No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Monday, May 11, 2026
FeeOnlyNews.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
No Result
View All Result
FeeOnlyNews.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Economy

Stove Selection Theory | Mises Institute

by FeeOnlyNews.com
3 days ago
in Economy
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Stove Selection Theory | Mises Institute
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn


[Darwinian Fairytales: Selfish Genes, Errors of Heredity, and Other Fables of Evolution by David Stove (Encounter Books, 1995; xv + 345 pp.)]

In a number of recent columns, I’ve been concerned about whether an evolutionary argument based on natural selection undermines objective ethics. If the best explanation for our moral beliefs is that they are adaptations that were best fitted to help us survive, why isn’t this enough? Why do we need to add that these beliefs are also objectively true? Indeed, the philosopher Sharon Street argues that it would be extraordinarily lucky if the beliefs that natural selection implanted in us turned out to coincide with the objective truths. Isn’t it then rational to drop these allegedly objective truths altogether?

How should those who accept objective truth in ethics respond to the evolutionary argument? Robert Nozick, as I discussed in an earlier column, argues that the beliefs that helped our ancestors to survive meet the standard criteria for objectively true moral beliefs. For example, the belief that you shouldn’t, in normal circumstances, start fights with people who live in your community aids survival and also seems objectively true.

As those of you who read my column last week would expect, David Stove takes a more radical approach. To our question, “Doesn’t an evolutionary argument based on natural selection undermine objective ethics?” Stove’s answer is that the evolutionary account is absurd and should be rejected. We need one clarification to understand how radical Stove’s position is. He is not arguing like this: “The evolutionary account is inconsistent with our ethical beliefs. But we know that our ethical beliefs are true, or at least we think that the reasons for acceptance of these beliefs outweigh the reasons for acceptance of the evolutionary account. Therefore, we ought to reject the evolutionary account.” Rather, Stove contends that the evolutionary account is, on its own terms, false and absurd.

Stove is not a supporter of Intelligent Design. On the contrary, he is a hardheaded atheist. He also accepts human evolution from hominid ancestors. His sticking point is natural selection, so far as this applies to human beings, both in Darwin’s original account of this concept and in the modern theory of kin selection. (In this column, I’ll confine my discussion to the latter).

The problem that kin selection tries to solve is this: Sometimes, people help others in a way that impedes their own survival. For example, people sometimes put their own lives at risk or even sacrifice themselves to save people to whom they are related. Wouldn’t natural selection eliminate people with a tendency to do this?

Kin selection theory denies that natural selection does this. According to it, what natural selection aims to preserve is not individual people as such but rather their genes. If you pass on to your descendants more of your genes than your evolutionary rivals, you will prevail in the struggle for survival. The key point in the theory builds on the fact that genetic similarity isn’t confined to parents and their children. You share half your genes with your parents but also half your genes with your brothers and sisters and lesser amounts with more distant kin.

Stove says that this theory leads to obviously false empirical predictions. The cases of altruistic sacrifice in the actual world are radically different from what the theory says they should be. As Stove puts it:

If the altruism of parents towards their offspring is due to their sharing half of their genes with each offspring, then filial altruism ought to be as common and strong as parental altruism. For if your offspring has half of your genes, then it is also true that you have half of your offspring’s genes. Yet in our own species, as everyone knows, parental altruism vastly exceeds filial, both in commonness and in strength. . . I am completely unable to explain Hamilton’s silence about the universal asymmetry, where his theory required symmetry, between filial and parental altruism in sexually reproducing species. (W.D. Hamilton was the founder of kin-selection theory.)

Stove acknowledges that there is a “patch” to this objection, but he thinks the theory is still in trouble:

The patch goes as follows. A parent is necessarily older than its offspring, right? An offspring therefore has more of its reproductive career ahead of it than a parent of it has, right? So a selfish gene, always on the lookout to maximize the representations of its copies in the population, will in general prefer to invest in an offspring rather than in its parent, and will dispose an organism which carries it to honor its sons and daughters rather than its father and mother. . . The shared genes theory of kin altruism suffers from other punctures which no attempt has ever been made to patch, for the simple reason that they are, in the eyes of the theory’s adherents, not punctures but beauty spots. One of these concerns identical twins. Such twins have, of course, all of their genes in common. Their mutual altruism must therefore, according to the inclusive fitness theory, be 100 percent. This reductio ad absurdum of the theory is willingly embraced, in fact mistaken for a successful prediction, by all sociobiologists.

Stove raises a deeper objection to the theory. Why should a particular gene, taken as a physical entity on a chromosome, care about reproducing other genes that are qualitatively identical to it? (I’m here ignoring problems of personifying genes as wanting things, which Stove also discusses. Defenders of the theory like Richard Dawkins acknowledge that such talk is metaphorical but think it can be “cashed out” in literal language. Stove is skeptical.) But the point is best taken in Stove’s own words:

It is true, of course, that if M [a molecule or group of molecules] is a gene, and brings the replica into existence. . .then there is a larger number of this kind of gene in existence at the later time than there was at the earlier. But this proposition implies nothing whatever about benefit. Indeed, it is not even a truth of biology; it is only the trivial truth of arithmetic, that two is a larger number than one. It is equally true that if M is a water molecule, and remains in existence while its replica is synthesized in some laboratory, then there is a larger number of that kind of molecule in existence at the later time than there was at the earlier. But it would be evidently nonsensical, in this case, to speak of anything having benefited by the change. And it is no less evidently nonsensical in the case where M is a gene instead of a water molecule, and produces the replica itself.

I wish that Nozick were here to respond to Stove: a debate between these two philosophers who, by the way, thought very little of each other, would be valuable. At the very least, Stove has given us much that is worth thinking about.



Source link

Tags: InstituteMisesselectionStoveTheory
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

5 Paid-Off Rentals vs. 15 with Mortgages: The Math Will Change How You Invest

Next Post

Bitcoin and ethereum prices today, Friday, May 8, 2026: Prices holding following strong jobs report

Related Posts

Jobs report: Retailers hire big, defying consumer warning signs

Jobs report: Retailers hire big, defying consumer warning signs

by FeeOnlyNews.com
May 10, 2026
0

A woman walks past a "Now Hiring" sign in front of a store on January 13, 2022 in Arlington, Virginia.Olivier...

The Sunday Morning Movie Presents: The Man Who Stole The Sun (1979) Run Time: 2H 27M Plus Bonus Short Silent Film!

The Sunday Morning Movie Presents: The Man Who Stole The Sun (1979) Run Time: 2H 27M Plus Bonus Short Silent Film!

by FeeOnlyNews.com
May 10, 2026
0

Welcome gentle readers to another installment of the Sunday Morning Movie. Today it’s Japanese thriller, The Man Who Stole The...

Criminalizing Childhood: When the Justice System Fails America’s Youth

Criminalizing Childhood: When the Justice System Fails America’s Youth

by FeeOnlyNews.com
May 10, 2026
0

Conor here: The following is part of the Independent Media Institute’s four-part series, “Does Your Community Care About Children?” In...

How To Distinguish A Real Bull Market

How To Distinguish A Real Bull Market

by FeeOnlyNews.com
May 10, 2026
0

COMMENT: Mr. Armstrong, we never met. I was introduced to Socrates at the insistence of a friend at another one...

Why Some Economies Are Growing While Others Collapse In Real-Time

Why Some Economies Are Growing While Others Collapse In Real-Time

by FeeOnlyNews.com
May 10, 2026
0

There is a pattern within the cost of living series based on a series of factors that directly contribute to...

The Market Keeps Escaping: Private Credit, Real Risk, and the Infinite Regress of Financial Regulation

The Market Keeps Escaping: Private Credit, Real Risk, and the Infinite Regress of Financial Regulation

by FeeOnlyNews.com
May 9, 2026
0

Every major financial regulation eventually produces the market it was trying to prevent. The Investment Company Act of 1940 was...

Next Post
Bitcoin and ethereum prices today, Friday, May 8, 2026: Prices holding following strong jobs report

Bitcoin and ethereum prices today, Friday, May 8, 2026: Prices holding following strong jobs report

Monthly Dividend Stock In Focus: Whitecap Resources

Monthly Dividend Stock In Focus: Whitecap Resources

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
The 27 Largest US Funding Rounds of March 2024 – AlleyWatch

The 27 Largest US Funding Rounds of March 2024 – AlleyWatch

April 17, 2026
Wells Fargo Transfer Partners: What to Know

Wells Fargo Transfer Partners: What to Know

April 16, 2026
Week 14: A Peek Into This Past Week + What I’m Reading, Listening to, and Watching!

Week 14: A Peek Into This Past Week + What I’m Reading, Listening to, and Watching!

April 6, 2026
The 16 Largest Global Startup Funding Rounds of March 2026 – AlleyWatch

The 16 Largest Global Startup Funding Rounds of March 2026 – AlleyWatch

April 21, 2026
The Justice Department Indicts the Ministry of Love

The Justice Department Indicts the Ministry of Love

May 2, 2026
LPL’s Mariner Advisor Network deal fuels already hot year for RIA M&A

LPL’s Mariner Advisor Network deal fuels already hot year for RIA M&A

April 16, 2026
Mah Sing sees natural ‘spillovers’ from Malaysia’s strong growth

Mah Sing sees natural ‘spillovers’ from Malaysia’s strong growth

0
Stove Selection Theory | Mises Institute

Stove Selection Theory | Mises Institute

0
Economists’ Greatest Fear Is Almost Here

Economists’ Greatest Fear Is Almost Here

0
Best money market account rates today, Sunday, May 10, 2026 (best account provides 4.01% APY)

Best money market account rates today, Sunday, May 10, 2026 (best account provides 4.01% APY)

0
Market outlook: Why the Nifty breakout failed and how to trade Vedanta & Bank Nifty this week

Market outlook: Why the Nifty breakout failed and how to trade Vedanta & Bank Nifty this week

0
Why Is Strategy Valuable? CEO Says MSTR Is More Than Its BTC Holdings

Why Is Strategy Valuable? CEO Says MSTR Is More Than Its BTC Holdings

0
Market outlook: Why the Nifty breakout failed and how to trade Vedanta & Bank Nifty this week

Market outlook: Why the Nifty breakout failed and how to trade Vedanta & Bank Nifty this week

May 10, 2026
Why Is Strategy Valuable? CEO Says MSTR Is More Than Its BTC Holdings

Why Is Strategy Valuable? CEO Says MSTR Is More Than Its BTC Holdings

May 10, 2026
Why global fund managers are giving D-St the cold shoulder

Why global fund managers are giving D-St the cold shoulder

May 10, 2026
Economists’ Greatest Fear Is Almost Here

Economists’ Greatest Fear Is Almost Here

May 10, 2026
Markets dip as US-Iran ceasefire goes nowhere, leaving Trump with a military option to reopen Hormuz

Markets dip as US-Iran ceasefire goes nowhere, leaving Trump with a military option to reopen Hormuz

May 10, 2026
Mexican cartel armed with powerful weapons and explosives launched from drones attacks rural homes

Mexican cartel armed with powerful weapons and explosives launched from drones attacks rural homes

May 10, 2026
FeeOnlyNews.com

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Business & Financial News, Stock Market Updates, Analysis, and more from the trusted sources.

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • Market outlook: Why the Nifty breakout failed and how to trade Vedanta & Bank Nifty this week
  • Why Is Strategy Valuable? CEO Says MSTR Is More Than Its BTC Holdings
  • Why global fund managers are giving D-St the cold shoulder
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclaimers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.