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Homo Deceptus
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At the risk of sounding
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grandiose, I hereby declare myself to be involved in a bitter feud with no less
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a personage than Stephen Jay Gould. It all started in 1990, when I reviewed his
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book Wonderful
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Life for the New
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Republic . I argued,
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basically, that Gould is a fraud. He has convinced the public that he is not
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merely a great writer, but a great theorist of evolution. Yet, among top-flight
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evolutionary biologists, Gould is considered a pest--not just a lightweight,
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but an actively muddled man who has warped the public's understanding of
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Darwinism.
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Gould,
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alas, paid me no mind. No testy letter to the New
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Republic ,
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nothing. I heard through the grapevine that he was riled. But, savvy alpha male
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that he is, he refrained from getting into a gutter brawl with a scrawny,
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marginal primate such as myself. Then, last month, my big moment finally
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arrived. Gould's long-repressed contempt burst forth from the reptilian core of
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his brain and leapt over the fire walls in his frontal lobes. In an essay in
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Natural
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History magazine, while dismissing evolutionary
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psychology as "pop science," he called my book The
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Moral
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Animal "the most noted and most absurd example."
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It is, of course, beneath my dignity to respond to this
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personally motivated attack (except to note that if you think Stephen Jay Gould
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actually deigned to read my puny book, you must be getting him mixed up with
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someone whose time is less precious). Instead, I will use the occasion of
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Gould's essay to make a major contribution to Western thought. And actually,
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come to think of it, making this contribution will entail responding to Gould's
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personally motivated attack. We'll start with Gould and get to Western thought
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later.
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Gould's
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Natural
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History essay, in keeping with his long tradition of
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taking courageous political stands, argues against genocide. Its final lines
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are: "It need not be. We can do otherwise." You may ask, "Where's the news
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value in noting that people can refrain from committing genocide?" Well, Gould
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spent the previous half-dozen paragraphs cultivating the impression that some
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people think genocide is hard-wired into our genes.
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Who are these people? Good question. Gould
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doesn't name names. Instead, just when you're starting to wonder who exactly is
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making this ridiculous claim, he changes the subject to an allegedly analogous
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example of biological determinism: currently popular Darwinian ideas about male
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and female psychology. Here he can name names--or, at least, one name. That's
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where I come in.
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Gould
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begins by distorting a basic evolutionary psychology argument: that because men
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can reproduce more often and more easily than women, natural selection (which
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favors traits conducive to genetic proliferation) has made the minds of men and
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women different. Gould puts the posited difference this way: Women, in theory,
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"should act in such a way as to encourage male investment after impregnation
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(protection, feeding, economic wealth, and subsequent child care), whereas men
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would rather wander right off in search of other mates in a never-ending quest
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for maximal genetic spread." The "wander right off" part is wrong. Evolutionary
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psychologists classify our species as having "high male parental investment."
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Men are naturally inclined to fall in love with women, stay with them through
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pregnancy, and fall in love with the endearing little vehicles of genetic
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transmission that roll out of the womb.
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To be sure, men may be tempted to philander on the side,
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even to fall in love with a second woman; they are more inclined than women to
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both infidelity and polygamy. (Women do have a penchant for cheating or
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straying, but under a narrower range of circumstances.) Moreover, men find it
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easier to have sex without emotional attachment, so they do sometimes
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want to "wander right off" after sex. Still, the fact that evolutionary
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psychologists don't view desertion as standard male procedure vaporizes what
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Gould considers one of his killer arguments: "Any man who has fiercely loved
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his little child--including most fathers, I trust--knows that no siren song
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from distinctive[ly male] genes or hormones can overcome this drive for
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nurturing behavior shared with the child's mother." If Gould knew the first
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thing about evolutionary psychology (if he had, say, read my book), he'd know
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that this "drive for nurturing behavior" isn't some news flash to evolutionary
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psychologists. It is central to their view of the tensions within male sexual
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psychology.
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More
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noteworthy than Gould's warping of evolutionary psychology is that he actually
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embraces some of its premises. On sex differences: "I don't ... think that the
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basic argument is wrong. Such differences in behavioral strategy do make
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Darwinian sense." Hmm. Gould has denounced evolutionary psychology for years
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without (to my knowledge) making such concessions. Now, as it gains support
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within both biology and psychology, he seems to be staging a strategic retreat.
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But, of course, he can't be seen retreating. He must, in the end, still manage
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to depict evolutionary psychologists as simpletons. What to do? Create
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confusion.
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Gould informs us that the sexual strategies of
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men and women are mere "capacities, not requirements or even determining
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propensities." Now, first of all, a truly determining propensity
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is a requirement. So Gould, without conspicuously positing a simplistic
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dichotomy, has posited a simplistic dichotomy: Every behavior--infidelity,
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genocide, whatever--is either a mere "capacity" or an "inevitability."
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Evolutionary psychologists, Gould suggests, tend to take the "inevitability"
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view, while a more discerning interpretation of biology (his) takes the
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"capacity" view.
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Let's not dwell on the sheer
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dishonesty of insinuating that I, or any serious writers on evolutionary
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psychology, believe infidelity or genocide or anything else is rendered
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inevitable genetically. (Well, OK, let's dwell briefly. There.) The key point
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is this: Isn't the range of alternatives to inevitability too broad to cram
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under the single heading of "capacity"? Do I just have the "capacity" to eat
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doughnuts and hamburgers and broccoli? No. Unfortunately, it's more complicated
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than that. I almost always feel a very strong attraction to doughnuts. To
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hamburgers I feel a fairly strong attraction under most circumstances. For
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broccoli I can muster mild enthusiasm if I'm feeling hungry or guilty. All
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these attractions can be bridled, but the amount and nature of the necessary
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effort differs by food type and by circumstance.
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I concede that my inner
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turmoil over doughnuts is not of great moment. But let's get back to things
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like infidelity, men's desertion of their families, or even genocide. If we can
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learn something about how the underlying emotions wax and wane, about the
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circumstances under which bad things are likely to happen, wouldn't that be
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useful information? Amazingly, Gould suggests not. After saying "we learn
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nothing" from current Darwinian theorizing about any "darkness" in human
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nature, he continues, "At the very most, biology might help us to delimit the
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environmental circumstances that tend to elicit one behavior rather than the
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other."
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At the
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very most? Delimiting those circumstances is the central aspiration of
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20 th -century psychology! So, even if Freud and Skinner had wholly
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succeeded in explaining how upbringing and social experience shape us, it all
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would have been a waste of time? Too bad they didn't have a luminary like Gould
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to explain that to them. I've heard many criticisms of evolutionary psychology,
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but this is the first time I've heard anyone dismiss it by saying that all it
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can do is find the Holy Grail of behavioral science.
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Obviously, evolutionary psychology hasn't yet come close to
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finding the Holy Grail. But, it has provoked ideas about the role of
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environment that, if confirmed by further study, can inform moral discourse and
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public policy. For example, I've argued from ev-psych premises that extreme
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inequality of income, all other things being equal, tends to raise the divorce
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rate. This claim may turn out to be wrong, but, contrary to Gould's basic
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indictment of evolutionary psychology, it is neither obvious nor, if true,
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useless.
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I grant
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Gould that evolutionary psychology hasn't taught us much about genocide that we
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didn't already know. So far, its main contribution is to illuminate not epic
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enmity, but the everyday, subtle kind. For example: I just referred to Gould's
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"dishonesty" in misrepresenting my views, but maybe the dishonesty isn't
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conscious. Once I wrote that 1990 review, I became a threat to Gould's social
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status, an enemy. According to evolutionary psychology, it then became hard for
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him to objectively appraise anything I've written (though I suppose actually
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reading it would have been a start). Tactically caricaturing my beliefs became
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an essentially unconscious process.
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Similarly, now that Gould has attacked me, I
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have trouble being objective about him. My radar readily picks up, even
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magnifies, his distortions and confusions, but is less sensitive to my own
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missteps. (The editors of Slate will contact Gould and invite him to have an
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online debate with me, during which the truth can emerge from dueling
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egocentric biases. I predict Gould will ignore the invitation, reverting to a
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risk-averse alpha-male strategy.) Anyway, the point is just that we are all, by
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nature, deeply and unconsciously self-serving in our judgments of others. Gould
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and I are convinced of each other's confusion, and the Hutus and Tutsis, long
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before the slaughter began, were convinced of each other's treachery.
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One big problem with Gould's
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simplistic capacity/necessity dichotomy is the way it obscures this commonality
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between us and the Hutus. Gould (in another sign of strategic retreat) concedes
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that people have a biologically based "capacity" to view enemies as "beyond
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fellowship and ripe for slaughter." But that makes it sound as if most of us
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are entirely civil human beings, while occasionally--in some remote part of the
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world--a "genocide" switch gets flicked, and slaughter happens. Those Serbs and
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Hutus may act like animals, but we Americans have kept our "capacity" for evil
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turned off.
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Many Germans, presumably,
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had a similarly high opinion of themselves in the early 1930s, and no doubt
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such blithe self-regard lubricates descent. OK, OK--I won't get carried away.
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I'm not saying Americans are on a slippery slope toward genocide, and that only
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evolutionary psychology can save the day. My point is just that (here comes my
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contribution to Western thought) evolutionary psychology needn't, as Gould
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fears, be used to excuse evildoers as victims of biology. It can actually serve
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humanity by making it harder for any of us to casually assume our own goodness.
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It says we all warrant skeptical self-scrutiny, and it warns us that this
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scrutiny, being unnatural, is very hard. But it also suggests that the effort
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is needed. If you sit around waiting for some switch to get flicked, you'll
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have waited too long.
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