An interesting new article by Ann Gauger. Are beauty, truth and goodness immaterial transcendentals or merely traits evolved for maximum individual and group fitness? Naturally, materialists and cynical skeptics of all types scoff at even posing this issue. One thing at the least is at stake in this question - these qualities of life are what make life worth living, at least to a large minority of humans. A belief that they are entirely subjective and ultimately meaningless leads to alienation and other problems.
I don't think so.
The evolutionary issue: if we evolved our appreciation for goodness, truth, and beauty, and these qualities are purely subjective and neurologically based, then evolutionary psychology research should surely have discovered the particular mechanisms involved. It turns out no such thing has happened. For instance once popular hypotheses have been abandoned, like the one to explain altruism (at least when directed to close kin), where by sacrificing oneself for one’s close kin, a person could ensure the survival of the genes he shared with his kinsfolk (so it's the "selfish gene" again trying to ensure its survival and spread itself). Evo-psych hypotheses are supported mainly by the usual Darwinian religious faith.
Of course, this issue ultimately is closely linked to the issue of the evidence for personal survival of physical death. If that is the case, what is it that survives and what are its essential qualities? Do they include the transcendentals Gauger discusses? She doesn't go into that.
Quote:"Truth, beauty, and goodness are abstract concepts that nonetheless correspond to our deepest desires. They are not likely to have evolved by a neo-Darwinian process. Rather, from neo-Darwinism I would expect an absence of beauty or a denial of it — an inability to appreciate it. The same for truth. What about goodness? If selflessness and generosity are taken as signs of goodness, should we expect goodness from the natural world?"
I don't think so.
The evolutionary issue: if we evolved our appreciation for goodness, truth, and beauty, and these qualities are purely subjective and neurologically based, then evolutionary psychology research should surely have discovered the particular mechanisms involved. It turns out no such thing has happened. For instance once popular hypotheses have been abandoned, like the one to explain altruism (at least when directed to close kin), where by sacrificing oneself for one’s close kin, a person could ensure the survival of the genes he shared with his kinsfolk (so it's the "selfish gene" again trying to ensure its survival and spread itself). Evo-psych hypotheses are supported mainly by the usual Darwinian religious faith.
Quote:"What’s the problem with these arguments? First of all, they assume (1) that the usefulness of the transcendentals is tied to a gene or genes; (2) that there is some sort of survival value or reproductive value to recognizing transcendentals or acting on perceptions of them; and (3) that there is at least enough survival or reproductive benefit to get this ability preferentially passed on to succeeding generations. More fundamentally, they assume that truth, beauty and goodness are not things in themselves, but are merely signals that allow us to make good evolutionary choices. Taking these assumptions into account, I would like to see someone set a rigorous number for the additional survival value of a group due to its members’ ability to recognize truth, beauty, or goodness, and then get it past the population genetics lottery.
Scientific materialism is no match for beauty, truth, or goodness. These immaterial transcendentals give meaning to our lives."
Of course, this issue ultimately is closely linked to the issue of the evidence for personal survival of physical death. If that is the case, what is it that survives and what are its essential qualities? Do they include the transcendentals Gauger discusses? She doesn't go into that.