Thanks Pieter, 

 

Sorry I have taken so long to get back to you.  If FRIAM ever started a 
journal, it should be called “the emperors new clothes”.  We are not committed 
to anything if not to the validity of an “amateur’s” perspective.  As people 
will be quick to tell you, mine has always been of that sort. 

 

If I read you carefully, the position you take is that laid out in Dawkins The 
Extended Phenotype – that the genes are the basic unit of selection.  But as 
Dave Wilson has been pointing out for years, Who made that decision?   For one 
thing, as epigenic studies have made clear, when one looks in detail, it is 
really hard to find a thing that is exactly the gene.  For another, that 
decision runs the risk of confusing the the thing that is selected with the 
forces that are selecting it.  Whatever level you care to calculate the impact 
of selection, it is differential group success that is driving selection or it 
is not group selection.  And if it  is differential group success that is 
driving selection, then it is group selection.  I think you might quite enjoy 
The Extended Phenotype.   For a whild ride, have a look at Elliott Sober and D. 
S. Wilson’s Reintroducing Group Selection to the human behavioral sciences.  
There is a wonderful metaphor in there about two riders riding three horses.  
It was the article that broke the tide for me.  I had been totally up Dawkins 
ass for the preceding 20 years. 

 

Here is the citation, courtesy og George Patrick Tremblay IV  

 

Wilson, D. S., & Sober, E. (1994). Reintroducing group selection to the human 
behavioral sciences. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 17(4), 585–608. 
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X00036104 en.wikipedia.org+15philpapers.org+15 
<https://philpapers.org/rec/WILRGS?utm_source=chatgpt.com> ….

 

Nick 

 

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Pieter Steenekamp
Sent: Wednesday, August 6, 2025 12:55 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Group Selection IS a metaphor.

 

Nick, I'm genuinely impressed. Honestly, I feel a bit out of my depth trying to 
respond meaningfully on this topic.

So please take my reply in the same spirit I’d expect a response from my 
10-year-old grandchild when debating computer programming with me. The gap 
between your understanding of evolution and mine feels about that wide.

That said, I’d still like to offer a response to your group selection 
argument—fully aware that it may come across as amateurish, and I'm okay with 
that.

Here's the question I’m grappling with:

Is the following valid?
Genes as the Unit of Selection:
Modern evolutionary theory generally views genes as the primary unit of 
selection. Natural selection acts on individuals, and the success of an 
individual is ultimately determined by the genes they carry. 
Group Selection as a Modifier:
Group selection can be seen as a process that influences the expression of 
genes. For example, if a group-level trait (like cooperative behavior) is 
advantageous, then genes that promote that behavior will be favored, even if 
those genes also have individual-level costs.

 

On Wed, 6 Aug 2025 at 00:12, Prof David West <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Nick,

 

I wish to embody the fear of being dragged away from what you think you are 
supposed to be doing, to be engaged in the topic you raise in your paper.

 

I have read the paper before and, as then, I find it meritorious, well written, 
and reasonable in argument. I am, basically, convinced.

 

However; two points:

 

First, your use of the concept, "metaphor," is the way that I use the term, in 
a manner that glen pointed out is inconsistent with the literal definition of 
the term. I speak of metaphor when there is some thing of which I think I know 
something and I have a suspicion that some other thing might be of the same 
ilk. I use what I think I know to craft a 'model', one that suggests particular 
points and particular relations that, if my suspicion is correct, will have 
direct analogs in the unknown thing. I check them out individually and in 
combinations and, if substantiated, confirm my suspicion. If unconfirmed, the 
metaphor is refuted.

 

This seems to me to be what you are doing in the paper, albeit it more 
abstractly and academically. Please correct me if wrong.

 

Second, and here is the real time sink, would it be possible to make your ideas 
concrete, real groups with actual history and demonstrated differential 
"success." If you were amenable to such a conversation, I would propose the 
Mormons as a test case.

 

One of 20 or so "religions"/"societies" to emerge from the "Burnt Over 
District" of western New York. The only one still extant.

 

Disproportionately successful, (in material and social terms), to their 
neighbors. Smith was living in a two-story New England style home while down 
the road, Abe Lincoln, was living in a log cabin with mud floor.

 

A schism immediately after Smith's death, with the Reformed LDS barely evident 
while the main group flourished. (Last time I checked, Mormonism and Sokka 
Gokai, in Japan, were the two fastest growing religions.)

 

In Utah there was a concerted effort to spawn multiple small groups by sending 
out colonies. Because each group was originally "seeded" with four or five 
families, you get a strong genetic/heritance component as well as "traits." (It 
is still possible to identify what part of Utah someone is from (especially 
females) by their physical appearance.)

 

Some interesting "adaptations" at the trait level, e.g., when Smith was alive 
blacks were included in the community and held the priesthood—something that 
Missourians, at the time, could not abide. Brigham Young 'suspended' (restored 
in 1978 with the admission that the suspension was not for theological, but 
merely political reasons) black priesthood membership and gave up polygamy (de 
jure only) to appease the Federal Government and avoid a second martyrdom.

 

davew

 

 

On Tue, Aug 5, 2025, at 1:10 PM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:

Dear Colleagues in FRIAM,

Sometimes, if I am going to get anything done, I just have to ignore Friam, and 
keep my head down, and work at the thing I am working at.  It always seems, on 
that occasion, that you-guys dangle in front of me some enticing topic so I 
must scream and put my fingers in my ears to keep focus on my work.  So it was 
that when I decided I must fish or cut bait on entropy or it would take me to 
my grave, that almost immediately you-guys started not one but two 
conversations close to my heart: on the centrality of metaphor to science and 
on the group selection controversy. 

A couple of decades ago I brought those two interests together in  a paper 
called “Shifting the Natural Selection  Metaphor to the Group Level.  There are 
two things about this paper that make it salient for me.  The first is that I 
think it is the best paper I ever wrote.  The second is that for each of the 
two people whom I most hoped to reach when I wrote it, D. S. Wilson and Elliott 
 Sober, it is a piece of  crap. In it, I try to show that the problem with 
metaphors is not with their use in scientific thinking: on the contrary, it is 
with their ill-disciplined use.  Metaphors need to be worked in a systematic 
way, not simply flung out in a gust of poetic exuberance.  This lesson  I try 
to teach by working the natural selection metaphor in a systematic way to show 
that if it had been treated seriously in the first place, the whole dispute 
about group selection might have been  avoided.  Thus the paper is not only 
arrogant, but meta-arrogant.  

Nothing is more pitiable than the retired academic who would do anything to 
have anybody read his moribund essays.  But, alas, I simply am such a person.  
So, I am attaching a copy of the paper  in the hope that it will have some 
value to you within the context of your two discussions. 

Mumble,

Nick

 

 

--

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology

Clark University

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson

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Attachments:

*       Shifting the natural selection metaphor to the group level.pdf
*       Shifting the natural selection metaphor to the group level.pdf

 

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