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of Deniz Cem Önduygu

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Tag "philosophy of biology"

Biology as Ideology: The Doctrine of DNABiology as Ideology: The Doctrine of DNA by Richard C. Lewontin

Lewontin is a leftist and he couldn’t be more obvious about it. When he unconvincingly accuses all science of being ideological, it seems like he’s preparing the ground for and justifying the strong ideology behind his own writing. He refuses the extreme idea that genes are the source of all causation in the human sphere, only to replace them with bourgeoisie and capitalism! Yes, he takes particular delight in linking everything from reductionism as a scientific tool to the information-theoretical paradigm in biology back to “the bourgeois revolutions of the eighteenth century”. It’s funny how reductionistic leftists can become when trying to refute reductionism.

It’s one thing to dream of a more egalitarian, more democratic and more fair society; it’s another to filter facts according to that dream. I find this confusion especially troubling for a scientist: everything he writes suggests that if ever science shows beyond dispute that intelligence – or some other “good” human quality – is differentially inherited, he will reject that conclusion just because it’s not in line with his precious ideals of equality and fairness. (He actually has a go at it in the book, and maybe this isn’t much of a problem for him since he admits that scientists are inevitably ideological creatures.)

Speaking of fairness, I actually loved the book (1) because it is nicely designed and (2) because Lewontin certainly has a rare gift of balancing our thinking against the sometimes lazy Dawkins-Dennett line of thought by pointing out neglected perspectives and offering a lot of food for thought. The problem is that – just like his ally Gould – often he’s pushing it too far, to the point that the poor arguments injected at those specific points compromise his otherwise amazing authorship.

Another problem worth noting is that in some of the corrections he proposes for the Dawkinsian reductionism – again, just like Gould – he is actually overlapping with what Dawkins says, only with a different vocabulary: the contructionism (“the environment of organisms is coded in their DNA” – p.112) that he defends against adaptationism is the same as Dawkins’s concept of extended phenotype (1982), and the below passage with which he closes the book (1991) is one step shy of memetics (1976).

(…) the genes, in making possible the development of human consciousness, have surrendered their power both to determine the individual and its environment. They have been replaced by an entirely new level of causation, that of social interaction with its own laws and its own nature that can be understood and explored only through that unique form of experience, social action.

In this respect, he reminds me of Dennett’s metaphor for Gould in Darwin’s Dangerous Idea: the boy who cried wolf.

Dawkins vs Gould: Survival of the FittestDawkins vs Gould: Survival of the Fittest by Kim Sterelny

I had low expectations for this book because of its (typographically) cheesy cover design and clumsy typesetting. In the end it made me want to read his other books.

The author uses the debate between Dawkins and Gould to walk through many important topics in evolutionary biology, mentioning lots of other scientists and philosophers on the way, and successfully switching between detailed examples and the big picture. He definitely knows what he’s talking about, and his writing is so clear and concise that it somehow resonates with the in-your-face 12-point Baskerville it’s set with. Even so, I would recommend it to those who have read Dawkins/Gould and are somewhat familiar with their ideas. The book ends with an amazing Suggested Reading section where Sterelny makes useful comments on every book he suggests.

In any case, Kim, if you’re reading this: change your publisher. Your book deserves better design.

And this is something I did (based on the original) reflecting where I stand on the debate:

Here it is, finally, Dan Dennett’s Istanbul talk titled “Darwin’s Strange Inversion of Reasoning” from last year. Enjoy.

Filmed, edited and subtitled by me. I thank Eser Aygün, Amaç Herdağdelen, Murat Özsaltık and Bilge Kobaş for their help.

Reminder: This was part of a series of events titled “Darwin and Beyond” organized by Sabancı University to celebrate the Darwin bicentennial, April 10, 2009, Sakıp Sabancı Museum, Istanbul. See also previous related posts.

santa-clement

I’ve been planning to go to the Cambridge Darwin Fest this summer to “lay hands on” Daniel Dennett (in order to tell my children in the future) whom I see as the most important thinker alive and whom I deeply love as if he were my grandfather (and Santa Claus). My desperate wish to meet him was expressing itself through my choice of dummy images in the sketches of the brochures I make for the symposiums in our university:

dummydan

detail from a sketch for the symposium "Digital Encounters" which of course doesn't really include Dennett (and Hirst), done 5 months ago

Last week, an e-mail was forwarded to me from my university, saying that they needed someone to make posters for the Darwin year events organized by Sabancı University.

I first thought about forwarding it to a friend. Nothing except the word “Darwin” could persuade me to take another job in this busiest period of my life and after a few minutes of thinking, I sent an e-mail saying that I was willing to do it. That day, I came across a friend I hadn’t seen for a long time and he said to me that he had finished reading the Dennett books I had been recommending to him, and asked for more recommendations. He also said that he was reading Dennett in order to “become a person who has the right to live in my eyes”.

My cellphone rang in the evening:

— Hello, I guess you’re the one who is going to make the posters?

— Yeah, how many do you need? Is it just one poster?

— Well, there are going to be several talks. Maybe we can do one big poster including all, or one for each, I don’t know. But the first one is on April 10th, that’s the urgent one. Maybe you’ve heard of him, there’s this man, Daniel Dennett, who is –

That moment, the person on the phone entered the list of “people who made me happiest” in the second rank. The complete immersion of this news into my nervous system took one week, and I spent that week making the posters, canceling every other job and thinking “I’m doing this in vain, I just dreamed about that phone call, it’s not real”. Yet it was real, I was making posters for Dan Dennett: I had my career climax as a designer a little early.

Yes, Daniel C. Dennett is coming to give our presents and his talk “Darwin’s Strange Inversion of Reasoning” at 16.00, April 10th, at Sakıp Sabancı Museum, Emirgan, Istanbul. I’d like you to inform me if you are going to be there because we’re trying to figure out how many people are going to show up.

In this one, I was inspired by the digital nature of evolution (for a beautiful account, see River Out of Eden by R. Dawkins), the Weasel program from the Blind Watchmaker and the Library of Babel (and Mendel) which Dennett makes great use of in his Darwin’s Dangerous Idea.

In this one I focused on what Dennett says about Darwin’s strange inversion of reasoning:

The great inversion of Darwin, what McKenzie calls his strange inversion of reasoning, was when Darwin realized that you have a bottom-up theory of creativity, that all the wonderful design that we see in the biosphere could be the products, direct or indirect of a mindless, purposeless process, and this simply inverts an idea that I think is as old as our species, maybe older in a certain sense, and that is what you might call the top-down theory of creativity: it takes a big fancy thing to make a less fancy thing. Potters make pots. You never see a pot making a potter. You never see a horseshoe making a blacksmith. It is always big fancy, wise, wonderful things making lesser things. And so, here we are, we are pretty wonderful: we must be made by something more wonderful still and it’s got to be like us, it’s got to be the intelligent artificer. It’s very scarey for people to give that up, and to begin to think about how our importance doesn’t depend on the importance of something still more important. That is, not of that sort. I mean on the one hand I think that a good bumper-sticker recipe for happiness is find something more important than yourself to think about and worry about. There are many such things that we can find to replace the one big important thing which many people think they have, which is God. (from here)

The official link for the event is http://myweb.sabanciuniv.edu/darwin/