Breakpoint

Evolutionary Psychology, Natural Selection, and Human Misbehavior


Listen Later

Why are people so attracted to beautiful “natural scenes like green fields, trees, and rivers?” Nostalgia, maybe? A sense of wonder? Some inherent draw to what is aesthetically pleasing?

Nah. According to some thinkers, “science” has figured out that we are drawn to natural beauty because for our ancestors, such scenes “represented survival." By “science,” I mean what’s known as evolutionary psychology or, as my colleague Shane Morris calls it, “Sabretooth Psychology.”

Evolutionary psychology is a field specializing in hypothesis in which natural selection explains all human behaviors. According to this way of thinking, all of our modern behaviors are best understood as carryovers from those ancient behaviors that offered our ancestors evolutionary advantage over others. So, those who didn’t appreciate beautiful natural landscapes had less access to food and water and, therefore, produced less offspring. Eventually, their line died out while those who liked lush natural scenes survived.

However, not everyone is persuaded by this sort of hypothesizing, including psychologist Dr. Steve Taylor. Writing at Psychology Today, Taylor says that “evolutionary psychology is largely based on assumptions rather than evidence, and as such it is debatable whether it should be referred to as a 'science' (since its hypotheses are generally unfalsifiable).” Or, as philosopher Subrena Smith recently told Gizmodo, “we don’t have the relevant evidence about how our ancestors behaved to make any substantive claims.”

Even so, evolutionary psychology continues to enjoy a popularity in many academic circles, the media, and other segments of culture that far outweighs its scientific credibility.

According to evolutionary psychologists, “mate selection, parental care, predator avoidance” and other behaviors result from natural selection working on our brains.  They further assume that our brains haven’t changed in the tens of thousands of years since.

But there is no evidence for these assumptions. On the contrary, as Smith told Gizmodo, brain science (not to mention history) shows that, “Our brains are dynamic, our behaviors are dynamic, we’re imaginative, we generate novel behaviors in contexts that never exhibited themselves.” This helps explain why only humans have spread to every continent.

Evolutionary psychology is built on what we might call “just-so stories,” conclusions that “must be so” because they are required by the assumptions that must not be questioned. While the constant hypothesizing might cause the people at Gizmodo to “roll their eyes,” the ideas of evolutionary psychology have real consequences and victims.

For example, according to evolutionary psychology, rape is a behavior of natural selection, “one potential strategy for males for achieving reproductive success.” It is, according to this framework, not a moral abomination, but an “aberration,” “an alternative gene-promotion strategy that is most likely to be adopted by the ‘losers’ in the competitive, harem-building struggle.”

While no evolutionary psychologist would conclude that rape is somehow justified, it’s not at all clear on what moral grounds they refuse to do so, since rape must be considered both “natural” and “hardwired.” They also must ignore much of human history, in which rape was used as a weapon to subjugate entire populations during wartime, such as in the 1937 “Rape of Nanjing” or, more recently, ISIS’s wave of terror. Survival of the fittest anyone?

On a related issue, evolutionary psychology struggles to conclude whether humans are evolutionarily adapted to mate for life, like birds, or to be promiscuous, like our other “ancestors.” Either can be “concluded” by appealing to “evolutionary adaptation,” otherwise known as the dynamic imaginations of evolutionary psychologists.

As atheist philosopher David Stove wrote in his book Darwinian Fairytales, however well these imaginative explanations describe “sponges, snakes, flies, or whatever,” they are a “ridiculous slander on human beings.” That’s because, as Chuck Colson said years ago, “they cannot account for what is most essentially human . . . things like altruism and music,” the love of beauty and that most un-survival- of-the-fittest human behavior: self-sacrifice.

So, remember, the next time you see an article or TV special ready to explain the natural origins of human behaviors, you might want to pull up a chair and get out some popcorn. You’re about to hear a fairy tale.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

BreakpointBy Colson Center

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

168 ratings


More shows like Breakpoint

View all
Renewing Your Mind by Ligonier Ministries

Renewing Your Mind

5,193 Listeners

The Briefing with Albert Mohler by R. Albert Mohler, Jr.

The Briefing with Albert Mohler

8,635 Listeners

Stand to Reason Weekly Podcast by Greg Koukl

Stand to Reason Weekly Podcast

1,271 Listeners

Breakpoint by Colson Center

Breakpoint

3,094 Listeners

The World and Everything In It by WORLD Radio

The World and Everything In It

7,118 Listeners

Mama Bear Apologetics by Hillary Morgan Ferrer & Amy Davison

Mama Bear Apologetics

1,249 Listeners

The Alisa Childers Podcast by Alisa Childers

The Alisa Childers Podcast

5,390 Listeners

Conversations That Matter by Jon Harris

Conversations That Matter

1,092 Listeners

The Crossway Podcast by Crossway

The Crossway Podcast

634 Listeners

Life and Books and Everything by Clearly Reformed

Life and Books and Everything

646 Listeners

Upstream by Shane Morris

Upstream

396 Listeners

The Strong Women Podcast by Sarah Stonestreet

The Strong Women Podcast

611 Listeners

The Natasha Crain Podcast by Natasha Crain

The Natasha Crain Podcast

1,315 Listeners

Unshaken Faith by Alisa Childers & Natasha Crain

Unshaken Faith

1,367 Listeners

Transformed with Dr. Greg Gifford by Fortis Institute

Transformed with Dr. Greg Gifford

556 Listeners

The Sean McDowell Show by The Sean McDowell Show

The Sean McDowell Show

283 Listeners