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Episode 33: Episode 33: Social Basic Instincts

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Manage episode 294289981 series 2906120
Content provided by Rami Alame [Akylles]. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rami Alame [Akylles] 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.
It is often said that “humans are social animals” without really thinking what that implies. Many creatures are social in the sense that they live in groups. Still, there are wide differences in what ‘social’ means – from the simple semi-chaos of herding for cattle or deer to the elaborate, regimented, division-of-labor society of the termite or the honey bee. Human social scientists (sociologists and anthropologists especially) have traditionally spent most of their time searching for differences between human societies and often assuming that the wide variety that exists is somehow infinite and has no, or few, underlying patterns, laws, or theories explain its myriad diversity. One is tempted to think that a non-human social scientist might take a rather different view, seeing clear patterns at both the macro and micro levels of human social organization, just as we find it easy to recognize patterns in other social species. Social Instincts It is not true to say that social scientists have had no idea of the nature of human sociality: – there have, in fact, been two competing visions of individuals' inherited social instincts. Neither view would probably admit that they were, by implication, theories of inherited human characteristics, i.e., theories of human nature. The first and most obvious is the neo-classical economics notion of the “rational utility-maximizing” human individual. Rather obviously, the idea that everyone, regardless of context or culture, is a "rational utility maximizer’ can only be due to human nature. Most neo-classical economists would be very uncomfortable with discussing their micro-economic ‘simplifying axioms’ actually relating to real-world human nature, but it seems difficult to avoid. The second is called the “standard social science model” of the infinitely malleable “blank slate” individual. Social scientists who hold this view would even more vehemently reject the idea this was a view of human nature, but of course, it is. For everyone, everywhere, to be ‘blank slates’ means we all must be born that way, which is, of course, a view of human nature. Having no ‘hard-wired’ social instincts is just as much an assumption about human nature as ‘rational utility maximization. These two basic approaches have been associated largely with the two principle wings in the democratic political thought of the past century and a half – free-market capitalism and liberalism (rational utility maximization) and socialism or social democracy (‘blank slate’ adaptability). I want to argue that both these models are partly right and also wrong because they are incomplete. There is an alternative, which is still a relatively simple picture of human social instincts but accounts for contradictory human behavior. Let me first set out some definitions. What do I mean by “instincts”? I use the term in the same way it is used in Steven Pinker’s “The Language Instinct” – that is to say, an ‘instinct’ combines an innate desire to acquire something (language) with an innate ability to assimilate it. Pinker argues that humans are normally born with an innate desire to acquire language and an innate ability to do so. This is not at all culture or experience-dependent but is ‘hard-wired.’ Which language people acquire is determined by the socio-cultural context in which they grow up. Take a child of American English-speaking parents at birth and have it adopted by Mandarin-Chinese speaking parents, and it will grow up speaking Mandarin like a native, and vice-versa. Thus, human facility with language includes elements of inherited, fixed, motives and abilities and an acquired cultural component. By social, in the context of social instincts, I refer to how humans seek to interact with other humans in ‘their’ and other groups (not just their immediate family). Most evidence suggests humans evolved in groups of about 150 (the famous “Dunbar’s Number”), and social instincts refer to how we seek to interact with the members of this social group. According to the supporters of ‘relational models theory (RMT), a surprisingly small number of social instincts – just four – can explain a great deal about human social behavior. I have changed the terminology slightly from RMT usage for reasons I will explain elsewhere in my explication of these four basic social instincts. The four basic social instincts are: – Community seeking – the desire for group membership, group sharing, and group identity. – Authority seeking – the desire to identify leaders and followers for security and order imposed by authority relations. – Equality seeking – the desire for equality and equity in the treatment of individuals, for justice and fairness, and for rules that apply to all. – Advantage seeking – the desire to secure, through the group and the exchange, self-interested advantage, personal autonomy, individualism, property rights, etc. An obvious question is how much, to some extent contradictory, social instincts could have evolved? The simple answer to that is group selection. It is now widely accepted amongst many evolutionary biologists (but by no means all) that selection can operate at several levels: individual genes, the whole genome, and groups of individuals (in social groups). In a previous book (The Paradoxical Primate 2005), I have outlined why group selection might favor groups composed of individuals with contradictory levels of, for example, altruistic and selfish behavior rather than groups made up exclusively of altruistic or selfish individuals. I have now applied the label ‘Homo Janus’ to this approach, signaling that unlike ‘Homo Economicus,’ humans have contradictory social instincts. Several points need to be made about the above four basic social instincts. First, the cultural expressions of these underlying social instincts – as for the language instinct and actual languages – may be extremely diverse. ‘Authority,’ for example, can be attached to elected representatives, professionally qualified individuals, religious leaders, and autocrats. Both Nelson Mandela and Adolf Hitler were authority figures to many, but it is hard to imagine two more different individuals regarding their values and actions. So the ‘authority seeking’ social instinct can have morally antagonistic expressions and very varied bases. Similarly, ‘community’ seeking can be a positive force or, in the case of xenophobia and racism, an extremely negative impulsion. Second, the proposition is that all individuals have these social instincts to a greater or lesser degree. The balance of expression of the four social instincts may well vary – in fact, almost certainly do – between individuals based on nature (inheritance) and nurture (cultural experiences). This means that any extreme social system that seeks to suppress one of these social instincts completely is almost certainly bound to fail. So though there may be a great deal of variation in social systems, this variation will exist within certain limits. A useful analogy here is the basis of life on earth itself – DNA. DNA is composed of just four bases: adenine (abbreviated A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T), and some sugars and phosphate. ACGT can produce an enormous diversity of living forms, all from just these four bases. But within this incredible diversity, there are also obvious intrinsic and extrinsic limits to the forms available. Third, as already noted, these social instincts are in tension with each other. ‘Authority’ is in tension with ‘Equality,’ ‘Community’ with ‘Advantage,’ and so on. These tensions provide the individual and the group with adaptive advantages if the balance and appropriate deployment of instincts match environmental challenges. Of course, they can also lead to destructive conflicts, both within individuals and groups, if not deployed appropriately. Fourth, this immediately leads to another conclusion – there is no ‘one right way’ in which these social instincts, and the balance between them, are best expressed. What is right or ‘best’ will change depending on context. It is possible to say that certain forms of expression are more or less likely to be appropriate in the long run. Still, even some extreme forms of expression – for example, extreme ‘Authority’ – may have survival and reproduction benefits in certain extreme or crisis circumstances. Societies and groups that have gone to extremes in the direction of one or other of these social instincts generally haven’t survived. Be organized, Be passionate, Be structured. www.ramialame.com www.startupkudos.com
  continue reading

38 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 294289981 series 2906120
Content provided by Rami Alame [Akylles]. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rami Alame [Akylles] 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.
It is often said that “humans are social animals” without really thinking what that implies. Many creatures are social in the sense that they live in groups. Still, there are wide differences in what ‘social’ means – from the simple semi-chaos of herding for cattle or deer to the elaborate, regimented, division-of-labor society of the termite or the honey bee. Human social scientists (sociologists and anthropologists especially) have traditionally spent most of their time searching for differences between human societies and often assuming that the wide variety that exists is somehow infinite and has no, or few, underlying patterns, laws, or theories explain its myriad diversity. One is tempted to think that a non-human social scientist might take a rather different view, seeing clear patterns at both the macro and micro levels of human social organization, just as we find it easy to recognize patterns in other social species. Social Instincts It is not true to say that social scientists have had no idea of the nature of human sociality: – there have, in fact, been two competing visions of individuals' inherited social instincts. Neither view would probably admit that they were, by implication, theories of inherited human characteristics, i.e., theories of human nature. The first and most obvious is the neo-classical economics notion of the “rational utility-maximizing” human individual. Rather obviously, the idea that everyone, regardless of context or culture, is a "rational utility maximizer’ can only be due to human nature. Most neo-classical economists would be very uncomfortable with discussing their micro-economic ‘simplifying axioms’ actually relating to real-world human nature, but it seems difficult to avoid. The second is called the “standard social science model” of the infinitely malleable “blank slate” individual. Social scientists who hold this view would even more vehemently reject the idea this was a view of human nature, but of course, it is. For everyone, everywhere, to be ‘blank slates’ means we all must be born that way, which is, of course, a view of human nature. Having no ‘hard-wired’ social instincts is just as much an assumption about human nature as ‘rational utility maximization. These two basic approaches have been associated largely with the two principle wings in the democratic political thought of the past century and a half – free-market capitalism and liberalism (rational utility maximization) and socialism or social democracy (‘blank slate’ adaptability). I want to argue that both these models are partly right and also wrong because they are incomplete. There is an alternative, which is still a relatively simple picture of human social instincts but accounts for contradictory human behavior. Let me first set out some definitions. What do I mean by “instincts”? I use the term in the same way it is used in Steven Pinker’s “The Language Instinct” – that is to say, an ‘instinct’ combines an innate desire to acquire something (language) with an innate ability to assimilate it. Pinker argues that humans are normally born with an innate desire to acquire language and an innate ability to do so. This is not at all culture or experience-dependent but is ‘hard-wired.’ Which language people acquire is determined by the socio-cultural context in which they grow up. Take a child of American English-speaking parents at birth and have it adopted by Mandarin-Chinese speaking parents, and it will grow up speaking Mandarin like a native, and vice-versa. Thus, human facility with language includes elements of inherited, fixed, motives and abilities and an acquired cultural component. By social, in the context of social instincts, I refer to how humans seek to interact with other humans in ‘their’ and other groups (not just their immediate family). Most evidence suggests humans evolved in groups of about 150 (the famous “Dunbar’s Number”), and social instincts refer to how we seek to interact with the members of this social group. According to the supporters of ‘relational models theory (RMT), a surprisingly small number of social instincts – just four – can explain a great deal about human social behavior. I have changed the terminology slightly from RMT usage for reasons I will explain elsewhere in my explication of these four basic social instincts. The four basic social instincts are: – Community seeking – the desire for group membership, group sharing, and group identity. – Authority seeking – the desire to identify leaders and followers for security and order imposed by authority relations. – Equality seeking – the desire for equality and equity in the treatment of individuals, for justice and fairness, and for rules that apply to all. – Advantage seeking – the desire to secure, through the group and the exchange, self-interested advantage, personal autonomy, individualism, property rights, etc. An obvious question is how much, to some extent contradictory, social instincts could have evolved? The simple answer to that is group selection. It is now widely accepted amongst many evolutionary biologists (but by no means all) that selection can operate at several levels: individual genes, the whole genome, and groups of individuals (in social groups). In a previous book (The Paradoxical Primate 2005), I have outlined why group selection might favor groups composed of individuals with contradictory levels of, for example, altruistic and selfish behavior rather than groups made up exclusively of altruistic or selfish individuals. I have now applied the label ‘Homo Janus’ to this approach, signaling that unlike ‘Homo Economicus,’ humans have contradictory social instincts. Several points need to be made about the above four basic social instincts. First, the cultural expressions of these underlying social instincts – as for the language instinct and actual languages – may be extremely diverse. ‘Authority,’ for example, can be attached to elected representatives, professionally qualified individuals, religious leaders, and autocrats. Both Nelson Mandela and Adolf Hitler were authority figures to many, but it is hard to imagine two more different individuals regarding their values and actions. So the ‘authority seeking’ social instinct can have morally antagonistic expressions and very varied bases. Similarly, ‘community’ seeking can be a positive force or, in the case of xenophobia and racism, an extremely negative impulsion. Second, the proposition is that all individuals have these social instincts to a greater or lesser degree. The balance of expression of the four social instincts may well vary – in fact, almost certainly do – between individuals based on nature (inheritance) and nurture (cultural experiences). This means that any extreme social system that seeks to suppress one of these social instincts completely is almost certainly bound to fail. So though there may be a great deal of variation in social systems, this variation will exist within certain limits. A useful analogy here is the basis of life on earth itself – DNA. DNA is composed of just four bases: adenine (abbreviated A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T), and some sugars and phosphate. ACGT can produce an enormous diversity of living forms, all from just these four bases. But within this incredible diversity, there are also obvious intrinsic and extrinsic limits to the forms available. Third, as already noted, these social instincts are in tension with each other. ‘Authority’ is in tension with ‘Equality,’ ‘Community’ with ‘Advantage,’ and so on. These tensions provide the individual and the group with adaptive advantages if the balance and appropriate deployment of instincts match environmental challenges. Of course, they can also lead to destructive conflicts, both within individuals and groups, if not deployed appropriately. Fourth, this immediately leads to another conclusion – there is no ‘one right way’ in which these social instincts, and the balance between them, are best expressed. What is right or ‘best’ will change depending on context. It is possible to say that certain forms of expression are more or less likely to be appropriate in the long run. Still, even some extreme forms of expression – for example, extreme ‘Authority’ – may have survival and reproduction benefits in certain extreme or crisis circumstances. Societies and groups that have gone to extremes in the direction of one or other of these social instincts generally haven’t survived. Be organized, Be passionate, Be structured. www.ramialame.com www.startupkudos.com
  continue reading

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