[An earlier version of this article was published in Extropy back
during the time I was Memetics Editor for that publication. An
incomplete fragment is on we web if you look hard enough.
My thinking on these issues changed some with the
introduction of the drug/cult analogy. I am writing a new
article incorporating drug/cult and evolutionary psychology
which should be out in few months. Still, reading this
article may give you insight into the current situation.
HKH]
Memes, Evolution, and Creationism
Copyright 1989, the authors.
Copyright 1990 Institute for Memetic Research. A close version
of this article appeared in Vol 1, No. 1 of the Journal of Ideas,
September 1990. Contact the editor, Elan Moritz
(moritz@well.sf.ca.us) for current subscription information.
Posted by permission, but use other than personal requires
permission from the Institute.
By H. Keith Henson and Arel Lucas
ABSTRACT: This paper discusses the question of creationism and
evolution theory in the context of memes. Several key questions are
raised including the questions of why humans have beliefs at all,
and why does belief in evolutions excite substantial opposition.
The authors address the competition of memes in the meme pool and
propose the existence of meme 'receptor sites' responsible for
strong maintenance of religious beliefs. KEYWORDS; memes,
creationist, evolution, learning, games, receptors-sites.
The widespread and long-lived opposition to evolution by
fundamentalist Christian sects is not the first time the religious
sector has opposed the findings of science. Copernican astronomy
excited centuries of opposition before finally being accepted. Why
did the Catholic Church defend the theories of a long dead Greek?
Why do "creation science" followers defend an Anglican bishop's
calculations of a world only a few thousand years old?
We would like something better than an intuitive, hand-waving
answer to these rather serious questions. We would like to be able
to make specific predictions and recommendations. Our attempt to
answer the "creation science" question above will be in two parts:
Why do humans have beliefs at all? And why does the belief in
evolution excite so much opposition?
In attempting to find answers, we will invoke Darwin in two
places. First in asking where human evolution has gone the last few
million years. Second to consider the evolution of ideas (which we
will also call memes, replicating information patterns, or beliefs)
and the forces that shape them. Human and meme evolution is
inextricably tangled. This discussion will switch back and forth
from one to other in seeking an understanding (in evolutionary
terms) of why evolutionists run into so much opposition from
certain segments of the wider community. Knowledge of the modern
concepts of evolution is assumed.
--------
Footnote: Richard Dawkins' *The Blind Watchmaker*, is a
well-written and entertaining book which describes the recent
advances in understanding how evolution works.
--------
Current interpretation of hominid fossils is that the split
between the line which led to humans and the one which led to the
chimpanzees came about 5 million years ago. A whole suite of
changes, male provisioning, bird-like pair bonding, more frequent
births, sequestered estrus, and bipedality evolved together,
perhaps in response to the shrinking of the relatively safe forest
and the expansion of the dangerous but protein-rich grasslands.
These changes long proceeded any significant increase in brain
size.
Hominid evolution in the last 2.5 million years, that is since our
ancestors started chipping rock, has mostly been in the direction
of elaborating brains and learning ability. Even prior to "modern"
technology humans lived over a wider range of the Earth's surface
than any other animal of comparable size. It seems fairly obvious
that large brains supporting powerful learning abilities are part
of the answer as to why humans (and their ancestors) have been so
successful in occupying such a wide variety of habitats. The rest
of the answer is in the skills which today, as it was in the past,
we must learn to survive.
We learn skills and, once in a while, discover new knowledge as
individuals. But most of our learning is from others. A simple
example: learning by trial and error that streets are dangerous
because of cars is *not* a practical approach for children. A good
deal of our learning is across generations, the rest from our
contemporaries, or from information stored in some material form
(books, etc.).
Most of what we learn is from the "meme pool" (analogous to gene
pool) of our culture, and a *selected part* of it gets passed on to
the next generation, thus setting up the conditions for the
evolution of culture. A meme pool may be imagined as the set of
circulating information patterns (ideas, blueprints for making
artifacts, customs, and so on) which indirectly structures the
artifacts and behavior of a culturally distinct group.
The earliest cultural-information-propagated-across-generations
(meme for short) probably dates back to our common ancestor with
the chimpanzees. Young chimpanzees learn from their elders how to
make tools for extracting termites from termite hills. Surviving
hominid artifacts which indicate cultural passage of information
date back 2.5 million years. Though it got off to a slow start
(chipped rocks look about the same for 2 million years), memes and
the human line formed a hyper-cycle (in analogy to the DNA/protean
hyper-cycle) where improving knowledge made human line survival
ever more likely, and the resulting larger populations discovered
and passed on an ever increasing amount of (mostly) useful
knowledge. Today humans and a huge, abstract mass of information,
have become fully dependent on each other.
In addition to humans evolving the capacity to learn and spread
memes, we see Darwinian forces acting on the replicating
information patterns themselves. One evolutionary force affecting
the frequency of a particular piece of shared information has been
the reality of the physical environment. Because they shape
behavior, memes that are too far removed from the way the world
functions lose influence either by being refuted or by poor
survival of their hosts. Memes that cause serious harm to their
carriers usually become inactive, though it may take a long time.
The Shaker belief persisted in its active form for about 100 years
despite incorporating a ban on host reproduction. Another primary
force in the evolution of memes is the rest of the meme pool.
Simple competition between similar replicating information patterns
for a limited number of "slots" in human minds results in the
survivors of this process being very good at getting themselves
into new hosts, and, once they have, excluding competitors.
A few meta-memes apply powerful selective forces to the rest. The
scientific method is perhaps the best known "artificial" meme
selection force. Phrenology (as a replicating information pattern)
is no sillier than palmistry. In spite of a fairly good start, it
failed to survive in the scientific meme pool where a testable
relation to reality is an asset.
A goodly number of memes have no significant relation to reality
at all. Yet they are quite successful (in the Darwinian sense of
existing in many copies). Into this class we would place astrology,
Marxist economics, and religions. Our concern in this article is
about those "schemes of memes"* which excite those infected with
them to actively oppose the evolution meme. How can we account for
the opposition?
------------
Footnote: Cooperating groups of memes. Credit this clever turn of
phrase to Douglas Hofstadter.
------------------
We will start by showing that our minds developed organizational
quirks as a byproduct of interacting modules in enlarging human
brains, and than show how these quirks provide a mental substratum
for the spread of a whole class of "reality unrelated" replicating
information patterns. Among them we will find the one(s) which
excite opposition to Darwin's meme.
Why did our brains enlarge? The advantage must have been larger
than the high cost in terms of increased infant care and maternal
mortality from getting those oversized heads born. William Calvin
in *The Throwing Madonna* proposed one continuous selection
mechanism that would come into play for a primate that started
throwing rocks and obtained a survival advantage by killing the
target instead of just scaring it away.
[A later book on the same theme is *Ascent of Mind.* See Calvin's
easy to find web site. HKH]
Timing the release of stones or spears to hit small targets must
be done much more accurately than the nervous systems of our remote
ancestors could achieve. Rebuilding the basic chemistry of nerves,
or converting to electronics is out of range for the small steps of
evolution, but adding more of the same is an old story. Parallel
redundant neural networks reduce timing error by well understood
mechanisms. Better accuracy, more protein on the table, and more
surviving children for rock-throwing ancestors. However they came
to enlarge, the brains we now possess support even self-awareness.*
-------
Footnote: Marvin Minsky proposed in *Society of Mind* that what we
call "consciousness" arose as the result of the evolutionary
reassignment of redundant capacity to new tasks. Thus, the larger
brain may have preceded the "smarter" brain. "Newer" thinking
skills (which have had less evolutionary honing) may still have
more variation than older thinking skills.
------------
Recent work has found the mind to be organized into a vast number
of interacting, simpler modules. A substantial amount of data has
emerged from the work of neurologist Michael Gazzaniga, artificial
intelligence expert Marvin Minsky, and others. (In historical
prospective, this work was presaged by Freud & Co.) Simple mental
modules or "agents" (Minsky's word) combine into larger agencies to
accomplish tasks of great complexity.
Starting from a base of hardwired connections from the senses to
the brain, Minsky shows how motor activity and feedback from the
physical world builds agents that allow a small child to stack blocks.
Stacking blocks is not a task to be sneered at. Many a graduate
student-year has gone into building machines that fall short of the
abilities of a three year old!
Memes may be seen to program or direct the formation of more
complex agencies such as those for chipping rock or making clay
pots or shoes.
Minsky speculates that a substantial number of our agents are
censors. It's easy to see how, with an enlarging number of modules
in potential conflict for "attention" we need censors to stop us
from getting into logical tangles or "inappropriate" behavior. They
may work by detecting unfruitful "loops" or painful thought
activity in other parts of the brain, and inhibiting the part that
is thinking "improper thoughts."
One "improper thought" is to think about our mortality. In getting
smarter and being able to plan far enough ahead to store food or
plant a crop, we have gained powerful agents with "think ahead"
ability, and they have been so successful in helping us survive,
that we can't "wire out" the ability to think about the future and
consequently about our own end. This is, however, an unproductive
and (at least potentially) a survival-threatening class of
thinking. Such thoughts are likely to activate censor modules that
powerfully inhibit further thought about the topic.
So far we have Minsky's censors and "think ahead" agents.
Gazzaniga clearly demonstrated the presence of another agent, an
"inference engine." This mental module detects or invents plausible
"causal" relations, sometimes when there aren't any. New
replicating information patterns seem to be invented (or
recombined) here. The same hardware seems to be involved in judging
meme input from others for plausibility. It makes evolutionary
sense that unsatisfied inference engine problems would be anxiety
provoking.
If there is no "explanation," there is no way to predict
(or control) when similar events, especially frightening ones, will
happen. Almost any answer, no matter how far fetched, reduces
anxiety. There is a great deal of data on the functioning (and
misfunctioning) of this module in Gazzaniga's *The Social Brain*,
and in the landmark *Human Inference* by Nisbett and Ross. Ritual
passed on through memes (praying, rites, etc.) gives the illusion
of human control over events, a psychological condition thought to
be essential for mental health. (At least the counter condition of
hopelessness is known to be detrimental.)
Though the plausibility standard of the inference engine is pure
*National Inquirer*, the importance of this module should not be
underestimated. It was a milestone in our evolution, and lies
behind every advance we make. But it was shaped by evolution to
jump to the conclusion that the noise in the bushes is a bear.
People who screen out its less plausible outputs do so at the
conscious level, making use of difficult-to-learn logical and
mathematical skills.
To sum up, our think ahead (and look back) capacities raise
painful questions, for which our inference engines either invent
"causes" or judge acceptable some meme obtained from others. The
effect of these modules has been to open our minds to replicating
"explanations" of our origin and fate. Religions and such "new age"
philosophies as "cosmic consciousness" memes or beliefs satisfy the
inference engines in most of us, providing explanations--
superficial or profound--to account for times before birth or after
death.
Just as chemical replicators were the consequences of the primal
soup, this entire class of memes is the consequence of the way our
mental processors were long ago wired up by evolution, and the
recent growth (in evolutionary terms) of these processors. Beliefs
in this class can be traced back at least as far as the beginnings
of oral history, and probably go back much farther, given the
finding of flower offering in 70,000 year old graves. It may be
that primitive versions of such beliefs were essential stabilizers,
which had to be on hand prior to the last great expansion of the
human brain.
By now, the difficulties evolution has as a replicating
information pattern should be apparent. In explaining one side of
the where-did-we-come-from/where-are-we-going question, the
evolution meme is in serious competition for limited mind "space"
with long-evolved religious memes. Unlike the memes of physics, it
is out there in a Darwinian fray for mind space with a large group
of well adapted, fearsome competitors, some of which have induced
those infected to incredible physical exertions, from building
cathedrals to flaying infidels.
There is an even more important strike against evolution in this
competition. Most of the religious memes provide for both origin
and fate. Unlike them, evolution deals only with origin and says
little (certainly nothing comforting!) about our fate, either as
individuals or as a species.
With so little going for it, why has the meme of Darwinian
evolution had any success at all? First, physical
evidence--especially from geology and biology-- and the meta-meme
of the scientific method are strongly supportive of evolution as a
meme.
Second, the (relatively) tolerant, secular world, with its
diverse religions, and rapidly increasing scientific knowledge was
complex enough when the concepts of evolution were first introduced
that space in minds was available that was not wholly committed to
competitive memes. Had there been no diversity in the religions at
the time of Darwin, the religious meme carriers might have
succeeded in suppressing ideas about evolution, or at least
censoring those holding such beliefs as they did temporarily with
Copernican astronomy.
As it turned out, the memes of evolution have spread well in the
subpopulation of receptive humans. They fit in seamlessly with the
scientific meme pool. Since Darwin, most religious schemes have
evolved to at least ignore natural history, waxing metaphysical and
getting vague about the meaning of passages written by (or about)
nomads thousands of years ago.
But a few of the religious belief patterns have successfully
evolved into an expanding niche (especially in the southern part of
the US) where organized opposition to evolution memes is a
distinguishing, even driving feature. Anti-evolution beliefs involved
fit comfortably into a meme pool that is almost an inversion of the
scientific one. The developing situation is reminiscent of the
struggles driven by memetic competition that sometimes turn into
physical conflict between groups of people infected with different
religions.
On this rather alarming note, let us resume thinking about mental
models and see if a better understanding of the processes within
the minds of "creation scientists" and their ilk can come out of
it.
We are going to assume some "mental space," and speculate a little
about the shape and function of it. We are not proposing a literal,
physical space into which ideas tumble and take root, like
fertilized eggs in a uterus, yet the metaphor is useful. Consider
"mind" to be composed of various "modules," or functioning
computation sites like parallel processors within a computer. The
form and identity of many of these modules are shaped by memes.
Thus we could say (from examination) that person has the baseball
meme (or memes). That is, enough knowledge so that they could teach
a recognizable game to a group of children who had never seen or
heard about it.
"Game" memes seem to have relatively little competition with each
other. Knowing about baseball probably has little influence on
susceptibility to learning marbles, hockey, or hopscotch, though
there is competition among these memes for a person's "game time."
This is not true of all memes. Memes of the religious class are
quite effective in excluding each other. Games do not include a
"play only this game" sub-meme, religions ordinarily do. Religious
memes may be taking advantage of the mortality censors, i.e.,
having acquired an "explanation" that accounts for "after death,"
the censors close off thinking that may change the structures of
this area.
For those who already have one religion, there is little
to be gained by acquiring a different one. In former times, and to
some extent today, changing religion often cost you your social
group. During our tribal past, questioning the tribes beliefs or
ritual was potentially disruptive, a threat to the group, and, even
up to late historical times, put your survival in question.
Anything statistically affecting survival can cause genetic bias
to emerge if there is variation in the available genetic material.
Edward Wilson and Charles Lumsden in *Genes, Mind and Culture*
provide suggestions as to how units of cultural transmission may
influence hereditary "biases" toward certain kinds of behavior via
a cycle of both physical and cultural reinforcement over several
hundred generations. It seems fairly obvious that if your tribe
makes its living with chipped rocks, inability to learn how to chip
rock will be bred out after a while. Likewise, we may have
coevolved with religious memes to accept, and not question, the one
of our tribe.
Memes of the religious class infect a majority of the people in
most countries of the western world. The combination of widespread
vulnerability to these memes and (normally) exclusive rule of one
set of memes per mind has led one of us (Henson) to propose a
"religious meme receptor site" in human mental space, with the
usual properties (selective stickiness and exclusion) of chemical
receptor sites.
Selective stickiness means that only "religious" beliefs can occupy
the site. The "energy currency" to measure stickiness might be the
lower level of anxiety from "solving" inference engine problems of the
where-did-I-come-from/where-am-I-going kinds.
Exclusion provides a test of what *is* a religious belief, and
forces us to include (for example) communism in the class of
competitors for the site. Unless our analogy is misleading, the "site"
may be shaped/prepared by other memes (concepts) and experiences that
are commonly learned in childhood. Wherever it is in human mental
space, the 'religious meme receptor site' appears to be ROM-like.
That is, once occupied, programmed, or constructed, its content
does not change, and its influence is not likely to change in intact
people (though ablating a small region in the temporal region of the
brain destabilizes beliefs of this category, according to Gazzaniga).
It is not that people never change religious beliefs, but just that
they are relatively more stable in this aspect than say, political
opinions. 'Changing' religious beliefs seems to be more of a process
of building a new mental structure and cutting the old one off from
behavioral connections.
Religious meme receptor sites may be 'close' in mental space
to the 'mortality censors' mentioned above. Religious memes may be
protected by the censors, normally preventing us from thinking about
(and potentially changing) beliefs near to this area.
Since we are discussing receptor sites, let us mention 'module
activation sites'. This would be a recognition activity on the
'surface' of the module built by a meme. For example, the baseball
agency built by the baseball meme would recognize a physical baseball
(or a bat, a mitt...) through visual or tactile senses and activate
the appropriate parts of the module given the context. These sites
would recognize the spoken or written word 'baseball' and the names or
pictures of prominent players. There might even be a site that
recognized roasting peanut smell. (The baseball agency might respond
by bringing up the memory of a particular game.)
In the case of a person with an influential creationism
programmed meme, the very words 'evolution' or 'Darwin' may instigate
complex behavior patterns, especially when a child comes home and
mentions that they were studying the 'E' word.
Are there practical applications of these theories? That is,
can we make predictions with this knowledge? Most of the predictions
we have thought of so far are post hoc: we already know that those
spreading the evolution meme run into dedicated opposition. The
theory partly accounts for the difficulty we have in trying to explain
our case, but we already knew that logical arguments have little
effect in changing the beliefs of people who believe in the creation
meme.
Perhaps one idea to try would be to avoid the trigger words
that arouse these mental structures. It is in fact more descriptive
to refer to principles of 'variation and selection' than to evolution.
Richard Dawkins' 'biomorph' computer program is particularly good at
demonstrating these phenomena. Copernican astronomy displaced the
Ptolemaic system because it provided a superior world view. For the
same reason Creationist beliefs will eventually be displaced.
This analogy might be of use in public arguments. The
comparison alone may be a useful argument if it opens a chink in 'mind
armor' enclosing creationist memes. The most effective people in
spreading Creationist memes are intelligent, but have mental agents
that put up strong defenses against the commonly used arguments. New
arguments may engage other mental mechanisms. It is even possible
that novel thoughts about the mental structures holding their beliefs
may shake a few of them.
A more attractive possibility would be to construct a 'scheme
of memes' which includes science and evolution memes but is more
effective in competing for the religious meme receptor site. This is
what the Humanist movement is about. The memes behind this movement
appeal in that they are in concert with the memes of science. In
competing for religious meme receptor sites in human minds, however,
we see two ways in which scientific/humanist beliefs fare poorly in
comparison to the opposition.
First, humanist beliefs answer where-we-are-going with no hope for
anything beyond a short life and oblivion. Second, it denies human
control over the forces of nature (except through raw engineering
efforts). As human control over our environment increases, the
second will become less of a drawback. We have personally found a
way to hope something other than oblivion through cryonics and the
developing concepts of cell repair machines, but going into detail
would take too much space
Even if we can't do much now about the spread of creation
memes or with those who are infected with these memes, it is useful to
know what we are facing. The knowledge may eventually lead to really
effective programs, but even if it does not, it may keep us from
wasting our time on futile activities. At least for us. we are less
upset by the irrational behavior all around us now that we know it has
an understandable origin in our evolutionary past.