opening pages of The
Selfish Gene
Excerpt from The Selfish Gene
by Richard Dawkins. (2nd Edition 1989)
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Start of preface to
1976 edition
This book should be
read almost as though it were science
fiction. It is designed to appeal to the
imagination. But it is not science
fiction: it is science. Cliche or not,
'stranger than fiction' expresses exactly
how I feel about the truth. We are
survival machines--robot vehicles blindly
programmed to preserve the selfish
molecules known as genes. This is a truth
which still fills me with astonishment.
Though I have known it for years, I never
seem to get fully used to it. One of my
hopes is that I may have some success in
astonishing others...
Chapter 1 - Why are
people ?
Page 1
Intelligent life on a planet comes of
age when it first works out the reason
for its own existence. If superior
creatures from space ever visit earth,
the first question they will ask, in
order to assess the level of our
civilization, is: 'Have they discovered
evolution yet?' Living organisms had
existed on earth, without ever knowing
why, for over three thousand million
years before the truth finally dawned on
one of them. His name was Charles Darwin.
To be fair, others had had inklings of
the truth, but it was Darwin who first
put together a coherent and tenable
account of why we exist. Darwin made it
possible for us to give a sensible answer
to the curious child whose question heads
this chapter. We no longer have to resort
to supersti- tion when faced with the
deep problems: Is there a meaning to
life? What are we for? What is man? After
posing the last of these questions, the
eminent zoologist G. G. Simpson put it
thus:'The point I want to make now is
that all attempts to answer that question
before 1859 are worthless and that we
will be better off if we ignore them
completely.'
Today the theory of evolution is about
as much open to doubt as the theory that
the earth goes round the sun, but the
full implications of Darwin's revolution
have yet to be widely realized. Zoology
is still a minority subject in
universities, and even those who choose
to study it often make their decision
without appreciating its profound
philosophical significance. Philosophy
and the subjects known as 'humanities'
are still taught almost as if Darwin had
never lived. No doubt this will change in
time. In any case, this book is not
intended as a general advocacy of
Darwinism. Instead, it will explore the
consequences of the evolution theory for
a particular issue. My purpose is to
examine the biology of selfishness and
altruism.
Apart from its academic interest, the
human importance of this subject is
obvious. It touches every aspect of our
social lives, our loving and hating,
fighting and cooperating, giving and
stealing, our
Page 2
greed and our generosity. These are
claims that could have been made for
Lorenz's On Aggression, Ardrey's
The Social Contract, and
Eibl-Eibesfeldt's Love and Hate.
The trouble with these books is that
their authors got it totally and utterly
wrong. They got it wrong because they
misunderstood how evolution works. They
made the erroneous assumption that the
important thing in evolution is the good
of the species (or the group)
rather than the good of the individual
(or the gene). It is ironic that Ashley
Montagu should criticize Lorenz as a
'direct descendant of the "nature
red in tooth and claw" thinkers of
the nineteenth century . . .'. As I
understand Lorenz's view of evolution, he
would be very much at one with Montagu in
rejecting the implications of Tennyson's
famous phrase. Unlike both of them, I
think 'nature red in tooth and claw' sums
up our modern understanding of natural
selection admirably.
Before beginning on my argument
itself, I want to explain briefly what
sort of an argument it is, and what sort
of an argument it is not, If we were told
that a man had lived a long and
prosperous life in the world of Chicago
gangsters, we would be entitled to make
some guesses as to the sort of man he
was, We might expect that he would have
qualities such as toughness, a quick
trigger finger, and the ability to
attract loyal friends. These would not be
infallible deductions, but you can make
some inferences about a man's character
if you know something about the
conditions in which he has survived and
prospered. The argument of this book is
that we, and all other animals, are
machines created by our genes. Like
successful Chicago gangsters, our genes
have survived, in some cases for millions
of years, in a highly competitive world.
This entitles us to expect certain
qualities in our genes. I shall argue
that a predominant quality to be expected
in a successful gene is ruthless
selfishness. This gene selfishness will
usually give rise to selfishness in
individual behavior. However, as we shall
see, there are special circumstances in
which a gene can achieve its own selfish
goals best by fostering a limited form of
altruism at the level of individual
animals. 'Special' and 'limited' are
important words in the last sentence.
Much as we might wish to believe
otherwise, universal love and the welfare
of the species as a whole are concepts
that simply do not make evolutionary
sense.
This brings me to the first point I
want to make about what this book is not.
I am not advocating a morality based on
evolution. I am saying how things have
evolved. I am not saying how we humans
Page 3
morally ought to behave. I stress
this, because I know I am in danger of
being misunderstood by those people, all
toll numerous, who cannot distinguish a
statement of belief in what is the case
from an advocacy of what ought to be the
case. My own feeling is that a human
society based simply on the gene's law of
universal ruthless selfishness would be a
very nasty society in which to live. But
unfortunately, however much we may
deplore something, it does not stop it
being true. This book is mainly intended
to be interesting, but if you would
extract a moral from it, read it as a
warning. Be warned that if you wish, as I
do, to build a society in which
individuals cooperate generously and
unselfishly towards a common good, you
can expect little help from biological
nature. Let us try to teach generosity
and altruism, because we are born
selfish. Let us understand what our own
selfish genes are up to, because we may
then at least have the chance to upset
their designs, something that no other
species has ever aspired to.
As a corollary to these remarks about
teaching, it is a fallacy--incidentally a
very common one--to suppose that
genetically inherited traits are by
definition fixed and unmodifiable. Our
genes may instruct us to be selfish, but
we are not necessarily compelled to obey
them all our lives. It may just be more
difficult to learn altruism than it would
be if we were genetically programmed to
be altruistic. Among animals, man is
uniquely dominated by culture, by
influences learned and handed down. Some
would say that culture is so important
that genes, whether selfish or not, are
virtually irrelevant to the understanding
of human nature. Others would disagree.
It all depends where you stand in the
debate over 'nature versus nurture' as
determinants of human attributes. This
brings me to the second thing this book
is not: it is not an advocacy of one
position or another in the nature/nurture
controversy. Naturally I have an opinion
on this, but I am not going to express
it, except insofar as it is implicit in
the view of culture that I shall present
in the final chapter. If genes really
turn out to be totally irrelevant to the
determination of modern human behavior,
if we really are unique among animals in
this respect, it is, at the very least,
still interesting to inquire about the
rule to which we have so recently become
the exception. And if our species is not
so exceptional as we might like to think,
it is even more important that we should
study the rule.
The third thing this book is not is a
descriptive account of the detailed
behavior of man or of any other
particular animal species.
Page 4
I shall use factual details only as
illustrative examples. I shall not be
saying: 'If you look at the behavior of
baboons you will find it to be selfish;
therefore the chances are that human
behavior is selfish also'. The logic of
my 'Chicago gangster' argument is quite
different. It is this. Humans and baboons
have evolved by natural selection. If you
look at the way natural selection works,
it seems to follow that anything that has
evolved by natural selection should be
selfish. Therefore we must expect that
when we go and look at the behavior of
baboons, humans, and all other living
creatures, we shall find it to be
selfish. If we find that our expectation
is wrong, if we observe that human
behavior is truly altruistic, then we
shall be faced with something puzzling,
something that needs explaining.
Before going any further, we need a
definition. An entity, such as a baboon,
is said to be altruistic if it behaves in
such a way as to increase another such
entity's welfare at the expense of its
own. Selfish behavior has exactly the
opposite effect.'Welfare' is defined as
'chances of survival', even if the effect
on actual life and death prospects is so
small as to seem negligible. One
of the surprising consequences of the
modern version of the Darwinian theory is
that apparently trivial tiny influences
on survival probability can have a major
impact on evolution. This is because of
the enormous time available for such
influences to make themselves felt.
It is important to realize that the
above definitions of altruism and
selfishness are behavioral, not
subjective. I am not concerned here with
the psychology of motives. I am not going
to argue about whether people who behave
altruistically are 'really' doing it for
secret or subconscious selfish motives.
Maybe they are and maybe they aren't, and
maybe we can never know, but in any case
that is not what this book is about. My
definition is concerned only with whether
the effect of an act is to lower
or raise the survival prospects of the
presumed altruist and the survival
prospects of the presumed beneficiary.