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20 | Distorting Darwinism, Or Why Evolution Does Not Prove That We Are Selfish ~ SOLO   

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Manage episode 360169977 series 3403620
Content provided by Ilari Mäkelä. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ilari Mäkelä or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In the final episode of season 1, Ilari addresses one of the underlying themes in many of the season's episodes: Darwinism. Is Darwinism dangerous? Is Darwinism linked to vicious ideologies? Does Darwinism prove that we are all selfish?

These questions have been addressed in many of this season's episodes (most notably episodes 1 and 2, but also 6, 8, and 11). In this short solo episode, Ilari connects some dots by reading his essay Distorting Darwinism, published in the Skeptic Magazine. Topics include:

  • The early links between Darwinism and far-right ideologies

  • Why do even professional evolutionists make rookie mistakes when explaining human behaviour.

  • Richard Dawkin's U-turn on human nature

  • Are all males naturally inclined to mate with a harem of females?

  • Why human desires come in “endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful”

  • The problem with “scratch an altruist and watch a hypocrite bleed”

  • Survival of the friendliest: from silver foxes to human self-domestication

  • Conclusions: ”Not everything evolution teaches us is nice and jolly. But we must stay alert at the perilous ease in which selfishness, ruthlessness, and deceptiveness seep into evolutionary theorising, even when not appropriate.”

_________

Please consider becoming a supporter of On Humans. Even small monthly donations can make a huge impact on the long-term sustainability of the program.

Visit: Patreon.com/OnHumans

Get in touch: ilari@onhumans.org

_________

Names mentioned

Charles Darwin / Herbert Spencer / William Jennings Bryan / Richard Dawkins / Edward Fox / Robert Sapolsky (author of Behave, 2017) / Michael Ghiselin / Jonathan Haidt / Frans de Waal / Dmitri Belyaev / Lyudmila Trut / Brian Hare / Richard Wrangham

Technical terms

Scopes Monkey Trial (famous legal case in 1925 regarding the teaching of evolution in Tennessee high schools) / Social Darwinism / Self-Domestication

  continue reading

59 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 360169977 series 3403620
Content provided by Ilari Mäkelä. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ilari Mäkelä or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In the final episode of season 1, Ilari addresses one of the underlying themes in many of the season's episodes: Darwinism. Is Darwinism dangerous? Is Darwinism linked to vicious ideologies? Does Darwinism prove that we are all selfish?

These questions have been addressed in many of this season's episodes (most notably episodes 1 and 2, but also 6, 8, and 11). In this short solo episode, Ilari connects some dots by reading his essay Distorting Darwinism, published in the Skeptic Magazine. Topics include:

  • The early links between Darwinism and far-right ideologies

  • Why do even professional evolutionists make rookie mistakes when explaining human behaviour.

  • Richard Dawkin's U-turn on human nature

  • Are all males naturally inclined to mate with a harem of females?

  • Why human desires come in “endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful”

  • The problem with “scratch an altruist and watch a hypocrite bleed”

  • Survival of the friendliest: from silver foxes to human self-domestication

  • Conclusions: ”Not everything evolution teaches us is nice and jolly. But we must stay alert at the perilous ease in which selfishness, ruthlessness, and deceptiveness seep into evolutionary theorising, even when not appropriate.”

_________

Please consider becoming a supporter of On Humans. Even small monthly donations can make a huge impact on the long-term sustainability of the program.

Visit: Patreon.com/OnHumans

Get in touch: ilari@onhumans.org

_________

Names mentioned

Charles Darwin / Herbert Spencer / William Jennings Bryan / Richard Dawkins / Edward Fox / Robert Sapolsky (author of Behave, 2017) / Michael Ghiselin / Jonathan Haidt / Frans de Waal / Dmitri Belyaev / Lyudmila Trut / Brian Hare / Richard Wrangham

Technical terms

Scopes Monkey Trial (famous legal case in 1925 regarding the teaching of evolution in Tennessee high schools) / Social Darwinism / Self-Domestication

  continue reading

59 episodes

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