I bet you think the theory of evolution is a pseudoscience as well? After all, there's no empirical way to prove macroevolution in that the human race is evolved from monkeys, yet it is the scientific consensus that that is a fact. The whole "pseudoscience" argument is more of a cop out just because there hasn't been empirical macro-scale study over 100 years on the matter. Evolution in social stances holds true.Pwns wrote:"Altruism" is quite often not a good policy for any group of living things to follow. The animal kingdom is full of things that are considered barbaric by normal people - prolicide, cannibalism, intentional neglect of offspring, and other such things. And often those things CAN and usually ARE beneficial from an evolutionary perspective. Why should a mother invest energy caring for offspring that is not likely to have reproductive success? Why shouldn't a Lion kill his lionesses' cubs when it is obvious he is stronger than the other Lion he ran off who fathered those cubs and thus would be more likely to father cubs who would be more likely to survive and reproduce? Why should many female insects and arachnids spare a single male that inseminates them when not doing so could mean hundreds developing eggs in her could end up malnourished as well?youngterrier wrote:
As I said, it's proven fact that the survival and thriving ability increases exponentially with altruism and cooperation. Simultaneously, it is within the inherent interests of every creature to survive and thrive as an individuals. Once we realize that cooperation and altruism does in fact make one's life easier and more happy than heathenistic psychopathic pursuits, it's quite easy to understand and pursue cooperation and altruism.
You can ask similar questions that relate to human affairs. Why should parents invest time and energy raising a down-syndrome kid who (1) isn't going to have reproductive success, (2) isn't going to grow up to become human capital that twenty-first century societies need, and (3) isn't going to live long enough to tend to his or her parents in their old age? Why should we allow anyone with double-digit IQ to reproduce? IQ scales certainly aren't perfect, but they have been shown to be positively correlated with achievement. There's no doubt we'd be better off if the average IQ on today's scale was 150, so why do we not say the end justifies the means? Why should you perform CPR on a stranger who needs it when whether or not that person will survive will have little effect on the performer or society at large? Why do we care about endangered species whos extinction would have minimal consequences for civilization?
Evolutionary psychology is a pseudoscience, YT. There is no way to empirically show that any human behavior pattern was essential to the preservation of human populations over the millenia. And there are plenty of behaviors that make absolutely no sense from an evolutionary perspective (see above).youngterrier wrote:If anything, humans do good because of selfishness, after selfishness they do things out of affection, after affection they do good things for others because they know that's how they would want to be treated and the world would be better off because of it. When I say better off, I'm not saying "cosmologically," I'm saying it would be better off for me to live in based off of preference. It all starts with selfishness, from selfishness we cooperate with others, and our understanding of how to thrive expands from that. Selfishness is the core, which as Darwinism teaches us, is the core of the survival of life and that's just a fact of life, which is objectively true.
People confuse Darwinism in that they believe that there's a specific way we are programmed and we stick to it no matter what, that's not how it works. Yes, there are some things that are held constant in nature, but as time and generations pass individuals adapt to suite their environment. Given the right amount of time, some aspects of creature (or culture in this case) can radically change for survival. The difference between man and animal is that man has reason, and the difference between what man has done in the past and what man does at present is that man is more reasoned in that he knows more about the surrounding world. Man does not simply pick and choose his viewpoints, he picks the most rational viewpoint, and it's often influenced by what's most comforting to him. When given superior evidence and being free from presupposed notions, man will pick the superior argument or viewpoint and adopt it to his world view. This influences our laws and our morality. Take for instance, the Gay Rights movement. 75 years ago (okay random number, I don't care), it was considered wrong, not a choice, and no one had any sympathy for you if you were gay, whatever punishment you got, you got. Since then, we've realized Gay people are people too, and despite what you may think about marriage we can agree that hurting/killing them for who they are is wrong and not really beneficial to society, especially considering there have been plenty of gay people who have contributed to society. The same can be said for black people and the civil rights period.
I think it's quite elementary and stupid to think that our understanding of our fellow species has not increased in the last 50 years alone, let alone few thousand, and even dumber to think that that understanding hasn't changed how we treat people.
I could give you a list of reasons why not caring for children, despite disability is wrong and unbeneficial to our society, many of which include unknown potential (see Temple Grandin), as well as it betraying current human nature by ignoring our senses of empathy and understanding.









