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Acquisition, Preservation against loss, and Perpetuation: The Basic Drives Underlying Biology & Evolution As Expressed in Human Psychology & Culture By Anthony G. Payne, M.A., N.M.D., Ph.D.,
M.D. (honorary) Are there
certain primal (core), universal traits or drives which act as a kind of
behavioral template for our species? Which give rise to and are expressed in
terms of our basic individual and collective behavior? A biological version of
the Holy Grail of Physics - Grand Unification? (In a word, a small number of
natural drives or instincts that undergird and give rise to much of human
behavior) In concert
with Darwin, William James, E. O. Wilson, and innumerable others, I would
respond with a resounding "yes". And like them, I believe that the
origins of the "psychobiological template" were forged in the
crucible of evolution. In June of
1998, the notion of fundamental or primal drives was big news. Researchers at
Ohio State University conducted an extensive study and concluded that there are
15 desires which underlie most human behavior. "Nearly everything
important a human being wants can be reduced to one or more of these 15 core
desires, most of which have a genetic basis," said Steven Reiss, co-author
of the study and a professor of psychology and psychiatry at Ohio State
University. "These desires are what guide our actions. In a sense, we are
studying the meaning of life." This body of
research was published in the June 1998 issue of the Journal of Psychological Assessment. These are the
15 basic or fundamental human desires and values revealed by the Reiss et al study: Curiosity -
desire to learn Food - desire
to eat Honor -
(morality) desire to behave in accordance with code of conduct Rejection -
fear of social rejection j Sex - desire
for sexual behavior and fantasies Physical
exercise - desire for physical activity Order -
desired amount of organization in daily life . Independence
- desire to make own decisions Vengeance -
desire to retaliate when offended Social
Contact - desire to be in the company of others Family -
desire to spend time with own family Social
Prestige - desire for prestige and positive attention Aversive
Sensations - aversion to pain and anxiety Citizenship -
desire for public service and social justice Power -
desire to influence people I, on the
other hand, would argue that there are 3 basic or core drives which include and
subsume Reiss's fifteen. Briefly: Life at it's
most fundamental level involves acquisition of resources to insure survival,
prevention of loss or compromise of resources vital to life, and the
perpetuation of the genome (Reproduction). Those traits and behaviors which
help an individual satisfy these life-sustaining and preserving
"essentials" are selected for; that is, they get the job done - are
adaptive - and thus lend those who possess them to leave behind viable
offspring (This is known as differential reproduction in biological parlance). Acquisition,
prevention of loss (defense), and perpetuation lie at the heart of biology and
it's explosive success on this planet. As such one would expect to see them
conserved throughout the course of biological evolution with discernible
expression in the individual and collective behavior of "higher"
animals. This does indeed appear to be the case. l
Acquisition The
acquisition of adequate food, water, shelter and warmth to sustain life is
obviously a fairly high priority. If not tended to, we die off. It is that
simple. How we secure these necessities is the stuff of which everything from
clans to tribal cultures to first world nation-states and economies are built
on. In the long run it behooves a collection of social creatures (people) to
cooperatively nail down the basics of life. If each person is left on their own
- or selfishness or cheating is considered a virtue - human survival on the
whole is adversely affected. In this sort of society a few survive and thrive
at the expense of the less capable, but theirs is an existence which is given
to conflict and xenophobia, if not downright paranoia. One-upmanship can be
carried to the point of mutual extermination. Humanistic
psychologist Abraham Maslow rather brilliantly and succinctly captured this in
his various works on human conduct and psychology. The first order of
acquisition is the physiological basics. Once these are met, we are
individually and collectively more at liberty to explore other wants, desires
and needs (Internet keyword phrase: Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs). The man or
woman who goes out to work in order to provide for self and family is
satisfying the biologic imperative to acquire that which will help guarantee
survival. It is universally recognized and in our culture elevated to the level
of being a virtue (Protestant Work Ethic). In most
cases, mature humans concurrently seek to satisfy the physiological basics and
reproduce. Both are expressions of resource acquisition. Procreation is
fundamental to the preservation of the species. It also furnishes the parents
with both an investment and a resource; that is, an investment in the sense
that the necessities of life, love, nurturing, etc., are directed at producing
healthy, viable progeny who will not only carry the family germline into the
future, but provide the parents with "dividends" (resources) in terms
of psychological, (possibly) material support, comfort, grandchildren, etc. But not every
parent does a great job of child rearing and not every child comes out right.
Acquisition is the drive, but its expression can be thwarted, perverted or
nullified. Adaptive traits such as ambition, competitiveness, willingness to
negotiate and compromise for mutual benefit, the quest for power over
circumstances, etc., can become maladaptive if pushed to extremes, seriously
thwarted or otherwise corrupted. The ambition/competitiveness which encourages
a father and/or mother to secure employment and work hard can become unbridled
and give way to negative manifestations of same: Workaholism, coworker envy,
greed, etc. The flip side of emotional satisfaction and sexual gratification
(Acquisition) can be obsession, sexual addiction, narcissism, and neurosis. If
these defects do not destroy the family structure or sacrifice the ability of
progeny to cope with the world and lead successful lives, the family unit limps
on. If the degree of dysfunction is seriously pathological, the family unit
disintegrates and the effects ripple through the ensuing generations. If
transgenerational maladaptive behaviors are not altered and more healthy
patterns established, the dysfunctional line may go extinct through various
adverse means : Suicide, homicide, infertility, socioeconomic marginalization
to the point of starvation, compromise of hygiene and health with resultant
onset of acute and/or chronic disease, et cetera. Maladaptive
traits can, in a social context, bring about conditions and responses (both
within and outside the family) which essentially select the dysfunctional
family member or unit out of existence. Of course, a society can enact programs
which blunt this selection or winnowing process. When looked at as an
investment which may return dividends to a given society down the line, this
species of altruism is probably a wise form of cultural, if not species "
insurance." As indicated
(above) , acquisition is derived from and informed by biology. We can see this
very readily in human mating patterns: Men and women exhibit courtship/mating
preferences and post-marital patterns which reflect differential parental
investment in offspring. Women, who invest more biological and personal
resources into bringing children (gestation) into the world, would tend to seek
out a mate who will produce genetically healthy children and help sustain them
(Bring home at least part of the bacon). And since it is often women who invest
the most in terms of time and energy in rearing progeny, they would naturally
be inclined to select a mate who will be both emotionally faithful and actively
involved in the support and protection of the family unit. Men, on the other
hand, who invest little in the reproductive process ("sperm donors"
is an apt term) and are apparently hormonally driven to maximize reproductive
opportunities, would be more inclined to get progeny into the world and on
their way through life, then seek out other mating opportunities. This is exactly
what cross cultural statistics indicate. Most divorces occur during or
following the fourth year of marriage, just after the first child or two has
been born and reached a sufficient age to suggest that "smooth
sailing" is ahead, i.e., the child(ren) are healthy and viable, and will
most likely remain so. Of course, this isn't fair from most religious and
ethical perspectives. Indeed, our society has enacted legislation to penalize
men who abandon their family and eschew material (and possibly some degree of emotional)
support for the children they have sired. But it (divorce) is a fact which
appears to reflect a pronounced biological tendency in males. Societies
have various solutions to keeping men committed to the marriage and family. In
over 85% of human cultures, polygamy is the order of the day. This is obviously
one way in which a man can "have his cake and eat it to", i.e., stay
true to his first mate and offspring - while maximizing his reproductive
opportunities. ( Of course, polygamous unions have their built in limits -
namely, resources. If the resources necessary to sustain the family are
seriously compromised, the intrafamily dynamic can be strained and even
ruptured ). In some of the societies which have outlawed polygamy, women
tolerate their men having mistresses and "one night stands". This is
not to say either approach is ethical in the classic Judeo-Christian sense, but
it does bear testimony to what men and women will do to accommodate biological
propensities. Again, this "battle of the sexes" (or battle for sex)
reflects the basic acquisition drive (mates, progeny, security, protection,
etc.) informed by biology. Once women
and men fully comprehend the desire to acquire through a biological/Darwinian
lens, certain behavioral traits and tendencies become not only explicable, but
potentially amenable to intervention and modification. On a larger
scale, acquisition finds expression in the activities of nation-states. Many of
history's most successful conquerors were expressly bent on expanding the
economic and other resources available to the nation or confederation of
nations they led. Other members of this fraternity apparently had in mind their
own glorification, if not deification. However, the people who followed these
megalomaniacs on wars of conquest did (and still do so) so for reasons more
often practical or "down to Earth" then not: The major player being
patriotism/nationalism, which boils down to protecting existing resources from
real or perceived enemies and/or acquiring more resources (In the past, war and
voyages of exploration/conquest and commercial gain brought a welcomed human
resource to many nations : Namely, slaves). The justification for bloody
conquest can be as straightforward as the desire for booty - xenophobic clashes
born of differences in culture, language, etc. - or as esoteric as assumed
racial or ethnic superiority packaged as a mandate to conquer and even
exterminate the untermensch [The race(s) and/or ethnic group(s) deemed
inferior]. The manifestations are many and varied, but the underlying drive is
biological (Acquisition). Consider the
embrace of virulent racism and dictatorship by technologically advanced,
seemingly "civilized" cultures in the early to middle part of this
century: The rise of
fascism in Europe and the Far East in the 1920s and 1930s was the stepchild of
economic depression and resultant privation (Loss and compromise of resources).
Whether men such as Adolf Hitler truly cared for the people they led is both
doubtful and irrelevant; that he possessed the insight to artfully exploit the
human desire to protect resources and acquire new ones (to flourish) is born
out by the slogans and propaganda he and his cronies employed to garner popular
support for the Nazi Party (NSDAP). One example: Fur freiheit und brot! (For freedom and bread). The fact the Nazis
passed out free bread to hungry, unemployed Germans - thus linking Nazism with
the acquisition and distribution of resources - was not lost on the common
people. The interplay of post-WWI political unrest, loss of resources and
national pride, scapegoating fueled by long-standing xenophobia and prejudice,
and a national tendency towards fervent militarism set the stage for the ascent
of the Nazis. The almost idolatrous homage paid the Fuhrer (Hitler) by a
nation-state grateful to have its glory (Resources) restored and expanded
becomes perfectly explicable when viewed as a manifestation of human evolved
nature. The Nazis, of course, took adaptive traits to unhealthy, maladaptive
extremes. This flip side of acquisition - blatant evil - was proximally
successfully, but ultimately catastrophic [And thus Nazi Germany decisively
armed the history-based observation/axiom that oppressive dictatorships, especially those predicated on elitism and
calculated violence, actually exploits (in the name of liberation) and then
stifles the basic human drive to acquire, retain and protect resources. What
begins as a successful shortcut to gain for the masses and its leaders succumbs
to the maladaptive extremes it was both born of and generates. e.g. sadism,
conflict, perversion]. The
democratic approach to generating opportunities for resource acquisition and
distribution exemplified by the American sociopolitical and economic system
would appear, despite all its pitfalls and failings, to offer the most benign
and yet productive framework for expressing the basic human drive to acquire.
That is, adaptive traits are actually accommodated if not nurtured by the law
of the land, i.e., freedom is granted to the citizenry to pursue material gain,
a mate of one's choice, sire progeny, etc., while the law concomitantly
penalizes those who attempt to usurp or monopolize resources, blatantly steal
them or employ them in such a way as to bring greater harm than good. This is not
to say there are not inequities, injustices, and the marginalization of many
citizens. However, the sociopolitical means exist to redress these, up to and
including completely voting in a new form of government. It is conceivable that
one day Americans may elect to marry political democracy to economic
democracy, so as to more equitably
distribute resources and thus insure that the existing poverty-stricken,
marginalized underclass does not grow or become a permanent sociopolitical
feature. Many European nations have been and are experimenting with various
permutations of social democracy or democratic socialism to achieve this very
end. Whether Americans will find wisdom in this trend and thus adapt some form
of it as national policy remains to be seen. At any rate, the American
political experiment would appear to both free and restrict the drive to
acquire in such a way as to favor the common good. l
Protection from Loss What we
acquire (develop or inherit), e.g., good health, resources (tangible and intangible),
progeny, esteem, etc., we naturally seek to protect from loss or compromise.
This is a basic, fundamental human activity,
akin to if not derived from the survival instinct. What we as
individuals and as social collectives (even nation-states) carve out we seek to
insure against loss; to preserve, if not expand. At the family
unit level, men and women employ posturing, strength, the law or what-have-you
to protect their mate, children, possessions, and possibly kin from inflicted
loss or compromise (Whether on the part of others or nature). The rifle over
the fireplace mantle and the insurance policy in the family strongbox are both
tools for protecting the family against grievous loss. If one's progeny, in
particular, succumb to violent acts inflicted by others, the genetic imperative
to produce and leave behind viable progeny is compromised (In essence one's
representation in the gene pool - the continuity of the family germline - is
threatened). In certain
tribal communities this propensity to protect may take the form of ruling
counsels and military chieftains. Field commanders essentially lead villagers
to fend off attacks aimed at compromising the village's integrity (Both it's
existence & established resource base). In larger collectives such as the
nation-states, we have professional armies and navies whose sole task is to
defend the populace against aggression from other nations bent on conquest
(Acquisition of resources). The adaptive
role of protection is so self-evident, most peoples have written it into their
religious and national codes of law. For example: If a man or woman kills an
intruder who is perceived to threaten life or limb, that person is held
blameless. Of course,
the basic drive to protect can be pushed to or assume maladaptive extremes.
People can and do twist "protecting what's mine" into a pretext for
smothering possessiveness, greed, envy and even the pathological control of
others. Fear of loss or a desire to limit the possibility of it occurring -
say, a mate taking a lover or running off (Read: Resource compromise or loss) -
can turn a protective stance into a "fortress mentality".
Authoritarian-prone leaders of nations sometimes fall prey to a similar mindset
- played out on a grander scale. The end result of both is predictably bleak. l
Perpetuation To seek to
perpetuate one's germline and resources (material gains/immaterial
contributions & legacy) into the future is a natural partner and outgrowth
of both acquisition and protection. One acquires resources, a mate, and has
children, all the while engaged in trying to protect this accumulated
treasure-trove in order to perpetuate biological (and personal) presence in the
world of today and far beyond. In most other animals, the drive to acquire and
protect biological and material resources is instinctive and perpetuation the
reward for success. In humans, perpetuation is all this and more: It is
distinguished by being simultaneously a natural drive and a conscious
objective. This is, I contend, an outgrowth of our unique cognizance of our own
mortality (Something no other extant animal species shares). Consider:
While religious faith comforts and reassures believers concerning a
transcendent postmortem reality (Afterlife)* - which is adaptive in terms of
reducing anxiety surrounding death, dissolution of self, etc. - it seldom
totally liberates individuals from the deep-seated notion that the only certain
immortality is found in progeny (and/or kin - especially for those sterile or
not given to reproduce for whatever reason) and in acquiring those resources
which nurture the familial germline and thus better insure it's continuity.
This unconscious element no doubt finds expression in conscious planning with
regard to perpetuation of self in various guises: Offspring (being primary);
ideas and memories passed down through kin, friends, and others; businesses or
other enterprises which bear one's name as both legacy and "physical
presence" in the world that lies beyond our demise; et cetera. No doubt
the modern cryogenic preservation of the dead in hopes of future reanimation
reflects this very human drive to both perpetuate and be perpetual. Given this
human tendency rooted in biology, it should come as no surprise that "To
die to self' is no easier to achieve in our day than when first articulated by
Ribbi Yehoshua ("Jesus of Nazareth") nearly two thousand years ago.
Yes, we do have many examples of people who die for strangers. St. Maximilian
Kolbe took the place of a married man condemned to be starved to death at Auschwitz
death camp during World War II. Newspapers routinely contain accounts of people
of all ages sacrificing their own lives to spare others certain death. Are
these acts consonant with our nature or do they transcend them? Perhaps both.
Kolbe laid down his human life in order to acquire what he counted a greater
reward: A place in God's realm. He compromised the drive to
"preserve" in order to "acquire" something of far greater
value. Many who sacrifice themselves no doubt have internalized (and act out
of) similar religious beliefs and convictions. While on the other hand, the
sacrificial and heroic acts of at least some are born on the heels of a deep
seated desire to gain more tangible rewards, such as recognition, honor, and
material compensation. Some folks probably blend the two. At any rate,
self-sacrifice would appear to both harmonize with and transcend the basic or
primal drives. As
perpetuation is an adaptive trait, it follows that it has a dark side. We need
look no further than individuals who build business empires and continue
seeking to acquire more, even when this
actually uproots and destroys other business and their employees. The reasons
given include "it is challenging", "the quest for more is an end
in itself*, "it benefits the economy and thus society at large" etc.
Are these the underlying motivations or mere rationalizations offered for a
much deeper desire? That is, are we not witnessing the conscious desire to
perpetuate oneself turned full throttle? Is the flip side of perpetuation an
insatiable appetite for a species of influence and malignant
self-aggrandizement which "immortalizes"? Do we see in history's
supreme narcissist, Adolf Hitler, the quest to perpetuate pushed to a lethally
pathological level? The 15 basic Desires/Values of Dr.
Reiss et al as Expressions of the 3
Primal Drives Acquisition Curiosity Food Honor Independence Preservation Physical
Exercise Order Vengeance Social
Prestige Aversive
Sensations Perpetuation Citizenship Power NOTE:
Actually there is a great deal of overlap possible here. Power over others, for
example, can help one acquire, preserve against loss, and perpetuate one's
legacy. The main point is: All 15 are expressions of the three fundamental or
core drives. l
Concluding Polemic & Summation Our brains
were shaped over many millions of years in an environmental context few humans
experience today (Gatherer-hunter). Our neurological wiring, so to speak, is a
prosaic mesh of domain-specific adaptations which give rise to the complex
faculties we call "mind". Given the survival advantages conferred on
life by acquisition, prevention against loss (defense), and perpetuation - it
follows that primate behavior should to some reflect a brain "wired"
with these core or primal (adaptive) drives. And indeed, various
primatological, ethnological, and anthropological field studies tend to
validate this prediction. Our evolutionary siblings, the Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), form communities whose
members engage in the sort of social interaction, competition, aggression,
peacemaking, food gathering activities, hunting, play, and so forth which would
be expected to have arisen (at least in part) from the underlying primal
principles or drives outlined in this essay. The same can be said of the Bonobo
(Pan paniscus) chimpanzee "culture", which is characterized by
an incredible degree of egalitarianism (though favoring matriarchy), sexual
activity that is somewhat casual, and the defusing of aggression via sexual
overture. The nature and scope of acquisition, protection from loss, and
perpetuation may be more subdued than is true of Pan troglodytes, but it is expressed nonetheless. That the primal
drives are varied in terms of expression within and between primate communities
(as well as human cultures) no doubt reflects biologic and environmental
influences. Consider: Anger is a universal emotion in primates - an adaptive
feature of our brains - which varies considerably in terms of expression.
Biology and context both influence the degree of anger elicited and its
discharge. Human
cultures vary too in terms of the influence and expression of the primal
drives. In the Kung! San tribal culture (Kalahari), the community is
essentially peaceful, there is a division of labor, e.g., men hunt, women
gather plant foods, and disagreements are basically resolved via discussion.
Families share possessions to a great degree with ownership per se being a
"non-issue". However, it should be noted that the Kung! have few
material resources and live in a setting where natural resources are available,
but do not readily facilitate the accumulation of "wealth" (They are
also highly mobile - moving in order to more readily harvest seasonal plants
and animals. As such, the Kung! peoples must literally pack up and carry their
world about from one geographic locale to another. This discourages
accumulating material goods not essential to survival). Historically, as
various cultures situated in resource rich areas began to cultivate and exploit
same, e.g., plant crops, create novel labor-saving implements, exploit minerals
and gems to fashion tools, jewelry, etc., and thereby benefit in terms of
material enrichment (intra- and extra-community trade), population growth,
etc., conflicts were more likely to ensue. Thieves sought to steal food and
goods. Armies sought to capture regions rich in material and human resources.
Defensive strategies and technologies had to be created to protect people and
assets. In short, acquisition, protection against loss, and perpetuation found
more overt expression in step with resource growth (Material and human). This
is true both of individuals, families, communities, and nation-states. So there you
have it. Acquisition (resource), protection from loss (defense), and
perpetuation - the primal drives. A two edged sword, being both blessing and
curse. It is what lends most of us to work, build, have families, buy fire
alarm systems and insurance policies, serve in civic organizations and the
armed forces, etc., and in so doing create a valuable and enduring legacy. And
for some that which builds gives way to the opposite - workaholism which robs
children of one or both parents, material greed, envy, strife, power plays,
manipulation, conflict and a whole host of other evils. In a world
awash in sophisticated weaponry, ancient hostilities, xenophobia and
intolerance, we must not only recognize the primal drives and their expression,
but identify (and employ) the best means to resist veering too far into the
dark side of our evolved nature. *Matters such
as an afterlife rest on faith - which lies outside the purview of science. Original
copyright 1998, revised version copyright 2002 by Dr. Anthony G. Payne. All
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