Rand failed to deal with evolution. Why?

Posted by Esceptico 8 years, 9 months ago to Philosophy
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Festinger’s Question comes from his famous 1956 book, "When Prophecy Fails." Suppose (1) an individual believes something with his whole heart and soul; (2) he has taken irrevocable actions because of it; and (3) he is then presented with evidence, unequivocal and undeniable evidence, evidence he himself fully accepts as true, that his first belief is wrong. Festinger’s question is: What will happen?

The answer, well documented by six decades of subsequent research, shows people respond to dissonant beliefs by using three key strategies.

First, they can ignore the dissonant belief. In essence saying, I don’t want to believe it, therefore it isn’t true. This, as the psychologists would say, is a form of repression. We Objectivists recognize this as subjectivism, holding the primacy of consciousness to be true, instead of the primacy of existence.

Second, they can reduce the importance of the conflicting belief. This is evident by phrases such as “I’ll think about it tomorrow,” meaning I have more important things to consider. This, as the psychologists would say, is a form of evasion.

Third, they can make the newer conflicting belief consistent with the older existing belief by twisting the evidence, then claiming the beliefs are not really in conflict. This, as the psychologists would say, is rationalization. Michael Shermer calls it “motivated reasoning.”

What Festinger did not expect, was people did not question their beliefs. Quite the opposite. Researchers were astonished to find people became stronger in their irrational beliefs after having been presented with unequivocal and undeniable evidence the subject himself fully accepted as true. For example, if they believed in the flat earth, then were presented with the undeniable evidence of the spherical planet, they became stronger in their flat earth belief.

The most difficult beliefs for people to examine are those beliefs which have been (1) held for a long time; (2) adopted before age of reason; and (3) most often repeated.

This explains why it is impossible to have a conversation on the two subjects one should never discuss socially: Religious and political beliefs, both of which are drilled into children from the time they are born.

One may easily say, “every belief should be open to reexamination upon the presentation of credible evidence,” but attempting to live up to that standard is difficult and takes a concentrated effort.

Which brings me to Ayn Rand.

A tenet of Rand is man was born tabula rasa [Rand, Ayn. The Virtue of Selfishness. New York: Signet. Chapter 1, “The Objectivist Ethics,” p. 28. Sorry, my copy is so old there is no ISBN. Rand also said this in the August 1970 issue of “the Objectivist” at page 3. Yes, I have the original copy I subscribed to and got in 1970.] and humans have no instincts. [Rand, Ayn. Atlas Shrugged. New York: Random House, 1957. P. 1013. Again, my copy is pre-ISBN. Hell, even my Spanish copy is pre-ISBN.]

The Theory of Evolution holds humans are not born tabula rasa and we do have instincts. Instinctive behavior is the inherent inclination of a living organism to act in a particular manner. An instinctive behavior is a fixed action pattern in which a sequence of actions are carried out in response to a clearly defined stimulus. For example, a dog shaking water from wet fur.

The role of instincts (genetically determined behaviors) in determining the behavior of animals varies from species to species. The more complex the neural system, the greater the role of the cerebral cortex and instincts play a lesser role.

Do humans have instincts? The answer is, in 2016, clearly yes. Humans seem to be mentally “hardwired” regarding many observable activities, such as the False Positive or False Negative responses to signs of danger such as the rustling of shrubs ahead. Is the rustling from the wind or a predator?

Humans tend to elect the false positive, which means we fear the worst, but the rustling is only the wind and we go on to make love and make babies. The species continues. Animals which selected a false negative, the ones who thought it was the wind when in truth the rustling was a predator, were lunch for the predator. They did not make love and have babies. The species ends. Natural selection.

These are dissonant cognitions. As Rand points out in Atlas, if there are two sides, at least one is wrong (both may be wrong, but one must be wrong if the positions are mutually exclusive). How did Rand resolve the problem? She refused to take sides. “I am not a student of the theory of evolution and, therefore, I am neither its supporter nor its opponent.” Ayn Rand Letter, Vol II, No. 17, May 21, 1973. We are talking 1973, not 1873, and Rand does not take a stand on one of the most important discoveries in history. Incredible.

In my research I did not find Rand even mentioned Darwin. I am not the first to discover this omission. Neil Parille, in his essay, “Ayn Rand and Evolution” (http://rebirthofreason.com/Articles/P...) presents an interesting explanation of why.

As time went on Rand and her lap dog Peikoff seemed driven more deeply into her tabula rasa and lack of instincts beliefs. This comports with the findings of Festinger. I think she was smart enough to know better but was unable to cope with the evidence due to cognitive dissonance.

This leaves Rand as (1) an individual who believes something with her whole heart and soul; (2) has taken irrevocable actions because of it by publishing her thoughts to the world and her followers; and (3) refused to even examine evidence to the contrary.

What would possibly drive Rand to ignore the theory of evolution, which was the most culturally changing theory in history, placing science before religion and illustrating religion’s claims for creationism to ring hollow?

Did she (1) say I don’t want to believe it, therefore it isn’t true; (2) reduce the importance of the conflicting belief and say “I’ll think about it tomorrow,” meaning I have more important things to consider; or (3) try to make the newer conflicting belief consistent with the older existing belief by twisting the evidence, then claiming the beliefs are not really in conflict; or (4) what?

To me, Rand selected door number 2: “I’ll think about it tomorrow.” In doing so, she reneged on a fundamental principle of her own philosophy: “To arrive at a contradiction is to confess an error in one’s thinking; to maintain a contradiction is to abdicate one’s mind and to evict oneself from the realm of realty.” Atlas, at pages 1016-1017.

Here us the question I ask the Gulch: In failing to deal with evolution, did Rand abdicate her mind and evict herself from the realm of reality? Or, is there some other explanation for her omission?


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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Mine were double calafate Margaritas, a new drink I created by replacing Pisco with tequila in a Pisco Sour because Pisco is so expensive in the US. Also supplies vitamin C.
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  • Posted by ScintiaSitPotentia 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I see your points, but in the end does it truly matter? At the end of the day you choose, humans are beyond that of Evolution, we rationalize, science has no impact when it comes to Evolution, Psychology and Sociology are on the finer paths to unlock the secrets that humanity contains. This only a perspective, but I appreciate the topic quite invigorating.
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  • Posted by $ Thoritsu 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Perfect! An example of being right...but...
    The variable you might have been ignoring...the size of my wine glasses. Mine were nine ounces. A "standard" margarita is 1.7 drinks (another assumption), compared to a 6 oz wine glass. Even though mine were 1.5, you were still ahead. Until I had two more little 6 ounce-ers on the plane!
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    Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Perhaps you should start a new post dealing only with evolution. I can already name a few gulchrs on each side. I have taken enough abuse from this group of "like-minded" Objectivists.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Thank you for your comments. I cannot put my finger on the place where Rand even alluded to her acceptance “that Evolution was here to stay.” I discovered since posting my question, others have also looked at this question and they cannot find such a statement by Rand.

    I agree with you that science and evolution to not weaken Rand’s thoughts. That was not my question. My question is why was she so evasive about a subject that is so important?

    I agree with part of your conclusion, “her so called ‘omission’ of evolution is she ... simply brushed it aside,” but I disagree the theory of evolution “has no impact on us.” One does not have to look far to see how much creationism / evolution underlies so much dissension between atheists (of which Objectivists are one group) and theists.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I do not see Branden has having betrayed Rand. If anything, Rand betrayed her own work. She was a pioneer, not the be-all-end-all of Objectivism. My memory for the time was he, in wanting to make Objectivism “open” and advance it, challenged some of what Rand held dear. In doing so, Rand’s reaction was what I call a Festinger cognitive dissonance Option 2. She chose to evade any contrary evidence, become more dogmatic, and sought ever greater purges within her inner circle. In doing so, she and he went their separate ways. Rand was the one who became publicly vindictive, not Branden. In fact, I don’t recall him saying much until 1984 when he wrote about the benefits and dangers of Rand’s Objectivism. Even then, his article did nothing but (rather un-emotively) recite their differences. Since I had witnessed much of what he wrote about, I thought he did a remarkable job of not attacking Rand.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I saw it at the time (1960s) because I called myself an Objectivist, not a student of Objectivism. For this transgression alone, I was called a number of nasty names.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I think you did a nice job here of clearing the air. I agree with most of what you say. I think you are saying we do have instincts, and I agree with your analysis.

    Perhaps Rand did not use the word "instincts" in the way we receive the word and it is a pity she did not elaborate more on that, but what she sid make clear is she believed humans do not have instincts. If she meant something else, I missed it.

    As I mentioned before here, whenever you say something, if there is any possible way for another to misunderstand what you say, you will be misunderstood in the worst possible way, at the worst possible time, and then they will tell you what you “really” meant by your message. All this happens because the listening people attach their own meanings to your words.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Now I am puzzled. How does this fit into the discussion of Rand's attitude (not knowledge) toward evolution?
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    To me, the word "known" is a different noun for the word "knowledge." So, one can say: "a set of facts within my knowledge." And, I would add, my two Margaritas trump your two wines.
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  • Posted by Animal 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    This. Every organism that has ever lived, is living now, and will ever live, is in some way a transitional form.
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  • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Notice in the 'long comment' that in his own words, he condemns himself: " Human beings have rights and are entitled to respect."

    There is no such thing as Human rights that include any entitlement to respect or anything else. Respect must be earned. That's progressive socialism think.
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  • Posted by $ puzzlelady 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    What, with the miles of tangled text already displayed in this thread? Don't stop now. Let's get to the bottom of evolution denial. The very process of all this argumentation is conceptual evolution in action.
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  • Posted by ScintiaSitPotentia 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Esceptico, your inquiry was this “In failing to deal with evolution, did Rand abdicate her mind and evict herself from the realm of reality? Or, is there some other explanation for her omission?” I as a fellow objectivist will hold you in high regards for you have struggled in your endeavors to find information and present it to the gulch. I however find it quite weary watching others trample across your work. When I say the battle, I suggest the fact that in Ayn Rand’s campaign she spread her word, and with it placed in the hands of the people a choice to be one who follows reason or to follow fallacies of their emotions and cognition. (We all know the criticisms produced by the doubters.) While on her path Evolution was present. It suggest according to you. “The Theory of Evolution holds humans are not born tabula rasa and we do have instincts.” Now lets look at these parameters. Evolution suggests man has evolved based off Natural Selection, based off the species with superior genetic information. Ayn Rand did not have the education to take on this theory, so which is more efficacious in keeping ones validity. To discuss and fight with those who do not see reason in something you know little about, or to simply recognize it has the theory that it is and spread your ideals with your validity still intact? It was a gambit. Ayn Rand did not choose to remove herself from reality, far from it, she accepted the reality that Evolution was here to stay, (which based off of the psychiatry reality is what we perceive it.) Ayn Rand new, and if we look at the facts Evolution and science still do not undermine Ayn Rand’s views, nor do they weaken them. Man has a choice, we choose to perceive reality based off of the state of awareness in one’s world, consciousness. So I submit my conclusion , her so called “omission” of evolution is she accepted what others lay before her and she simply brushed it aside, to allow the objectivists to continue because it has no impact on us. Why because at the end of the day, we still have a choice. We choose, we progress, we do not simply choose based off of genetics, because of some rudimentary instinct.
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  • Posted by $ sjatkins 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    New species evolve from previously existing species. That is what the facts say. I forget who it is attributed too but it comes to mind in this discussion, "Stop philosophizing about how many a teeth a horse should have and instead simply look its mouth and count." :)
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  • Posted by $ puzzlelady 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You might as well claim that she may have thought humans came from extraterrestrial visitors! Branden’s testimony is tainted by his emotional antipathy toward a former mentor whom he betrayed. Better not rely on his texts for accurate interpretations of Rand’s views.

    About evolution: given enough time, our origins in the singularity of microorganisms that developed connections and assembled themselves in ever more complex groupings eventually led to the forms we are today, with trillions of cells, more than half of which are not even our own human DNA but symbiotic bacteria and microorganisms that inhabit our bodies and help to keep us alive. .

    What I love and admire about Ayn Rand's thinking is that it gives us a vision of what we can evolve into when our marvelous brains are still more fully developed, as they have been doing for the last 100,000 years. Ask yourself why human brains are so much more capable than chimps' and even bonobos'.

    We are indeed in the next stage of evolution now. The Age of Reason has just begun, even with all the setbacks we see around us. Rand was a pioneer, a forerunner, an outpost, an echo from the time of Aristotle, a gifted visionary impatient to see the "ideal man" appear in reality. If Atlas Shrugged is a type of science fiction, imagine how much more humans will be capable of when traveling into space, when we can move past our primitive violence and mutual destruction to a stage of mutual benefit and collaboration.

    If Ayn Rand was “uncomfortable” about evolution, it may just have been impatience that it took so long.
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  • Posted by $ sjatkins 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    There is ample evidence that the fetal developing brain is not blank or doing no cognition at all. Yes, their is not language yet. But it is not reasonable to suppose language is required to form any deduction, induction or abduction at all from sensory information.
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