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Conway Zirkle and the Persistence of "Marxian Biology" in the Western Social Sciences
J.W. JAMIESON
Institute for the Study of Man
In 1948 the Soviet Union stunned the world with its denunciation of the
science of genetics and its searing criticism of Charles Darwin's theory of
natural selection. To those who were familiar with the ideology of Karl Marx
and Friedrich Engels, this was not entirely unexpected - the repudiation of
genetics could be directly attributed to the incompatibility of its doctrines
with those of Marx and Engels.
This twisting of science 'although subsequently discredited even in the
Soviet Union with the disgrace of the Soviet pseudoscientist Trofim D.
Lysenko, has nevertheless had a disastrous influence on sociological thought
in the Western world. Western sociologists of the Lester Ward mold, who were
already ideologically prejudiced against concepts of biological inequality
among men - both as individuals and as groups - willingly allowed "Marxian
biology" to permeate their thinking, and in consequence the erroneous concepts
of Lysenko, while long since abandoned by geneticists throughout the world
(including even those in the U.S.S.R.), still distort the context of many of
the social science textbooks used in our contemporary universities.
The first Western schools to clearly identify the extent of Marxist
pseudo-genetic infiltration into the social sciences was Conway Zirkle, a
distinguished biologist who was a member of a number of university faculties
in the course of his career, notably Virginia, Johns Hopkins, Harvard and
Pennsylvania. A member of the editorial boards of Isis, Botanical Review and
The American Naturalist, Conway Zirkle authored several books, but
particularly pinpointed the nature of Marxian pseudo-genetics in his Death of
a Science in Russia. (1) In this he showed how the Marxist dedication to the
concept of equality had caused pseudo-scientific theories, rooted only in
political dogma, to dominate the field of genetics in the Soviet Union, with
the intention of downplaying the inherent genetic differences (i.e.,
inequalities) that distinguished all complex living organism from each other,
by claiming to show that the genetic heritage of the individual organism could
be modified by environmental forces.
But it was Zirkle's Evolution, Marxian Biology and the Social Scene(2)
which first revealed the extent to which this pernicious biological cult had
influenced Western social scientists. Marxian biology dates from the 1860s
when Marx and Angels first read Darwin's Origin of Species. Although the
founders of communism were Willing to accept the concept of evolution, they
categorically rejected all parts of the theory which conflicted with the
ideals of a socialistic society and extended their party line right through
the science of biology.
As Conway Zirkle points out in this Study, it was the recrudescence of this
line that enabled Lysenko to annihilate all traces of the science of genetics
in the Communist world. But what is of even greater importance to us today is
the influence of this "Marxian biology" on a number of the attitudes and
beliefs of American scholars who are unaware of its permeating forces because
of our modern intellectual specialization and consequent fragmentary
knowledge.
In order to alleviate the heretofore unchallenged status of "Marxian
biology" as present in the American culture, Dr. Zirkle cited examples of its
pervasive influence on American literature and sociology. He showed how a
"quackery has penetrated into our scholarly world," limiting our information
and affecting our thinking. So that the reader who is not a professional
biologist may make an informed judgment, the author also included a brief
history of the theory of evolution - which has been distorted by the Marxians
- from the time of Darwin to the present.
There can be no doubt that the influence of those who oppose the
application of the findings of biological and genetic research to the
understanding of human social behavior was greatly enhanced by the temporary
fashion for "Social Darwinism" at the turn of the century, with its erroneous
emphasis upon individual competition in evolution to the exclusion of group
competition. Social Darwinists did not see that cooperation within the group
enhanced the competitiveness of the group in its struggle for survival against
other groups - and that altruism and loyalty were powerful forces for the
survival of the group, race or lineage. The fact that altruism has survival
value, when practiced in favor of members of the altruist's own gene pool, was
not apparent to the Social Darwinists, who did not fully realize that from the
evolutionary point of view it is the gene pool, the race or lineage which is
important, not the individual per se. This defect in primitive Social
Darwinists thinking made it easier for Marxian social philosophers to downplay
the significance of biological forces to the human social system and to
promote instead their own distorted concepts of direct genetic subordination
to environmental forces. Darwin himself, of course was not a "Social
Darwinist" in that he never meant anyone to assume that all competition took
place strictly at the level of individuals. Indeed, the influence of marxian
biologists has been such that we almost always hear his major work referred to
simply as "The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection." Even Karl
Marx looked with approval on Darwin's thought in so far as this short title is
an imperfect representation of Darwin's own conception of the evolutionary
process. Darwin's true comprehension of the evolutionary process, as involving
group even more than individual competition at the higher levels of mammalian
development, is revealed by the full title of his renowned book which is: "The
Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of
Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. " Commenting on the impact of Marxian
biology on Western thought, Conway Zirkle noted that:
Those who tried to advance Marxian biology consciously were not numerous,
but their influence in shaping the ideals of our intelligentsia was
tremendous. They actually set the fashion not only in letters but also in the
popular up-to-date attitudes in morals and ethics. It is even possible that
they furnished the dominant directives to the social sciences. This statement
is not as far-fetched as it might seem at first, for practically all social
scientists are familiar with the works of the more progressive writers, but
almost none of them is technically equipped to evaluate the new discoveries in
biology.
Marxian biology has always had allies, and this has been one of the sources
of its strength. On the other hand, scientific biology has had few friends.
The moment it grew to the point where it applied to Homo sapiens, it acquired
enemies. Indeed, for the last hundred and fifty years, the history of biology
(outside of the history of its technical developments and discoveries) has
been a history of conflict, and the conflict shows no signs of abating. For
example, in 1925, a high school teacher in Tennessee was arrested for teaching
evolution; and as late as 1948, five geneticists in Moscow were forced by the
Communists to recant and forswear their knowledge of biology.
The proponents of Marxian biology appear in unexpected places. In the early
disputes over evolution, the most effective aid to the Marxian line came from
the humanitarian but conservative Christians, who not only rejected evolution
on theological grounds, but who also looked with horror on the amoral
viciousness of what they took to be natural selection. Marx himself had also
objected to the competitive aspects of natural selection, so both his
followers and the more conservative religious groups found themselves on the
same side. In fact, the Marxian biologists of the last seventy-five years had
their pathways made smooth by the Victorian fundamentalists. (3)
Penetration of Sociological Thought
Concerning sociology, Zirkle was even more critical: "The coexistence of
our rapidly expanding sciences with stupid quack substitutes for science
should surprise no one .. Marxian biology ... exists also in non-Communistic
countries - in countries where it is not protected by Marxian dictators.
Moreover, it exists not merely as an intellectual lag among the unlearned, but
as a carefully protected faith in disciplines whose members are equal in
education - quantitatively at least - to the biologists themselves. "(4)
Zirkle did not complain that contemporary Western sociologists ignored
biology, but rather that they had become so deeply permeated by the propaganda
of Marxian pseudobiology that: "The usual course is to treat the human species
as if it were composed- of an amorphous, uniform and plastic raw material, as
if it were a species which could be molded (conditioned is the usual word) to
suit the heart's desire."(5) Most sociologists, he declares, are dedicated to
the idea of "reform" along equalitarian lines, and find it easier to
disapprove of biological variables and to accept Marxian pseudo-biology than
to face the reality of biological complexity.
Admitting that there are some sociologists who have not fallen in this
trap, Zirkle warns that "It is necessary, however, that we distinguish between
sociology as it is understood by the cream of the professional sociologists
and sociology as it is taught from elementary textbooks. Some sociologists
recognize the complexities of their subject and are fully aware of the
tremendous difficulties which they will have to surmount before they can make
the contributions which society needs. The more popular textbooks, however,
give a very different picture of the field and this, of course, is very
serious - even dangerous. If he knows anything at all, it is apt to be only
what he learned in a single undergraduate course which was taught from an
elementary textbook. It is textbook sociology which penetrates to our
professional educators and which is included in the curricula of our teachers'
colleges. It is textbook sociology which conditions the thinking of those who
teach in the primary and secondary schools and thus, it is textbook sociology
which influences, and which will continue to influence, the climate of
opinion. It is textbook sociology which indoctrinates the run-of-the-mill
college graduate and it is textbook sociology which orients our intelligentsia
on social questions." (6)
Characteristics of Marxian Biology
The identifying characteristics of Marxist biology are numerous. Salient
among these is the rejection of Malthusian doctrine. As Margaret Sanger
admitted, "A remarkable feature of Marxian propaganda has been the almost
complete unanimity with which the implications of the Malthusian doctrines
have been derided, denounced, and repudiated. Any defense of the so-called
'Law of Population' was enough to stamp one, in the eyes of the orthodox
Marxians, as a 'tool of the capitalistic class,' seeking to dampen the ardor
of those who expressed the belief that men might create a better world for
themselves. Malthus, they claimed, was actuated by selfish motives. He was not
merely a hidebound aristocrat, but a pessimist who was trying to kill all hope
of human progress. By Marx, Engels, Bebel, Kautsky and the celebrated leaders
and interpreters of Marx's great 'Bible of the Working Class' ... birth
control has been looked upon as a subtle Machiavelian sophistry created for
the purpose of placing the blame for human misery elsewhere than at the door
of the capitalistic class. Upon this point the orthodox Marxian mind has been
universally and sternly uncompromising."(7)
Other key indicators of Marxist influence in the social science's attitude
towards biological reality centers upon: 1) the refusal to recognize the role
of population pressure in natural selection among contemporary human
societies, 2) the insistence upon reintroducing Lysenkovian doctrines of the
inheritance of acquired characteristics, 3) the insistence that evolution has
ceased to play a significant role in human affairs 4) of the idea that all
peoples are in any case made equal by culture.
Perhaps an equally important indicator of Marxian bias is the commitment of
many Western sociologists to unwavering opposition to eugenics, "Negative
eugenics, and indeed all kinds of eugenics, are anathema to Marxists of all
types. In fact, eugenics impinges upon so many religious, political, and
economic convictions that a great many individuals are unable to evaluate the
subject honestly. Yet the questions involved are essentially simple. The
program of negative eugenics is sound and based on valid research. Our
knowledge of the machinery of heredity is now sufficient to enable us to
foretell the outcome of the program and the outcome, we know, would be
beneficial ..."
"Negative eugenics, however, should not be scorned on the grounds that its
benefits are biological rather than social. If the eugenics program is
followed, the number of defectives will be decreased, fewer institutions would
be needed for their care, and those institutions now in use would be less
crowded. Uninstitutionalized defectives, those who now wander at large, would
also be fewer and could be given better care with the present overall
expenditure of energy, and the burden on society would be greatly lessened.
Thus, the prescriptions of negative eugenics, if followed, should result in
some real social gain. Opposition to all eugenics seems rather silly. The
program prescribed is simple; all that is needed is for recognizable genetic
defectives not to reproduce."(8)
Finally Marxist influence in the contemporary social sciences is perhaps
most evident in the persistent attempts of many contemporary social
"scientists" to keep alive the meaningless "nature versus nurture"
controversy, debating the relative importance of heredity and environment.
Zirkle summed up this last noted issue succinctly when he wrote, "The biology
embedded in the social sciences approaches closest to the biology of Marx and
Engels when it attempts to evaluate the relative roles of heredity and
environment as these two variables interact to produce the human differences
which we see in those about us. Here, the sociologists postulate biological
principles which have long been disproven and which are so far removed from
the ignored recent discoveries that at present sociological biology" has
almost nothing in common with the biology of the biologists. In fact, the two
disciplines are so far apart that the pertinent biological theories should be
restated if we are to compare the two conflicting systems. ... Any contrast of
heredity with environment which presents one as more important than the other
is completely meaningless. What we are depends 100 per cent on our heredity
and also 100 per cent on our environment; change either and we are changed.
Any attempt to make one more important than the other is as silly as trying to
determine which is the more important in deriving a product, the multiplicand
or the multiplier."(9)
1. Conway Zirkle, Death of a Science in R@ Philadelphia, 1949.
2. Conway Zirkle, Evolution, Marxian Biology, and the Social Scene,
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1959.
3. Ibid., p. 298.
4. Ibid., p. 418.
5. Ibid., P. 420.
6. [bid., p. 429. Also Margaret Sanger, The Pivot of Civilization. New
York.
7. Ibid., p. 272.
8. Ibid., p. 444.
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