A little more than a week ago, scientist James Watson made a complete idiot of himself with some despicable and racist comments about the intelligence of white people and black people, and Greg Laden justifiably kicked his arse over the ill-founded statements. I was certainly surprised, then, to visit the official Rutgers University newspaper (The Daily Targum) website and see an opinion article by a freshman named Brad Pironciak who apparently has no idea what natural selection is, his piece being an idiotic espousal of Social Darwinism (although he didn't use the phrase that pays, "survival of the fittest"). Between this student piece and Jerry Fodor's latest essay, some members of the Rutgers community are showing just how ignorant they are when it comes to evolution.
Although it is not certain who said it, there is a familiar maxim that goes "It is better to keep your mouth closed and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt," and Pironciak has opted to let us in on his condescending brand of foolishness. Our student author opens with the "true story" of 44-year-old Megan Fri, shot dead because she decided to "surprise" officers that were training on a firing range. A quick google search does not reveal any news stories about this death, only a few random links to lists of "Top 20 Homicides" that are anything but amusing. Apparently Pironciak has not yet learned that one of the primary rules of journalism is to CHECK YOUR SOURCES, as we are presented with a very thin story with no references as absolute fact. What's more, even if the event actually occurred Pironciak looks at the event rather callously, the rest of the article (as we'll see) implying that she deserved to die because she did something that wasn't very bright.
After briefly pondering why there are helmet & seatbelt laws, instructions on Pop Tart boxes, and warnings on hair dryers, Pironciak unveils his rather strange (but unfortunately not unique) hypothesis. He writes;
This may be putting some words in Pironciak's mouth, but his idea seems to be that the different between "intelligent" and "not-so-intelligent" is genetically determined at birth and cannot be changed or overcome by environment, education, or other factors, the hypothetical loathsome idiots always outnumbering the egg-heads in their Ivory Towers. This, of course, is unadulterated bullshit with nothing to support it except the author's opinion, and intelligence is heritable to greater or lesser extents and seems to be correlated with unintentional injuries or early death in adult life, Pironciak apparently could not be bothered to do any actual research and saw it fit to instead reveal his own biases. But wait, it gets better (and by that I mean much, much worse);
I guess we're all bad people then, depriving Pironciak's imaginary idiotic populace from killing themselves off like they're supposed to. I could hardly believe I was reading this, and is obvious from the tone of this post it's difficult to control my anger and frustration that this made it past the editors into print (even if it is an opinion piece). What Pironciak is essentially doing is taking the "survival of the fittest" model of natural selection and applying it to populations of Homo sapiens, dullards diluting the intelligence of the species by producing more offspring with low intelligence than their more intelligent counterparts. Given this notion, I'm actually a little surprised that Pironciak didn't go all the way and advocate eugenics or selective breeding for intelligence, but if we think through his spotty logic (and I use "logic" loosely) he is implicitly suggesting selecting for the "best and brightest" by weeding out those deemed undesirable. Even if we look past such loathsome ideas for a moment, it's starkly apparent that Pironciak is no expert on Darwin, and even if he has read some of Darwin's books much of it seems not to have sunk in. Thanks to the work of Ed Darrell, who actually has read Darwin's work and understood it, we can see what Darwin had to say for himself when it came to the application of natural selection to humans (click the link for the full quote, as I've only extracted the most pertinent parts here to keep things as concise as possible);
While this passage, from the Descent of Man, is obviously a bit dated it does hold some important ideas as to how natural selection works and why we should not expect that those who simply breed the most will end up outnumbering those who are not so prolific in Western society. As I had mentioned earlier, environment, education, and economic status (among other factors) all are important in influencing intelligence, and those that do not have many of the luxuries that you or I may have (those who Pironciak would rather be rid of) often experience higher rates of mortality at an earlier age, their impact not being as great as would be assumed. Treating other humans beings as if they were some sort of vermin, in contrast, tries to simplify the model to the point where intelligence is determined by genes alone, those with low IQ's having no choice but to give in to their compulsion to start having babies at the earliest age possible for reasons they cannot fathom. As a professor and friend remarked about this article and relating to such ideas, one is almost tempted to say that they must be satire, but I fear that Pironciak's moral superiority is real. He continues;
As I mentioned earlier, Pironciak's rather bleak interpretation of a future populated by dullards is hardly unique, taken to horrifying extremes by tyrants in history but also reflected in some works of fiction. Indeed, I have to wonder if the Targum tirade was somehow inspired by a recent Mike Judge film Idiocracy;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=10qQyq8NXYs
As PZ has previously noted, there are no "marching morons" like the titular victims of the Cyril M. Kornbluth story "The Marching Morons," essentially being the great intellectually unwashed that so worry our student writer. While I have to admit that Idiocracy has some funny moments, the sentiment behind it is far from accurate, those who feel they're somehow superior than others easily falling into the trap of thinking that they actually have to be concerned about the average IQ of the next generation. Indeed, Pironciak's view of the situation is rather bleak;
Oddly enough, it seems that Pironciak may have simply been doing what the "picture box told [him] tah do," finding it far easier to publicly stick his foot in his mouth rather than think his standpoint through. Perhaps it's too much to ask of a pre-business freshman to look up some primary sources and create a well-constructed argument, but I would have at least expected one of the editors to spot this steaming pile of editorial excrement before it got the "OK" for publication. Pironciak's work is an embarrassment to himself, to the Targum, and to Rutgers, and his hijacking of natural selection to support his holier-than-thou views is not helping in the creation/evolution debate either. It is people like him who continue to use the term "Darwinism" to support their morally questionable views that continue to give good scientists a black eye, and while I can't stand creationists like Ken Ham, I can tolerate writers such as Pironciak even less. I'll be sending a condensed version of this post to the Targum for publication and I will follow up on it this week as to whether it gets printed or not; I can't sit idly by when a student like Pironciak misuses one of the most important ideas in the whole of scientific thought to uphold his own questionable views.
This post is a reply to "A Darwinian look at the 21st Century" by Brad Pironciak. You can register your disgust here, if you like.
