BIG03.POSTMODERN
SYNTHESIS
“We're beginning to see the coalescence of a new
and quite different theory from that that represented the strict Darwinism of
the so-called modern synthesis. A new and different theory with a Darwinian
core is being forged, exciting and fruitful theory in the very best sense that
first of all it is quite different in many important respects from what was the
standard take.” – Stephen Jay Gould
How does nature and evolution
work in 2017?
BIG
outline: While culture (and mind in relative concert) is about our
developing second nature, our other
nature, this BIG is about Mother Nature, the evolutionary process and how we
express that through our range of knowledge(s) in 2017 and beyond. Darwin used
‘natural selection’ as a metaphor for ‘man’s methodical selection’ in culture. Nature’s
“selection” is not conscious, and doesn’t have the foresight of human selection
and Darwin was clear in stating and restating that natural selection was the
main, but not the exclusive means of modification. I’ll refer to this as
‘classical Darwinism’. However, over the 1930/40s, the ‘modern synthesis’
emerged as a neo-Darwinian fusion of Darwin’s theory of evolution and Mendelian
genetics. Since this time evolution has become more hard, more genetic to the
point where genes as crucial process in evolution are referred to as the
purpose of evolution. The Postmodern Synthesis is a rejection of this narrowing
of evolutionary theory. Instead, the Postmodern Synthesis expands classical
Darwinism out towards a general theory of nature. In working through what
culture is, a lot of that is working through what it is not and that means
getting to grips with evolutionary theory and what is happening in nature. The
Postmodern Synthesis uses the explanatory power of the trilectic mechanism
previously discussed, and aligns it with Richard Lewontin’s triple helix,
Edward O. Wilson’s sociobiology, classical Darwinism and the inclusion of other
means of modification and process in evolution (such as epigenetics), towards a
general theory of nature that we can see in the earth systems science approach
in James Lovelock’s Gaia approach.
BIG outcome: We’re doing BIG
knowledge here and illuminating how culture and society work. When you’re
watching television or listening to radio and a commentator refers to a team,
political party, etc as having something “in their DNA” when it is in their
culture, or psychology, that is wrong and we need to understand the developments
that foster such convenient ignorance. This comes from an incomplete reading of
nature, and transferring that shortcoming back onto culture. From the modern
synthesis the genetic basis of behaviour
became an increasing focus and from this cultural/historical bandwagon
Sociobiology (1975), Cultural Ethology (1975) and Memetics (1976 ‘The Selfish
Gene’) emerged. Evolutionary Psychology (1992) is one of several more recent expansions
of this idea.
When we say that something is
natural we need to be really, really (really) clear what we mean by nature. Is
nature a model of sustainability and diversity borne of geological time with
intermittent and varying evolutionary processes and forces, or is nature an
arena for neo-Darwinian genetic selection to operate? Are there a range of
‘actions’ within the evolutionary process, with natural selection being the
main, but not exclusive, as classical Darwinism states? How important are
discoveries/contributions like epigenetics, systems biology, etc in refining
our understanding of the evolutionary process, and nature more generally? The
Postmodern Synthesis is a social science based response to evolutionary theory
towards a general theory of nature. In BIG.08 we’re going to look at Social
Capitalism and the importance of efficiency and ‘what is nature?’ is
fundamental to that. Furthermore, in BIG11.Easter Planet we foster a ‘nature’s-eye
view’ to the planet and a Postmodern Synthesis is important on its own, and in
its contribution to these other BIGs.
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