Frans B. M. de Waal, "Survival of the Kindest: Of Selfish Genes
and Unselfish Dogs" and "Down with Dualism! Two Millennia of
Debate about Human Goodness," Selections from The Ape and the
Sushi Master
Frans de Waal (de Vaal) began his work on the link between human and primate
behavioral patterns began in 1975 with a six- year project studying the
world's largest captive colony of chimpanzees at the Arnhem Zoo in the
Netherlands. De Waal discussed the initial results of his research into
how primates resolve conflict in Chimpanzee Politics (1982) and
has since published a series of books that seek to further establish the
continuum of conciliatory and aggressive behavioral patterns that link
humans and primates: Peacemaking Among Primates (1989), Good
Natured: The Origins of Right and Wrong in Humans and Other Animals
(1996), and Bonobo: The Forgotten Ape (1997).
Originally
trained as a zoologist and ethologist in the Netherlands, de Waal is currently
the C. H. Candler Professor of Primate Behavior at Emory University and
director of the Living Links Center at the Yerkes Regional Primate Research
Center in Atlanta Georgia. The goal of the Living Links Center is to study
the four extant breeds of great apes--the bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas,
and orangutans--that connect humans to our primate relatives. By exploring
these links, de Waal and his colleagues hope "to reconstruct human evolution,
pinpoint the differences and similarities between humans and apes, and
educate the public about apes and promote their well-being and conservation."
By insisting primates have a "culture" that they learn through observation,
de Waal sees himself as challenging both the humanities and the social
sciences, which have assumed a sharp distinction between humans and animals,
and the sciences, which have depicted humans as "taking over the world
by means of aggression." In "Survival of the Kindest" and "Down with Dualism,"
two chapters drawn from de Waal's most recent book, The Ape and the
Sushi Master: Cultural Reflections by a Primatologist (2000),
de Waal offers an alternate understanding of the relationship between
primates and humans. As de Waal explained in a recent interview, it is
by studying the compassionate and altruistic behavior of the Bonobo and
the other great apes that we can gain access "to a side of ourselves that
the textbooks have put under the table."
de Waal, Frans. Selections from The Ape and the
Sushi Master: Cultural Reflections of a Primatologist. (Basic Books,
2000.)
Biographical information and digital image drawn from The
Living Link Center's Web site.
Quotations from Ira
Flatow's interview with Franz de Waal on National Public Radio's Science
Friday, June 1, 2001.
Links to Explore:
The
Living Links Center: directed by Professor de Waal, the center seeks
to study the links between humans and the four extant great apes--the
bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans. Includes links to a primate
taxonomy with a homonoid evolutionary tree based on DNA comparisons
and Ira Flatow's interview
with de Waal on NPR's Science Friday (starts at 14:30).
"Revolutionary
Evolutionist": article on Richard Dawkins, author of The Selfish
Gene, by Michael Schrage, published in Wired magazine in 1995.
The U.S. Department of Justice,
Bureau of Justice Statistics: data on crime in the United States,
including reports on recent trends in terms of victims and types of crimes
committed.
Biodiversity
and WorldMap: provides a wealth of information on the current state
of biodiversity and conservation efforts around the globe.
Questions for Learning:
-
What is to be gained by studying "the living links" that
join humans with their primate ancestors? What does it matter what
the homonoid evolutionary tree looks like? After you've visited the
The Living Links Center
and listened to the interview
with de Waal, how do you believe de Waal would answer these questions?
- Dawkins' view of how genes work is antithetical to the position that
de Waal supports. As Schrage puts it in "Revolutionary
Evolutionist," Dawkins believes that "genes are selfish;
the watchmaker is blind. To say otherwise, he insists, betrays the truth.
Cherished concepts like 'free will' and 'spirituality' live in the dark,
helical shadows of our genes." What evidence does Dawkins rely
on to reach these conclusions? What do we gain by accepting that "all
life, at its core, is a process of digital-information transfer"?
- de Waal is obviously aware that humans can be aggressive towards one
another as well as kind. Can his argument be used to shed any light
on the persistence of criminal activity? As you review the The
US Department of Justice's reports on crime in the United States,
do you find places where de Waal's argument seems relevant? Can evolutionary
theories be used to explain or illuminate such statistical accounts
of the behavior of the species?
- Conservation is a cause that many people find easy to embrace in the
abstract; the hard work comes in deciding how to balance the needs of
humans and the environment in practical matters, such as city planning,
fuel efficiency, public transportation and the maintenance of local
and global "biodiversity." After you've visited the Biodiversity
and WorldMap web site, you should be in a position to state what
the arguments are for working to conserve biodiversity. How does one
decide which life forms should be preserved? How are the priorities
established?
Questions for Connecting:
-
In "What does the dreaded 'E' would mean anyway?"
Stephen Jay Gould offers two competing definitions of evolution.
Can either of Gould's definitions accommodate de Waal's vision
of the evolutionary process? In the end, does it matter how
one thinks about the evolutionary process? Is there a necessary
connection between how one thinks about evolution and how one
understands humankind's place in the cosmos?
For additional connecting suggestions, please go to assignments
and more
assignments.
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