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Hardin,
Garrett Nature and Mans Fate
[Abstract 400 words]
It is difficult for
those of us living today to realize that the idea of progress is
an extremely young idea. It is a sense that, viewed over a long
period of time, there is a progressive improvement in life; rather
than the old times were better or that which hath
been is that which shall be.
Progress is primarily
a feeling that governs a persons view of the world and motivates
his actions. The feeling has been immensely important in the development
of the Western world during the last two hundred years.
The idea of biological
evolution was accepted by some as representing progress of a sort;
a progression of species over time leading from simple animal forms
to the pinnacle of natural selection, the human species. But is
biological evolution progress?
Darwinian adaptation
is not in its essence a progressive change, but merely a dynamic
way of preserving life as conditions change. The fittest
in a population of organisms are those that can best survive to
reproduce under given environmental conditions. When those conditions
change those previously less fit may become the fittest
and their progeny will dominate. There is no direction to the change.
When a species of
bacteria becomes resistant to an antibiotic can we call that change
progress? We would say at once, Not from the human point of viewsince
the change makes the human situation more difficult. Is the change
progressive from the point of view of the bacteria? It is tempting
to say, Yes. In response to the threat of a new selecting agent,
a new and superior form comes out of the bacterial population.
But it is important
to note that the new form is superior only in the new environment.
If it is set in competition with the old form in an environment
that is lacking the special selecting agent, the resistant strain
is speedily displaced by the nonresistant strain through a process
of natural selection. Is this progress? It does not seem quite like
what we have in mind when we use the word.
The concept of progress,
for all its historical importance in sheltering the idea of evolution,
is not easily applicable to facts of biology. There may be a sense
in which it is useful to say that progress has occurred; but we
have not yet discovered it. Perhaps we will later. For the present,
it is best to agree that biological evolution does not necessarily
constitute progress.
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