From: Jkr438@aol.com
Date: Tue Jun 18 2002 - 13:29:20 MDT
This seems a pretty frequent ideological goal of many technophilic fantasies, 
to "escape" from Darwinian evolution, to no longer have a "blind watchmaker" 
but human/transhuman desires and intentions to do the work of evolution.  
While it may prove difficult to show why this cannot really happen when we 
look at any one area, like alleviating physical suffering, and so forth (I 
mean after all they look like simple bioengineering problems, right?), I 
think there exists some deep, though understandable, misunderstandings about 
the nature of evolution in these utopic dreams.  This time the 
misunderstanding arises not from creationist ideological denial of reality, 
but from the misunderstanding of our individual partial role that we play in 
an otherwise impersonal algorithmic process that encompasses our more partial 
and self-seeming "star" role that we as individuals play in that process.
It comes down to this:  The things that humans do for individual vanity, or 
even for the "greater good", we NEVER figure accurately (and frequently not 
even approximately) the unintended consequences of what we do, and hence 
considerations of fitness may frequently run obliviously or even counter to 
what an individual thinks of as "fitness" from their own perspective.  For 
example, we may increase the intelligence of individuals, only to discover 
that they no longer have any desire to reproduce.  We may alleviate physical 
pain and suffering to such a degree that people become apathetic to the 
plight of those who still have no relief, after all do not at least some 
people enter the medical profession inspired at least in part if not in whole 
by some incident(s) of suffering within their own childhood 
family/environment?
In any case this does not stand as a point of defeatism in these kinds of 
issues, it merely points out that while may and perhaps should improve our 
condition and increase our options, we should not expect this to exempt us 
from essentially blind evolutionary forces.  In the case of pain, especially 
since we all have fairly visceral experience of this phenomena, evolution 
thrives on stress of this very sort.  Eliminate this, and evolution will tend 
to award those "competitors" that reintroduce this or another stressor into 
the system.  Perhaps in its place our great grandchildren will experience 
some great anxieties that we could never understand in our current cognitive 
capacities.
In any case, when we hear these sorts of technophilic gushings about 
eliminating natural selection, I think we should remain more than just mildly 
skeptical.  For me it sort of falls in the same sort of category as 
technologically achieving time-travel (backwards and forwards).  We find it a 
little more seductive than that, however, because in particular instances, 
like eliminating all physical pain, we have already made some significant 
strides and it therefore makes the issue of why not complete elimination? a 
particularly more pressing one.  In any case, despite any optimism on 
particular issues, evolution - and here I mean the blind variety - operates 
on a more impersonal and more holistic level.
-Jake
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