Wilson's Ladder
The following is the basic argument of pop sociobiologists, called Wilson's ladder (Kitcher, 1987).
- IF a behavior maximizes fitness, THEN the behavior will exist in virtually all members of a group.
- IF a behavior exists in virtually all members of a group, THEN the behavior came about by natural selection.
- IF a behavior came about by natural selection, THEN there were once individual differences in the group's genetic makeup.
- IF there were once individual differences in the group's genetic makeup, THEN there are differences in the genetic makeup of the present group from its prehistoric ancestors.
- IF there are differences in the genetic makeup of the present group from its prehistoric ancestors, THEN the genetically adaptive behavior will be difficult to modify by social engineering.
- THEREFORE, IF a behavior maximizes fitness, THEN the genetically adaptive behavior will be difficult to modify by social engineering.
Reference
Kitcher, P. (1987). Précis of Vaulting ambition: Sociobiology and the quest for human nature. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 10, 61-100.
Last modified May 1998
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