Tag Archives: evolutionary psychology

On Defoe, London and Stevenson

For some latent psychological reason, still dimly unaware to me, I’ve returned to a few books from my college days. Perhaps it is a return to the womb. The magic of the books when first read did not reappear again, not to be recaptured, my folly. I was disappointed. I had thought they were crackerjack when I read them as a young man. And so for equally dim reasons, I thought I’d read books that were valued for youngsters, such as Treasure Island and Robinson Crusoe. By chance, a visit to a book fair revealed an edition from the Sixties with afterwords by critics, to explain what I couldn’t figure out for msyelf.

One book, The Sea Wolf, was inspired by a film of the same name, made in the Forties with Edward G. Robinson, John Garfield and Ida Lupino. It has a stupendously fierce performance of a Darwinian sea captain (Robinson) and the film has dialogue textured with philosophical questions. With all three books in hand I began to nibble away at them. The first read was London’s and what impressed me was his command of the sailing lexicon of the day — jibs, windlasses, spritsails, all the sailorly seamanship of the day that at times I just blew threw it to get at the narrative. London was a sailor and that art has greatly disappeared in the world today, for it is an arcane craft and skill much like cobbling a shoe by hand. I got through the book with its Darwinian view of man as expressed by Wolf Larsen, really London, and it did make me think.

Larsen refers to man and the collective as “yeast,” each spore struggling and in competition with others; one is fatigued by the struggle; however, it is a struggle going on now in each one of our bodies.Today’s evolutionary psychology  poses many of the same questions with a different perspective so that I come away believing, thinking that we really are not in charge of anything, just flesh and bone capsules and captives of our genomes working their way through the millenias in random evolution. Evolution, apparently has no estimated time of arrival. (Parenthetically, I was a classmate of Stephen J. Gould at Jamaica High School, Queens,  sadly deceased, who went on to become a world famous evolutionary expert.) Who knows what our next fellow will become?

The book that had me annoyed at first was Defoe’s. I imagine the style of the time, it was loaded with semi-colons; it was as if the reader, me, was being punctuated every few words. Growing tiresome, I blew the book off with the hope that I might try it later on in mid-day when I might be more alert and patient. I am rereading it now and I have improved in my attitude toward it. London’s prose was more fluent, Stevenson’s was limber with an occasionaly semi-colon thrown in to annoy me as well. Styles of writing and expression have their fashion.

So I knocked off London first, tried Defoe and put it away and finally entered the world of Stevenson and was able to get through it and then back to Defoe which I am reading now with a better attitude as I said.  And as I am awash with the survival of the fittest, buccaneers and English individualists some observations are emerging.

In all three books the sea, islands in the sea, the natural elements, nature, man against nature and man against himself as well as man against society all form a constellations of motifs and themes for the authors to hang their hats on. From what I have read from the 30 or 50 pages in Crusoe, there is a strong flavor of utilitarianism, rugged individualism, thinking out of the box, doing for one self, of being a divergent thinker in a dire situation, like a prisoner plotting his escape and all the devious ways he concocts to make that so.

Dafoe’s Crusoe is more of an adventurous Thoreau, his thinking is purposeful, not that Thoreau’s is not. One becomes aware of a life force trying to sustain itself in every way imaginable. I am vaguely aware of Luis Bunuel’s film of Robinson Crusoe starring Dan O’Herlihy in the early fifties. I may even have seen it but I cannot recall for sure. There is a survival energy in the book that propels it, although I am only half through it.

In The Sea Wolf London brilliantly recreates how a seaman restores a boat with his own hands, his wit and his physical energy that I associate to The Flight of the Phoenix (1967) in which crash survivors develop and rig a new plane from the debris of the old and escape their being being marooned. The cannibalization of the dead into the resurrection of the new is something to behold and such are the pages and scenes in London’s description of how a shipwreck is put together once again by one man’s determined effort to be more than a yeast spore. It is altogether a masterly piece of prose.

Long John Silver is the best written character in Treasure Island. He is ambiguous, somewhat complex, fascinating to behold, brave and most cunning, an Italian Machiavelli in his dealings with individuals and small groups. As a child I saw a few versions of the film, one with Orson Welles and the other with Robert Newton, a famous scene stealer, whose eye-rolling and gravelly voice was compelling. After all, he played Sykes in Oliver Twist, with gusto. All the other characters pale beside this pirate captain, except for Jim Hawkins who to me is Robin to his Batman.

So I have all three books gestating in mind, and for some reason I feel all three, a little less with London’s book, to be a product of industry, that is, the book as an industrious effort, perhaps reflecting the times, the Industrial Revolution itself. I can imagine Defoe brilliantly running a wool factory, a captain of industry  to use the old term.

I’ved entered the Eighteenth Century with two of these books and the Nineteenth Century with the other, maritime worlds to a degree and inhabited by industrious, struggling, energetic and purposeful individuals making their way across the earth like ants scuttling across a bread crumb. To a degree, fatiguing. It is as if I am reading outer directed as opposed to inner directed literature, which has its pleasures. We have worry, confusion, fear and all the other human emotions but existential angst does not make its appearance.

Perhaps these three books are statements of a different kind of humanity, like comparing the acting styles of Gable, Cooper, Peck, Stewart with Brando, Hopper, Nicholson, Pacino and DeNiro. To wit, I entered into a different climate of opinion.  The age of Freud had not dawned. In other words same old mankind, different sauce.

 

Evolutionary Psychology

Of late I have been trying to get through a series of books that have revolutionized genetic thinking and science since the 1990s. Names that I have not heard before -Matt Ridley, Robert Wright, except for Richard Hawkins and his meritorius diatribes against all religions and religious thought. As I began to wade into these books I felt frustrated, stymied and annoyed, which I should register as the first signs that they are worth reading.

The writings of evolutionary psychology are difficult for me to grasp as my mind is not a scientific one. In  short, I can’t access the conceptual double helix. However, I can write about what I don’t know, writers do it all the time. I can comment on the path and the brush and briars without having reached home; perhaps it is a Sisyphaean task. Neverthess, allow me to share what I am sensing, feeling about all this, throwing in here and there a shard or two of what I recall from all this reading while spending more time on the consequences for us all as I dimly see and sense it.

As I continue to write here, perhaps I will be clearer about my own feelings and share them with you. And here is the quotation from Dawkins which about says it all for me in Genome by Matt Ridley who has written several books on the new science:   “We are survival machines — robot vehicles blindly programmed to preserve the selfish molecules known as genes. This is a truth that still fills me with astonishment.” Richard Dawkins, The Selfish Gene

What I write here requires an imaginative response on your part, with you relinquishing that part which judges. Suspend that part if you will. I am not asking for empathy. I am asking that you go with it, at first.

So I am a body, a canister if you will. As you well understand  you have very little control over your internal bodily mechanism. Pumping blood through your heart is out of your hands. And so I conclude we are a sack holding life-giving processes. In that is amazement if we just pause,but like many things we take it for granted, part and parcel of life itself, like breathing oxygen or getting wet by rain. However, let us register something new. We have enough evidence clearly to say that our genes and chromosomes, our complete human genome determines all of our being, from eye color to sex and completely run the human show. And these tiny bits of matter, our genes, molecular dots and dats, determine everything that we are, from consciousness to unconsciousness, that genes replicate us over and over into what is known as a human being regardless of our century or place in the world — ontogeny recapitualates phylogeny.

What the new science teaches us goes beyond Darwin himself;  that genes are continually seeking sex in the sense of trying to replicate themselves or adapting to newer situations; they are often at odds with one another, antagonistic, but don’t confuse this with survival of the fittest. And they are not aware nor cognizant of their own existence, and this is critical to grasp — and mind-boggling as well. There is no determinism here nor free will, which are contributions of the conscious mind, or the cultural existence we liv, as I see it. It is as if we are shadow puppets, controlled by forces (genes) that we are unaware of. What is also difficult to grasp or mentally metabolize is that these genetic shakers and makers of our existence are not aware of their controlling attributes nor of their existence. Does a microbe think? So we spin through space in ellipsod orbits, billions of planets doing the same meandering without design, and most definitely without meaning.

Freud introduced us to the unconscious mind which millions still do not subscribe to or choose not to grasp in its consequences, to wit, that consciousness, to use the old cliche, is but the tip of the iceberg; that much of what we do is already decided for us unconsciously. Darwin made the case that we are a product of adaptations over millenia, that we are closer to the chimp than one wants to imagine, that we are animal life continually mutating and adapting. Consequently the greatest revolution of the existence of man has emerged. I am arguing, based upon what I have read , the genetic studies of the last 30 years have created a monumental revolution still unknown to most of us and is no doubt the greatest scientific revelation since man became present on this planet. Yes, that profound!

Essentially genes drive us. The world we live in within our bodies is gene driven, and we have no control over that at all; that there is no fate, no destiny if you will, no free will — a philosophic and often religious canard. When I think about all this I find myself in a reel, trying to conceptualize what it might mean  50 years from now for a student reading a science text explaining the new learnings, what he  might make of all this. That we are programmed; that we out of the loop, what sentience we have we know we have as we go through life is only a blade of grass on an elephant’s ass. If there is a change in a worldview, what might that be? I have no idea except thoughts about it now as I read about evolutionary psychology.

We are puppets controlled by other puppets. What do you make of that? What happens to “meaning,” “salvation,” “God,” “religion,” and “intention”? What can we make of our world in which we are not in control, and never have been? Can we give up the illusion and now delusion that we are in charge? It is critical, I think,  to attempt to philosophize or to conceptualize such a topsy turvy existence. I am reading more and more of this new science essentially by science reporters of the highest skill, Matt Ridley, for one, and Robert Wright, for another. I have questions about free will, but more importantly what happens if we were to accept these learnings as facts, where does it leave us? To be continued as I learn more.

 

 

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