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Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny

Amazon.com Price:  $6.99 (as of 12/05/2019 20:44 PST- Details)

Description

In his bestselling The Moral Animal, Robert Wright applied the principles of evolutionary biology to the study of the human mind. Now Wright attempts something even more ambitious: explaining the direction of evolution and human history–and discerning where history will lead us next.

In Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny, Wright asserts that, ever since the primordial ooze, life has followed a basic pattern. Organisms and human societies alike have grown more complex by mastering the challenges of internal cooperation. Wright’s narrative ranges from fossilized bacteria to vampire bats, from stone-age villages to the World Trade Organization, uncovering such surprises as the benefits of barbarian hordes and the useful stability of feudalism. Here is history endowed with moral significance–a way of looking at our biological and cultural evolution that suggests, refreshingly, that human morality has improved over time, and that our instinct to discover meaning may itself serve a higher purpose. Insightful, witty, profound, Nonzero offers breathtaking implications for what we consider and how we adapt to technology’s ongoing transformation of the world.
Nonzero, from New Republic creator Robert Wright, is a difficult and important book–well worth reading–addressing the controversial question of purpose in evolution. The use of language suggesting that natural selection is a designer’s tool, Wright inevitably draws the conclusion that evolution is goal-oriented (or at least moves toward inevitable ends independently of environmental or contingent variables).

The underlying reason that non-zero-sum games wind up being played well is the same in biological evolution as in cultural evolution. Whether you are a bunch of genes or a bunch of memes, if you’re all in the same boat you’ll be able to tend to perish unless you are conducive to productive coordination…. Genetic evolution thus tends to create smoothly integrated organisms, and cultural evolution tends to create smoothly integrated groups of organisms.

Admittedly, it’s as hard to think clearly about natural selection as it is to think about God, but that makes it just as important to acknowledge our biases and take a look at to exclude them from our conclusions. It is this that makes Nonzero potentially unsatisfying to the scientifically literate. Time after time we’ve seen thinkers try to find in biological evolution a “drive toward complexity” that might give an explanation for all sorts of other phenomena from economics to spirituality. Some authors, like Teilhard de Chardin, have much to offer the careful reader who takes pains to read metaphorically. Others–legions of cranks–provide nothing but opaque diatribes culminating in steadily-odd assertions proven to nobody but the creator. Wright is much closer to de Chardin along this axis; his anthropological scholarship is particularly noteworthy, and his grasp of world history is excellent. Unfortunately, he has the advocate’s willingness to blind himself to disagreeable facts and to muddle over concepts whose clarity would be poisonous to his positions: try to pin him down on what he means by complexity, for example. Still, his thesis that human cultures are historically striving for cooperative, nonzero-sum situations is heartening and compelling; even supposing it’s not supported by biology, it’s not knocked down, either. If the reader can work around the undefined assumptions, Wright’s charm and obvious interest in planetary survival make Nonzero a worthy read. If the first chapter’s title–“The Ladder of Cultural Evolution”–makes you cringe, the last one–“You Call This a God?”–will make you smile. –Rob Lightner


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