(Redirected from Hereditarian)'Hereditarianism' is the doctrine or school of thought that
heredity plays a significant role in determining human nature and character traits, such as
intelligence and . Hereditarians believe in the power of
genetics to explain human character traits and solve human social and political problems. Hereditarians adopt the view that a Darwinian understanding of human origins can extend the understanding of human nature as it is now. They have explicitly abandoned the
standard social science model.
Competing theories
The opposite of hereditarnianism is
behaviorism or
social determinism. This disagreement and controversy is part of the
nature versus nurture debate.
Hereditarianism is sometimes used as a
synonym for
biological or
genetic determinism, though some scholars distinguish the two terms. When distinguished, biological determinism is used to mean that heredity is the only factor. Supporters of hereditarianism reject this sense of biological determinism for most cases. However, in some cases genetic determinism is true; for example, Matt Ridley (1999) describes Huntington's disease as "pure fatalism, undiluted by environmental variability." In other cases, hereditarians would see no role for genes; for example, the condition of "''not knowing a word of Chinese''" has nothing to do (directly) with genes (Dennett, 2003). In most cases, hereditarians believe that genes play an intermediate role. In all cases, they believe this is an empirical and not a philosophical question.
Some scholars argue that an organism inherits only
alleles, and that only the interaction of alleles with environment creates
phenotypes. Put another way, in this view there are no additive genetic or environmental effects, only interactions.
Steven Pinker has criticized this view, which he terms "holistic interactionism".
[1] Philosopher
Daniel Dennett satirized this view: "Surely 'everyone knows' that the nature-nurture debate was resolved long ago, and neither side wins since everything-is-a-mixture-of-both-and-it's-all-very-complicated, so let's think of something else, right?" The hereditarian view is that for a set of actual people (i.e., a given set of genes and environments) it is possible to partition the causal influences between genetic and environmental variation.
Contemporary hereditarianism
Herediatrianism has seen a resurgence since the mid-1970's, as
sociobiology,
behavioral genetics and the
gene-centric view of
Neo-Darwinism began to influence scholarly and political discourse. The concept came to the attention of the public following the
1994 publication of ''
The Bell Curve'', which ignited intense debate about possible correlations between
race and intelligence.
Contemporary hereditarianism encompasses a number of interrelated fields and points of view:
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gene-centric view of evolution
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Sociobiology
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Cognitive science
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Evolutionary psychology
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Human behavioral ecology
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Dual inheritance theory
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Behavioral genetics
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Human variability, including
sex and
race differences
Political implications
Historically, hereditarians were more likely to be
conservative (Pastore, 1949). They view social and economic inequality as a natural result of variation in talent and character. Thus, likewise they explain class and
race differences as the result of partly-genetic group differences. Behaviorists were more likely to be
liberals or
leftists. They believe economic disadvantage and structural problems in the social order were to blame for group differences. Conservative economist
Thomas Sowell has noted the converse relationship in his book ''
A Conflict of Visions'': noting that conservatives tend to have a hereditarian view of human nature (Sowell calls this the "constrained" view) and
liberals tend to have a behaviorist ("unconstrained") view.
However, the historical correspondence between hereditarianism and conservatism has broken down at least among proponents of hereditarianism. Many notable hereditarians are avowedly liberal. A notable example was
Noam Chomsky's defense of sociobiology. Philosopher
Peter Singer describes his vision of a new liberal political view that embraces hereditarianism in his 1999 book ''
A Darwinian Left''. Similarly, in his 2002 book ''
The Blank Slate'', psychologist
Steven Pinker endorses the view that hereditarianism is the empirically correct view of human nature, that this does have political implications which would constrain the goals of some liberal philosophies, but that embracing rather than rejecting the hereditarian view of human nature is the best way to achieve liberal goals.
The controversial
Pioneer Fund, established in
1937 is now a leading source of funding for scientists wishing to investigate hereditarian hypotheses.
Notable hereditarians
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Noam Chomsky (against behaviorism, but disagreeing with the hereditarian explanation in
race and intelligence --though defending the scientific legitimacy of the question)(Chomsky, 2003)
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Richard Dawkins
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Daniel Dennett
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Richard Herrnstein
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Lloyd Humphreys
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Arthur Jensen
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Richard Lynn
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Steven Pinker
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J. Philippe Rushton
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William Shockley
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James D. Watson
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E. O. Wilson
References
★ Mehler B.
Heredity and Hereditarianism. in Chambliss JJ, (ed.) ''Philosophy of Education: An Encyclopedia''. New York: Garland 1996.
★ Nicolas Pastore, ''The Nature-Nurture Controversy''. New York: King's Crown Press, 1949.
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Steven Pinker, (2002) ''
The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature'', Penguin Putnam, ISBN 0-670-03151-8
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Peter Singer (1999) ''
A Darwinian Left'', New Haven and London: Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-08323-8
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Thomas Sowell (2002). ''
A Conflict of Visions: Ideological Origins of Political Struggles'', Basic Books, ISBN 0-465-08142-8
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Noam Chomsky (2003) "Psychology and Ideology," ''For Reasons of State'', New Press, ISBN 1-56584-794-6