Collaboration and diversity essential
By Dave Lehman, Connections Executive Editor and NSRF National Facilitator in Wisconsin
“Collaboration has been a recurring theme in science
and technology in recent years. The life of the mind is
increasingly transnational. It roams centers of excellence
from every continent, linked by communications of great
speed and breadth.”
The spring 2013 issue of YES! magazine was devoted
to the theme, “How Cooperatives Are Driving the New
Economy.” In this issue, Eric Michael Johnson, graduate
student in the history of science at the University of British
Columbia,wrote about a “New Theory of Evolution: Survival
of the Nicest.” Citing the recent extensive research of
Michael Tomasello of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology at Leipzig, Germany, Johnson developed
a “comprehensive evolutionary theory of human cooperation.” Here is an account of human evolution which has
predisposed us to work collaboratively, with cooperation
favoring survival. (Also see Tomasello’s 2008 book, Why We
Cooperate.)
I would add that this is not a “new” theory of evolution,
even in 2008, but goes back at least to the turn of the 19th
century with the writings of Petr Kropotkin (Russian geographer, economist, activist, philologist, zoologist, evolutionary theorist, philosopher, writer and prominent anarchist)
and his seminal book, Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution.
Kropotkin’s work first appeared as a series of articles in the
magazine, “The Nineteenth Century” in 1890, then as a
book in 1902. In summary, drawing on an extensive analysis
of animal behavior as well as human societies, the medieval
cities, and modern villages, Kropotkin said, “In the practice
of mutual aid, which we can retrace to the earliest beginnings of evolution, we thus find the positive and undoubted
origin of our ethical conceptions; and we can affirm that in
the ethical progress of man, mutual support—not mutual
struggle—has had the leading part.”
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