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Tuesday, March 20, 2007 | Science : Evolution and Biology | print version Print | Comments

Document Scientist Finds the Beginnings of Morality in Primate Behavior

by Nicholas Wade

Reposted from the NYTimes:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/20/science/20moral.html?ref=science

Some animals are surprisingly sensitive to the plight of others. Chimpanzees, who cannot swim, have drowned in zoo moats trying to save others. Given the chance to get food by pulling a chain that would also deliver an electric shock to a companion, rhesus monkeys will starve themselves for several days.

Biologists argue that these and other social behaviors are the precursors of human morality. They further believe that if morality grew out of behavioral rules shaped by evolution, it is for biologists, not philosophers or theologians, to say what these rules are.

Moral philosophers do not take very seriously the biologists' bid to annex their subject, but they find much of interest in what the biologists say and have started an academic conversation with them.

The original call to battle was sounded by the biologist Edward O. Wilson more than 30 years ago, when he suggested in his 1975 book "Sociobiology" that "the time has come for ethics to be removed temporarily from the hands of the philosophers and biologicized." He may have jumped the gun about the time having come, but in the intervening decades biologists have made considerable progress.

Last year Marc Hauser, an evolutionary biologist at Harvard, proposed in his book "Moral Minds" that the brain has a genetically shaped mechanism for acquiring moral rules, a universal moral grammar similar to the neural machinery for learning language. In another recent book, "Primates and Philosophers," the primatologist Frans de Waal defends against philosopher critics his view that the roots of morality can be seen in the social behavior of monkeys and apes.

Dr. de Waal, who is director of the Living Links Center at Emory University, argues that all social animals have had to constrain or alter their behavior in various ways for group living to be worthwhile. These constraints, evident in monkeys and even more so in chimpanzees, are part of human inheritance, too, and in his view form the set of behaviors from which human morality has been shaped.

Many philosophers find it hard to think of animals as moral beings, and indeed Dr. de Waal does not contend that even chimpanzees possess morality. But he argues that human morality would be impossible without certain emotional building blocks that are clearly at work in chimp and monkey societies.

Dr. de Waal's views are based on years of observing nonhuman primates, starting with work on aggression in the 1960s. He noticed then that after fights between two combatants, other chimpanzees would console the loser. But he was waylaid in battles with psychologists over imputing emotional states to animals, and it took him 20 years to come back to the subject.

He found that consolation was universal among the great apes but generally absent from monkeys — among macaques, mothers will not even reassure an injured infant. To console another, Dr. de Waal argues, requires empathy and a level of self-awareness that only apes and humans seem to possess. And consideration of empathy quickly led him to explore the conditions for morality.

Though human morality may end in notions of rights and justice and fine ethical distinctions, it begins, Dr. de Waal says, in concern for others and the understanding of social rules as to how they should be treated. At this lower level, primatologists have shown, there is what they consider to be a sizable overlap between the behavior of people and other social primates.

Social living requires empathy, which is especially evident in chimpanzees, as well as ways of bringing internal hostilities to an end. Every species of ape and monkey has its own protocol for reconciliation after fights, Dr. de Waal has found. If two males fail to make up, female chimpanzees will often bring the rivals together, as if sensing that discord makes their community worse off and more vulnerable to attack by neighbors. Or they will head off a fight by taking stones out of the males' hands.

Dr. de Waal believes that these actions are undertaken for the greater good of the community, as distinct from person-to-person relationships, and are a significant precursor of morality in human societies.

Macaques and chimpanzees have a sense of social order and rules of expected behavior, mostly to do with the hierarchical natures of their societies, in which each member knows its own place. Young rhesus monkeys learn quickly how to behave, and occasionally get a finger or toe bitten off as punishment. Other primates also have a sense of reciprocity and fairness. They remember who did them favors and who did them wrong. Chimps are more likely to share food with those who have groomed them. Capuchin monkeys show their displeasure if given a smaller reward than a partner receives for performing the same task, like a piece of cucumber instead of a grape.

These four kinds of behavior — empathy, the ability to learn and follow social rules, reciprocity and peacemaking — are the basis of sociality.

Dr. de Waal sees human morality as having grown out of primate sociality, but with two extra levels of sophistication. People enforce their society's moral codes much more rigorously with rewards, punishments and reputation building. They also apply a degree of judgment and reason, for which there are no parallels in animals.

Religion can be seen as another special ingredient of human societies, though one that emerged thousands of years after morality, in Dr. de Waal's view. There are clear precursors of morality in nonhuman primates, but no precursors of religion. So it seems reasonable to assume that as humans evolved away from chimps, morality emerged first, followed by religion. "I look at religions as recent additions," he said. "Their function may have to do with social life, and enforcement of rules and giving a narrative to them, which is what religions really do."

As Dr. de Waal sees it, human morality may be severely limited by having evolved as a way of banding together against adversaries, with moral restraints being observed only toward the in group, not toward outsiders. "The profound irony is that our noblest achievement — morality — has evolutionary ties to our basest behavior — warfare," he writes. "The sense of community required by the former was provided by the latter."

Dr. de Waal has faced down many critics in evolutionary biology and psychology in developing his views. The evolutionary biologist George Williams dismissed morality as merely an accidental byproduct of evolution, and psychologists objected to attributing any emotional state to animals. Dr. de Waal convinced his colleagues over many years that the ban on inferring emotional states was an unreasonable restriction, given the expected evolutionary continuity between humans and other primates.

His latest audience is moral philosophers, many of whom are interested in his work and that of other biologists. "In departments of philosophy, an increasing number of people are influenced by what they have to say," said Gilbert Harman, a Princeton University philosopher.

Dr. Philip Kitcher, a philosopher at Columbia University, likes Dr. de Waal's empirical approach. "I have no doubt there are patterns of behavior we share with our primate relatives that are relevant to our ethical decisions," he said. "Philosophers have always been beguiled by the dream of a system of ethics which is complete and finished, like mathematics. I don't think it's like that at all."

But human ethics are considerably more complicated than the sympathy Dr. de Waal has described in chimps. "Sympathy is the raw material out of which a more complicated set of ethics may get fashioned," he said. "In the actual world, we are confronted with different people who might be targets of our sympathy. And the business of ethics is deciding who to help and why and when."

Many philosophers believe that conscious reasoning plays a large part in governing human ethical behavior and are therefore unwilling to let everything proceed from emotions, like sympathy, which may be evident in chimpanzees. The impartial element of morality comes from a capacity to reason, writes Peter Singer, a moral philosopher at Princeton, in "Primates and Philosophers." He says, "Reason is like an escalator — once we step on it, we cannot get off until we have gone where it takes us."

That was the view of Immanuel Kant, Dr. Singer noted, who believed morality must be based on reason, whereas the Scottish philosopher David Hume, followed by Dr. de Waal, argued that moral judgments proceed from the emotions.

But biologists like Dr. de Waal believe reason is generally brought to bear only after a moral decision has been reached. They argue that morality evolved at a time when people lived in small foraging societies and often had to make instant life-or-death decisions, with no time for conscious evaluation of moral choices. The reasoning came afterward as a post hoc justification. "Human behavior derives above all from fast, automated, emotional judgments, and only secondarily from slower conscious processes," Dr. de Waal writes.

However much we may celebrate rationality, emotions are our compass, probably because they have been shaped by evolution, in Dr. de Waal's view. For example, he says: "People object to moral solutions that involve hands-on harm to one another. This may be because hands-on violence has been subject to natural selection whereas utilitarian deliberations have not."

Philosophers have another reason biologists cannot, in their view, reach to the heart of morality, and that is that biological analyses cannot cross the gap between "is" and "ought," between the description of some behavior and the issue of why it is right or wrong. "You can identify some value we hold, and tell an evolutionary story about why we hold it, but there is always that radically different question of whether we ought to hold it," said Sharon Street, a moral philosopher at New York University. "That's not to discount the importance of what biologists are doing, but it does show why centuries of moral philosophy are incredibly relevant, too."

Biologists are allowed an even smaller piece of the action by Jesse Prinz, a philosopher at the University of North Carolina. He believes morality developed after human evolution was finished and that moral sentiments are shaped by culture, not genetics. "It would be a fallacy to assume a single true morality could be identified by what we do instinctively, rather than by what we ought to do," he said. "One of the principles that might guide a single true morality might be recognition of equal dignity for all human beings, and that seems to be unprecedented in the animal world."

Dr. de Waal does not accept the philosophers' view that biologists cannot step from "is" to "ought." "I'm not sure how realistic the distinction is," he said. "Animals do have 'oughts.' If a juvenile is in a fight, the mother must get up and defend her. Or in food sharing, animals do put pressure on each other, which is the first kind of 'ought' situation."

Dr. de Waal's definition of morality is more down to earth than Dr. Prinz's. Morality, he writes, is "a sense of right and wrong that is born out of groupwide systems of conflict management based on shared values." The building blocks of morality are not nice or good behaviors but rather mental and social capacities for constructing societies "in which shared values constrain individual behavior through a system of approval and disapproval." By this definition chimpanzees in his view do possess some of the behavioral capacities built in our moral systems.

"Morality is as firmly grounded in neurobiology as anything else we do or are," Dr. de Waal wrote in his 1996 book "Good Natured." Biologists ignored this possibility for many years, believing that because natural selection was cruel and pitiless it could only produce people with the same qualities. But this is a fallacy, in Dr. de Waal's view. Natural selection favors organisms that survive and reproduce, by whatever means. And it has provided people, he writes in "Primates and Philosophers," with "a compass for life's choices that takes the interests of the entire community into account, which is the essence of human morality."

Comments 1 - 22 of 22 |

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1. Comment #26600 by Nails on March 20, 2007 at 5:00 pm

 avatarSo primates have morals but no god.
We (as in most of us who regularly visit sites such as this)have morals and no god.
Shame we also have people who have a god and no morals.

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2. Comment #26626 by phiwilli on March 20, 2007 at 6:11 pm

Please give some consideration to the "genetic" fallacy - the mistake of appraising the worth of ideas based on where they came from or originated, instead of on the merits or demerits of the ideas themselves. How morality developed has little or nothing to do with issues of what is moral or immoral behavior.

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3. Comment #26627 by phiwilli on March 20, 2007 at 6:14 pm

The author of this should give some consideration to the "genetic" fallacy - the mistake of appraising the worth of ideas based on where they came from or originated, instead of on the merits or demerits of the ideas themselves. How morality developed has little or nothing to do with issues of what is moral or immoral behavior.

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4. Comment #26628 by Roland Deschain on March 20, 2007 at 6:22 pm

^
So aren't all religious ideas then based on the "genetic" fallacy?

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5. Comment #26629 by Janus on March 20, 2007 at 6:29 pm

 avatar"The author of this should give some consideration to the "genetic" fallacy - the mistake of appraising the worth of ideas based on where they came from or originated, instead of on the merits or demerits of the ideas themselves. How morality developed has little or nothing to do with issues of what is moral or immoral behavior."


You're absolutely right, of course. To say that biologists have more to say about morality than moral philosophers is total nonsense. Biologists can tell us about the origin and nature of our moral sense, but morality is the business of philosophy, if it's the business of any discipline.

Theologians never had anything worthwhile to say about morality in the first place.

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6. Comment #26633 by cassdenata on March 20, 2007 at 7:27 pm

I generally agree with the comments above on the genetic fallacy argument and I won't add anything to that discussion. But I do think that from evolutionary biology we can learn about some behaviors that may be quite important in our development and evolutionary history that generally get labeled immoral, wrong or are more mildly shunned. For instance, the study on this website that rough-housing helps with building social skills in rats. Who would have thought that when mom told you not to rough-house, she was doing something wrong...impairing your development. I can't wait for the study detailing the positive developments that masturbation imparts. That would drive the Catholic fundies mad.

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7. Comment #26647 by bladeScythe on March 20, 2007 at 11:25 pm

that second last line is pure gold cassdenata.

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8. Comment #26659 by George Dickeson on March 21, 2007 at 2:36 am

The article annoyed me a little in its misrepresentation of contemporary philosophy.

Many, if not most philosophers these days would happily agree with the suggestion that morality can be explained in Darwinian terms.

The views of Prinz are interesting (and may well be correct) but they are hardly the norm.

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9. Comment #26663 by gcdavis on March 21, 2007 at 2:59 am

 avatarWhy should anyone be surprised? Morality is of course driven by evolution. Many animals exhibit altruistic behaviour (albeit genetically programmed) you only have to watch a bird feeding its young. For animals that nuture their young over an extended period like primates it is no surprise that this altruism has developed into a morality in humans. After all morality is just altruism that has been codified. The relationships within the human family are all that are needed for morality to take root.

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10. Comment #26681 by Mustbcrackers on March 21, 2007 at 5:10 am

Why do evolutionary psychologists get so hooked on altruism in relation to morality? Isn't it obvious that the bigger part of moral codes is not about helping others but about punishing them - often quite severely - for breaking the rules of the group.

This altruism fixation stems from Sunday school Christianity - it has no worth, even if it could bridge the is - ought gap.

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11. Comment #26683 by dom9inic on March 21, 2007 at 5:39 am

I wuld echo that to say Biology should be the sole bastion of morals is wrong, all should be welcomed to the table.

I think correct empthasis for Biology and morals is that it can help everyone determine how to be moral. It can highlight why we have knee jerk reactions to things and not to others. If you know where, how and why, you can probably devise a more informed way of dealing with a moral dilemna as a society.

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12. Comment #26709 by glittergulch on March 21, 2007 at 8:28 am

 avatarI think it's pretty clear what the article suggests: The monkeys believe in God.

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13. Comment #26713 by gcdavis on March 21, 2007 at 9:08 am

 avatarParental altruism is a prerequisite of offspring survival in a human family; it is therefore not surprising that human beings have developed a system of do's and don'ts that is the origin of morality. Do feed your children even at the expense of your own hunger, don't allow a stronger sibling to hit a smaller one. The biological origin of this "moral" behaviour makes it likely that it is shared with other animals albeit without them being aware of it. No need for god, just evolution!

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14. Comment #26714 by gcdavis on March 21, 2007 at 9:09 am

 avatarOnly monkeys believe in god glittergulch!

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15. Comment #26716 by Jiten on March 21, 2007 at 9:22 am

 avatarWhat is it with the constant use of Dr this and Dr that? It spoils the flow of reading and anyway doesn't the writer realise that this is an honorary title to be used only to address someone.Little things like this annoy me.

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16. Comment #26732 by Cancerfish on March 21, 2007 at 11:52 am

 avatarI, as someone who is interested in moral philosophy welcome this view with open arms. It seems to parallel social contract theory. I think it adds validity to it as well; considering its about man in nature, now we have non-humans in nature acting the way which writers like Hobbes predicted.

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17. Comment #26741 by Druid on March 21, 2007 at 1:01 pm

 avatarSo, do we really need a God to be moral? I am taking this article as a proof of my answer 'NO'.

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18. Comment #26768 by phiwilli on March 21, 2007 at 2:58 pm

Things that morality seems to involve besides altruism (OK, that's an important part) include not only punishment (that comes in two varieties, retributive and corrective) but also appropriate concern for yourself ("duties to oneself"), which should be distinguished from pure selfishness.

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19. Comment #26876 by gcdavis on March 22, 2007 at 5:26 am

 avatarThe reason the link between altruism in animals and morality in humans is important is that it demonstrates being "good" is part of a biological process; it exists without the need for god or religion. If altruism is essential to our survival as a species then it is inevitable that as sentient beings we are aware of it and attempt to codify it into good/bad, right/wrong, in essence a moral code. As for morality being about wrongdoing and punishment as some contributors have stated, this is true of morality derived from religion. The default position of most religions is that we are essentially "bad" and need to be brought into line, they portray their house rules as MORALITY. To maintain control they offer entry into paradise in return for obedience. Religion like politics is all about power.

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20. Comment #26882 by peterdf on March 22, 2007 at 6:23 am

It seems to me that the issue of "is and ought" and the relationship of man and animal is a lot simpler than some philosophers and thinkers would have people believe. The notion that ethics has no foundation in biology is self-evidently false. EVERYTHING about mankind is rooted in biology. We evolved - it's where we came from!

It follows that if we reject supernatural origins for ethics, morality and emotional behaviour – and as rationalists we must – our value systems have to have an emotional basis. They must have evolved as a means of managing our behaviour. If something "ought" to be, then it ought to be because someone THINKS it ought to be. If no one THINKS it ought to be then it ought NOT to be. Unless of course the something will never impact on anyone's feelings in which case the whatever-it-is is entirely neutral in ethical and moral terms.

Moral philosophers have an important and useful role in investigating and applying appropriate moral weight to the conflicting emotional interests demanded by our evolved feelings without looking beyond it all to ask daft questions like 'how ought it to be?' There is, however, a different question that has a salience that simply cannot be ignored. If emotions evolved to manage our behaviour in terms of a tribal hunter/gatherer society will they still be appropriate today - now that's something to keep the philosophers busy.

On the question of the relationship between man and animals, I once went to a conference of evolutionary psychologists and I was astonished that they used a different terminology for human behaviour than they did for animal behaviour. (No it isn't a misprint - I did say evolutionary psychologists) An animal has "dominance", a human has "prestige", an animal has "submissiveness" a human "conformity". While these terms are not completely interchangeable it was shocking to see just how far we have to go in order to see our species in terms of his true biological heritage.

Emotions can have great profundity – and no human (or probably ape) can deny it. It is that very profundity, and our anthropocentric arrogance, that tricks us into thinking that emotions are anything other than instincts that evolved to help us survive.

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21. Comment #30071 by Chris Davis on April 6, 2007 at 6:13 pm

 avatar@ peterdf

I found your comment as interesting as this fascinating article. It's amazed me for some time how resistant otherwise sensible people are to the idea of humans having instincts at all. And those who will accept that they do still tend to cling to the notion of an overarching 'free will' that makes our every move pre-rationalised and subject to our marvellous intellect.

I'm with Pinker on the idea that consciousness is an illusion - a post-facto rationalisation of actions that are in reality a combination of reflex, habit and instinct. Only on rare occasions do we apply intellect to our decisions at all, and when we do our choices are entirely constrained. Although we tell ourselves we can in theory make our choices entirely arbitrarily, in fact we can only ever choose the option that is optimal for our current requirements. Even if that requirement includes 'do something surprising', we simply choose the option that maximises 'surprisingness'.

CD

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22. Comment #30804 by yehadut on April 9, 2007 at 10:48 pm

If children and the retarded show altruism, why are we surprised when chimpanzees do? Only due to the irrational bigotry by which we lump chimps and snails together as "animals" but imagine a large gap between all of them and humans. Chimps show intelligence surpassing that of children and the severely retarded. They can learn language, solve complex problems, invent and use tools, create culture and pass it from generation to generation. The should be afforded all the rights and regard that we afford humans of similar intellectual ability. If God is responsible for moral sense in humans, God can be responsible for moral sense in other species.

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