Well worth reading and re-reading
The paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould wrote two books demonstrating that evolution has no point¿that it is at best a random walk. It's just a matter of blind luck that humans are smarter and more complex than bacteria. Since the course of evolution is bounded by a wall of zero complexity, it is forced to expand gradually and blindly into the realm of complexity. That it got to us is just a matter of luck. Robert Wright wrote _Non Zero: The Logic of Human Destiny_ to prove Gould wrong. Although Wright doesn't claim that we have a pre-ordained, God-given kind of destiny, he does argue forcefully that it's no accident that both biological and social evolution obviously do produce grander and more complex entities over time¿plants, animals and us in the case of biological evolution; families, tribes, villages, city-states, nations and beyond in the case of social evolution. He argues that intelligent beings and complex institutions inevitably appear because of the interplay between natural selection an--surprise¿game theory. We're all familiar with zero-sum games--a football match for example. One team's gain is the other's loss, and there's always a winner and a loser. But Wright argues that most zero-sum games evolve into or are intimately linked to non-zero-sum games, exchanges in which all the players benefit by playing. We can see this in organized sports. Although the matches are zero-sum, they take place within a web of value-added exchanges and relationships. Fans who buy tickets or watch on TV are rewarded, and so are the teams and leagues that receive ticket and advertising revenues. Players and teams may lose games, but they still make a living by playing. And in the process they support a network of individuals and groups playing non-zero-sum games with them: advertisers, vendors, commentators, groundskeepers, umpires, security guards, cheerleaders, you name it. Wright shows that when this transformation from zero-sum into non-zero-sum exchanges is coupled with competition between the entities involved, with natural selection picking those who play more cooperatively, the inevitable result is increased complexity and information processing capability (that is, intelligence). And once complex entities appear, their presence sparks even more complex games, which create yet more complex systems, in an evolutionary upward spiral. It's a grand and fascinating idea, and Wright develops it thoroughly and clearly. I was particularly impressed with his willingness to state opposing ideas and arguments clearly, and with the care he takes not to slip into mysticism, grandiosity, or the kind of fish-eat-fish social Darwinism that this kind of thinking has been associated with in the past. He is realistic enough to recognize that neither biological evolution nor the evolution of civilization has been a smooth upward spiral. But he argues convincingly that even horrendous zero-sum exchanges, such as plagues or war, sooner or later sow the seeds of new growth. That's not to say I agreed with everything Wright had to say. I found myself arguing with many of his points, only to be convinced, at least enough to read on. At times he seemed overly glib, for example when he said that even if the dark ages had managed to destroy all ancient learning completely--'Well, them's the breaks.' Yet, more often than not, I found myself being surprised by his incisive, paradox-breaking analysis. He pokes holes in many fuzzy yet widely held ideas, such as religious determinism (e.g. that the West has surged ahead of the East because of the Protestant work ethic), or because of the Western exploitation of nature vs. Eastern merging with it, or the idea that societies evolve deliberately and as a whole rather than because of the striving and inventiveness of their individual members. Some of Wright's more interesting statements: 'As the centuries fly by, civilizations may come and go, but civilization flourishes.' 'Adam Smith'
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