Rand failed to deal with evolution. Why?

Posted by Esceptico 7 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?


All Comments

  • Posted by 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You use the word “respect” in more than one meaning. In the context here, I use it in the sense of granting civility, as does Washington and Kelley. You apparently did not have the good fortune I had, which is to have been raised by parents who taught me to be polite. But, you are in luck. Amazon features many books on the subject you can use for self-study.
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  • Posted by Zenphamy 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Oh my, how awful, non-PC, and thus uncivilized of me to have not read your Esceptico Rules of Discussion and granted you your entitled human right of respect and treatment as an equal human, and I assume from that to have also not considered your denigrating comments and judgements of AR, her work, and those of us on this site that take pride in calling ourselves Objectivists and students and defenders of the philosophy--as serious and an amazingly erudite presentation and defense of your world changing discovery that Ayn Rand didn't do something that you insist she had to do to avoid your astounding criticism of her work. And I'm so very appreciative of your astute observations of my lack of proper communication skills and uncivilized ass style of written communication instead.--Not

    The content of your Post criticizing Rand and your defense of that content has not earned my respect and you and I are in no way equal humans nor equal anything else. While I'm sure that Rand was a human being and made many if not all of the mistakes that human beings make, as a script writer, an author, and a philosopher--she had few if any equals. While you on the other hand attempt to belittle her by attacking her for not doing something that you think she should have done in order to satisfy your asinine and sophist determination of what the developer and describer of a philosophy must do, from whatever lofty perch you imagine yourself on.

    If you have determined from my written comments and replies to you on this post, a lack of respect and an assertive communication style that you feel (OhOhOh) doesn't recognize you as an equal---you're certainly perceptive at least.
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  • Posted by 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    My understanding is we are part of the great ape animal group, and we are a separate species because we cannot interbreed. Again, man did not evolve from lower apes, but from a common ancestor with the other great apes.
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  • Posted by 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Let’s see here, this thread has changed the focus from Rand’s refusal to take a position on evolution to the psychology of sex, the branding of Branden as a whatever and ignoring Rand was a cougar. Perhaps we should be examining Rand’s stated concept of sex and love as compared with her actual lifestyle. Of course, then we would have to ignore she seemed to write her sex scenes more in a BDSM style than love — if we assume consent on the part of the woman — or outright rape. Definitely a separate topic.
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  • Posted by 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I have read Dawkins' books. I conclude from coments I have seen here that there are some Gulchers who do not accept the theory of evolution or misunderstand it. Dawkins does explain the theory in easy to understand terms.
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  • Posted by $ puzzlelady 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    No need to. Just read the books of Richard Dawkins, evolutionary biologist, or watch his YouTube appearances, talks, debates, lectures, interviews.
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  • Posted by $ puzzlelady 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    He cheated on her with a younger woman, a breach of trust and integrity. He was afraid of telling her the truth and so tried to get away with living a lie. It was a totally dishonorable way for him to deal with reality. Whether it was to hold on to his position of prestige under her umbrella or for the financial gain he could make thereby, it was a betrayal of her and of the values he professed to share.
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  • Posted by $ puzzlelady 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Ah, I understand. There was only one true Objectivist, namely its author and founder, Ayn Rand. All other mortals were merely students of her work. This has to do with intellectual property. Whether since then sympathizers, partisans, students, followers, fans, acolytes, endorsers, adherents, practitioners, what-have-you, are allowed to call themselves full-fledged Objectivists is still an issue, and the cause of the great divide between ARI and TAS. Should philosophers be made to call themselves only "students of philosophy"?

    Ayn Rand named her system Objectivism, virtually a proprietary trademark. Yet she also stated that she did not have an exclusive monopoly on truth, that truth belonged to all who came to it of their own mental effort. After her death, when no new authentic material could be added to her opus, those who had been "students" and had internalized the full philosophy began to declare themselves graduated to full stature as complete Objectivists. If this is objectionable to the keepers of the estate, they are wrangling over her legacy and its monetizable assets.

    This, too, is a product of evolution--the evolution of ideas and a form of tribal heritage. In the final analysis, if you are a rational, ethical human, you are a practicing Objectivist whether you have even ever heard of it or define yourself as such or not.

    It is in the nature of memes (idea software) to take on a life of their own and to defend themselves and to attack deviations. If people could only understand that such is the source of all conflicts, we could finally evolve to a stage of peaceful co-existence, constructive cooperation for mutual benefit, individual freedom, and unhampered creative productivity.

    I'm sorry you had a bad experience with the slavish adherents. Or was it Ayn Rand herself who called you names?
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  • Posted by $ puzzlelady 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Tres bien, merci. Traveling much this summer, off to Michigan this morning, then to Finland, Denmark and Germany next week. I trust you are well. Missed you in Las Vegas.
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  • Posted by $ sjatkins 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    The point is that from the POV of evolution we are not an ape. We are a separate species that cannot inter-breed with apes.
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  • Posted by 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I fear you misunderstood me, my fault for not being clear. My point is one must always keep what goal you have in making statements. If your goal is to change the mind of a reader, then I think an aggressive, belittling, style is misplaced because it will close the ears of a listener. A person does have a right to be an uncivilized ass, but cannot expect others to participate in the discussion. In a discussion, one must treat people as equal humans. George Washington put it this way: “Every action done in company ought to be with some sign of respect to those that are present.” David Kelley, echoed this when writing: “The rational individualist is not the enemy of benevolence or civility, but their truest exemplar.”
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  • Posted by LibertyBelle 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I think it was in an article in the periodical "The
    Objectivist Forum"; there was later a periodical
    "The Intellectual Activist" (one was supposed to bephilosophical, the other a sort of warning about political measures coming up, but "The Objectivist Forum" quit publishing, and so "The Intellectual Activist" sort of took over its func-
    tion). Anyway, as I remember, the remark came
    from a speech Ayn Rand gave. But, I'm sorry,
    I don't remember the name of the article. I think
    she may have been talking about education in
    the public schools. And that may be the article
    in which she said that, with people reaching
    sexual development earlier, and some people not wanting sex education taught in the schools,
    it was as if they were trying to create "sexual
    disasters". But I am not certain that it was the
    same article.
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  • Posted by Zenphamy 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    That's very like a kid getting a trophy just for participating. There are only Individual Rightsall deriving from the Individual's ownership of his life. There are no other rights. There can be no right that places an obligation on others such as satisfying an entitlement to respect.
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  • Posted by 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Not likely I'll get east. I spend most of my non-Arizona time in South America. But, I will offer you the same if you get west --- or south. Stay in touch. rmorris@richardmorris.com

    I am off to the movies to see "Hillary's America" (though I must say I usually can't stand D'Souza) and just watched "Clinton Cash" at http://www.breitbart.com/clinton-cash... both of which will probably make me want to spend more time South.
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  • Posted by $ Thoritsu 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Sounds good. If you make it to MA/NH, we have to go out, try a few, talk and test the limits.
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  • Posted by ScintiaSitPotentia 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Ah, now the ego comes out to play, When I say What does it matter, its simple, people are to involved in what the perceive to be important and what is correct to them. Other than the people here debating this, who else would care? non this is the world that Ayn Rand wanted to draw a picture in Atlas Shrugged. Why Galt's Gulch was built. I myself truly care about the subject but find it to be quite self explanatory.
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  • Posted by 7 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You are probably right, what does it matter? After all, people lived a long time believing the earth was flat and 18% of Americans still believe the sun revolves around the earth. It is too early here in Arizona for a drink, though. I guess I'll go to the movies and see "Hillary's America" for some tragic relief
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