “Social  Darwinism” was used sparingly in the 19th Century; it 
was only popularized in  the United States in 1944 by historian Richard 
Hofstadter. And indeed, it’s a  term that casts a wide net, encompassing 
several 
different areas as it pertains  to the extension of Darwinism to the social 
realm.  
 
 
 
I  don't think I'm taking a bold stance by saying that any real attempt at 
eugenics  is indefensible. Practically speaking, though,  eugenics…


Indeed, its wide  interpretation led thinkers to a number of different 
conclusions, including the  reinforcement of individualism and minimalist 
government, theories about racial  and societal “hygiene” and _eugenics_ 
(http://io9.com/5925024/why-eugenics-will-always-fail) , notions of racial 
superiority and the justified  use of force, and the idea that the human 
species 
could be moulded by the state.  
Part of the problem  is that Darwin’s theory arrived at a dangerous time — 
a time when Western  cultural and scientific sensibilities were not 
entirely ready for it; it was an  idea ahead of its time, and by consequence, 
was 
misappropriated to realms into  which it didn’t belong. The acceptance of 
Social Darwinism was not only a  symptom of an emerging and overly enthusiastic 
scientism, but also the result of  poorly developed conceptions surrounding 
race, ethnicity, and biological  diversity. It appeared during a time of 
deeply embedded and unquestioned racism,  where the conditions of 
under-developed nations and poverty-stricken visible  minorities were 
attributed to 
racial inferiority.  
 
 
 
The human brain is  capable of 1016 processes per second, which makes it 
far more powerful than any  computer currently in existence. 


It was also driven  by a _fallacy_ 
(http://io9.com/5974468/the-most-common-cognitive-biases-that-prevent-you-from-being-rational)
  that exists to this 
very day, namely the  Naturalistic Fallacy. Social Darwinism was often 
justified on account of  evolution being a “natural” process — a very dangerous 
proposition, to be sure.  
During the latter  half of the 19th century, Darwin’s biological ideas 
began to influence not just  political theorists, but politicians as well. His 
theory — which described the  process of variation and selection, the 
struggle for existence, and the need for  adaptation and improvement — were 
applied 
to human society, primarily to  reinforce and rationalize aspects of 
competition and struggle. It was also used  to justify political control by a 
minority (e.g. imperialism and colonialism)  and the capitalistic system 
itself. 
What’s more, because Darwinism was (and  still is) often misunderstood to 
imply an evolutionary trajectory, evolution was  also equated with social 
progress.  
An Individualist  Order 
The chief advocates  of Social Darwinism during the 19th century included 
Herbert Spencer and William  Graham Sumner. Interestingly, Spencer’s highly 
influential work, Progress:  Its Law and Cause, was released three years 
before the publication of  Darwin's On the Origin of Species, while his First 
Principles  was printed in 1860. So while Spencer was not immediately 
influenced by Charles  Darwin, the subsequent popularization and legitimization 
of 
his ideas were most  certainly a direct consequence. 
Both Spencer and  Sumner asserted the value of the struggle for life which 
resulted in  improvement, a natural consequence of the “survival of the 
fittest” doctrine.  This early form of Social Darwinism had a distinctive 
laissez-faire  character to it, whose supporters advocated for an individualist 
order of  society.  
Herbert Spencer in  particular was an ardent individualist. He firmly 
believed that the functions of  the state should be limited to protection, and 
that no restrictions should be  placed on commerce, and no provision made for 
social welfare or education. This  individualism was a clear consequence of 
his application of evolutionary biology  to social relationships.  
All existence,  Spencer argued, grew through a series of transformations 
from the simple to the  complex by successive variations. He saw civilization 
as an ongoing process in  which humans adjusted to an increasingly complex 
world. This evolutionary  process, in the absence of interference, led 
inevitably to social improvement —  an idea that now resonates with modern 
libertarians.  
He also saw the  poor as being biologically “unfit.” Public efforts to 
help them, be it through  legislation, charity, and social reconstruction, were 
undesirable because it  might allow them to mature and pass on their 
weakness. He suggested that the  whole thrust of nature was to get rid of the 
inefficient in order to make room  for the superior. The way he looked at it, 
if 
they weren’t fit enough to live,  they would die — and it was probably for 
the better.  
Spencer wrote:  
Other  evils, no less serious, are entailed by legislative actions and by 
actions of  individuals, single and combined, which overlook or disregard a 
kindred  biological truth. Beside an habitual neglect of the fact that the 
quality of a  society is physically lowered by the artificial preservation of 
its feeblest  members, there is an habitual neglect of the fact that the 
quality of a  society is lowered morally and intellectually, by the artificial 
preservation  of those who are least able to take care of themselves.”
Similarly, Cesare  Lombroso, an Italian physician, _argued in 1876_ 
(http://www.marxist.com/science-old/marxismanddarwinism.html)  that born 
criminals 
were essentially  proto-humans — a throw-back in evolution. Similar 
sentiments were also used to  justify slavery in the United States. [WTH?  
slavery 
ended in 1865, its  justification in the era it was legal ofen was Biblical 
even though this was  highly contested] 
These ideas would  go on to influence the eugenics movement, an early 20th 
century initiative  designed to prevent those deemed too unworthy to pass 
their deleterious genes to  the next generation, lest the overall health of 
human society be compromised.  
Additionally, the  burgeoning Social Darwinism of the time would go on to 
influence such  politicians as Otto von Bismarck, Joseph Chamberlain, and 
Theodore Roosevelt. It  was often used in the political arena to justify 
eugenic or racial differences,  imperialist expansion, colonialism, and war. 
These 
politicians, whether they did  so opportunistically or sincerely, used 
these sentiments to stress competitive  relationships and struggles between 
nations and groups in order to ensure the  survival of the physically and 
mentally worthiest people.  
And to further the  cause of their nation.  
The Totalitarian  Tragedies 
Without question,  the most infamous application of Social Darwinism was in 
Nazi Germany. By the  early 20th century, the pseudoscientific generalities 
of Social Darwinism  remained popular in Europe — and it spoke to those 
advocating for racial purity.  
Indeed, Social  Darwinism served to heighten race consciousness to a 
greater degree;  anti-semitism during this time was justified on biological 
grounds.  
Historian Alan  Cassels writes:  
Above  above all, German Volkish cultists excoriated Jews as “a pestilence 
and a  cholera” which threatened to pollute the race. To accomplish this 
corruption,  Jewish males were supposed to lust perpetually after Aryan women. 
A logical  recommendation to be drawn from this view was the destruction of 
German Jewry  in order to preserve the purity of the German race — a 
proposal made by some  fanatics before 1914 and ultimately implemented by the 
Nazis.
Using such  thinking, Jews could then be persecuted not for their actions 
or beliefs, but  simply for who they were.  
Adolf Hitler  further articulated these beliefs in the first volume of Mein 
Kampf. He  essentially saw the world as one gigantic struggle among the 
races — a struggle  that would ultimately be won by the strongest.  
And therein lay one  of the most nefarious ideas to take root in modern 
politics — the notion that  force could always be justified in this context, 
with no room for ethics, law,  or humanitarian scruples. The acceptance of 
Social Darwinism by the Nazis goes a  long way in explaining the intense 
brutality meted out during the Second World  War. It not only motivated them to 
unite the Teutonic peoples, but to decimate  races altogether, and to claim 
other lands as the conquerors of more primitive  races — including the Slavs 
who Hitler described as being subhuman, a race  suitable for both 
colonization and, eventually, annihilation (Hitler’s Hunger  Plan, which was 
never put 
into practice on account of stubborn Soviet  resistance, called for the 
deliberate starvation of tens of millions of Slavs in  preparation for the 
colonization of Ukraine and parts of Russia).  
 
 
 
The Second World War  witnessed the introduction of hundreds of 
cutting-edge and often bizarre  weapons, many of which became quite famous. 


So severe, was  Naziism, that its political opponents deemed it an 
existential risk. It had to  be wiped out lest its tentacles spread to all 
corners 
of the Earth, spawning a  culture-crushing and science-stifling Dark Age. The 
resulting war — the first to  feature apocalyptic _weapons_ 
(http://io9.com/11-jaw-dropping-weapons-from-world-war-ii-you-probably-511010752)
  — was 
the greatest human-instigated disaster to  befall our civilization.  
But fascists  weren’t the only totalitarians to be influenced by Darwin. 
The misapplication of  biology to politics was also committed by the 
communists. Karl Marx  read  On the Origin of Species and absolutely loved it. 
Not 
only did it speak to his  materialist sensibilities, it also affirmed his 
theory of class struggle — an  agenda that was put into full force by Joseph 
Stalin during the Great Terror  period, a time when millions of people were 
murdered by the Soviet apparatus as  a means of self-colonization.  
Marx wrote:  
Darwin’s  work is most important and suits my purpose in that it provides a 
basis in  natural science for the historical class struggle...Despite all 
shortcomings,  it is here that, for the first time, ‘teleology’ in natural 
science is not  only dealt a mortal blow but its rational meaning is 
empirically  explained.
 
 
 
One of the stories  about China you see cropping up a lot in U.S. media is 
that the nation is  conducting a eugenics project to engineer a  generation.


What’s more, it  also affirmed in Marx’s mind that humanity is a work in 
progress. It supported  his conception of the utopian New Man — _the next 
iteration of the human species_ 
(http://io9.com/no-china-is-not-conducting-a-giant-eugenics-project-512749419) 
. But rather than  have it come about 
through the haphazard processes of natural selection, it  could be enforced 
through state imposition. [ This confuses Marx with Lenin] 
A Weak Moral  Compass 
Sadly, Darwin never  intended for this to happen. For the most part, he 
limited the theory to the  biological realm (though he did delve into 
speculative sociology in his later  work, The Descent of Man).  
But like so many  things in life, it takes only a few people to ruin it for 
everybody else. To  this day, Darwinism has its detractors, including 
Creationists who wrongly blame  Darwin and his theory for the travesties 
committed last century. Quite  obviously, equating natural selection — a 
remarkably 
potent theory that’s  accepted wholeheartedly by any serious biologist — 
with the ills of Social  Darwinism is a tragic mistake. The science is still 
science, while Social  Darwinism, with its gratuitous generalizations and 
misreadings of how natural  selection works (e.g. it completely fails to 
account for group selection  theories and the rise of such characteristics as 
empathy) will forever remain in  the realm of pseudoscience.  
What’s more, the  application of Darwinian processes to human morality is 
about as facile an  exercise as it gets. As a moral maxim, “survival of the 
fittest” is as  unenlightened as it gets. If anything, the general tendency 
of human society is  remove itself as far away from possible to this process. 
If anything, Social  Darwinism is anathema to civilized society.

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