Fred Turner’s response to: Did you know Ants Exhibit Compassion, Empathy and Sympathy?

Roger F Malina July 3 2024

Published on this blog: Did you know Ants Exhibit Compassion, Empathy and Sympathy

July 3 2024

I love the wild connections in the ants piece. But I think we need some sharper distinctions. E. O. Wilson, whom I knew, was a leading figure in the recognition of eusociality in the insects, and his wonderfully counter-intuitive idea that humans were eusocial too.

It now begins to look as if there’s a whole evolutionary spectrum of compassion, from simple commensality or symbiosis, the cooperativeness of cells in multi-celled organisms and individual clones in a swarm, to the much more complex relationships of genetic individuals in a sexually reproducing species that are designedly different from each other. Some might define “compassion” as being an appropriate word only for the latter. And here things get complicated, but such species are ecologically obliged to compete for mates, privilege kin, avoid strangers, and defend themselves against oppression and exploitation; to be able to deceive and recognize deception, and to develop internal mental models of each other. Konrad Loranz defines love among territorial animals (and all animals are territorial in one way or another) as making an exception for an individual from the natural rule of aggression. Here compassion becomes a beautiful emergent feature, as in the parable of the Good Samaritan.

Below is a poem about the emergence of love.

Fred

The Genealogy of Love

1.

If love did not exist,

How might it be invented?

What would be needed first

Is something just presented.

If nothing is at first,

Whatever’s next must be

Not nothing, but a burst

Of possibility;

Existence–“standing forth”–

The prime ingredient

Being itself the birth

Of all things consequent.

To be, though, carries that

Exclusion principle:

Whatever is, is not

Anything else at all;

For otherwise the All

Is but a bland suspension:

Existence is a fall

Into a state of tension.

Symmetry must be broken

To make distinctiveness:

Matter must be awoken

Out of the formlessness.

2.

But love’s not gravity,

Nor friendship a black hole;

Love needs identity

Not mergence in a whole.

Stars must be kindled, that

The elements be forged,

Each with its habitat,

By its own flavor urged.

Space must be found to cool

A place for chemistry;

Carbon must found its school

Of wild diversity.

3.

But compounds are not love

Nor valence make desire;

Some other step above

Is needed for that fire;

The search for quiddity,

Uniqueness in the strife,

Calls for an entity

We cannot but call life.

The seeking to be other

Than just the common flow

Culminates as the mother

Of the live world we know.

But to be something needs

That something else not be;

Death, then, is born, that feeds

The less free to the free.

4.

And so desire was born,

Both engine and its fuel:

To flourish and to spawn,

To conquer and to rule.

And pain came too, to scare

The creature from its bane,

Futures sprang forth from there,

The choice of loss or gain;

Sex and the choice of mate

Ensured a future where

The gene could cheat its fate

By learning how to share:

The future of the seed

Outweighed the present fact,

The mother felt the need

To feed and to protect;

The self itself grew forth,

To recognize its kin,

To judge the greater worth

Of what now lay within;

Beauty no longer was

Things’ artless elegance;

Design emerged, because

Sought for the mating dance.

5.

The miracle was done:

The future was now real:

But only for the one

Able to know and feel;

And at each step the pain

Mounted as more was given,

How precious was the gain!–

Hell the fit price of heaven.

Love, born of time, gives birth

To death, time’s instrument:

The chronicle of Earth

Discovered what it meant:

A billion years of grief

On every living world–

What kind of strange belief

Could praise it unconsoled?

A god, then, had been born

Out of the urge to be;

But from love’s fruitful horn

Came endless agony.

6.

And so that Hebrew poet

Saw what needs must be done:

Someone who’d come to know it

Must claim to be its son,

And take on him the guilt

Of love’s long savage crime,

Paying for what love built

In suffering and time:

No truth can now undo

That poor Jew’s reckless claim:

For if it were not true,

It should be, all the same.


Fred Turner 2024

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