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Evolving the Future Toward a Science of Intentional Change ACBS World Conference IX Parma, Italy

Evolving the Future Toward a Science of Intentional Change ACBS World Conference IX Parma, Italy July 14, 2011 David Sloan Wilson President, Evolution Institute SUNY Distinguished Professor Binghamton University. Published by Little, Brown in August 2011. Change. • We crave it.

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Evolving the Future Toward a Science of Intentional Change ACBS World Conference IX Parma, Italy

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  1. Evolving the Future Toward a Science of Intentional Change ACBS World Conference IX Parma, Italy July 14, 2011 David Sloan Wilson President, Evolution Institute SUNY Distinguished Professor Binghamton University Published by Little, Brown in August 2011

  2. Change • We crave it. • We fear it. • We’re not very good at managing it.

  3. Can There Be A Science of Change? • Yes. • It must be centered in evolutionary theory. • This means that achieving a science of change will be both difficult and easy.

  4. Why It Will Be Difficult • Darwin’s theory, which has unified the study of life, has been avoided for the study of humans for the last half century. • This avoidance is based on complex histories in which evolutionary approaches of the time were rejected for good reasons (e.g., Social Darwinism plus much more). • An ACT-like process is required for a science of human change to become centered in evolutionary theory.

  5. Why It Will Be Easy • Evolutionary Science offers a powerful toolkit for the study of all traits in all species. • The toolkit is easily learned. • The tools can be applied right away. • Some of the most recalcitrant problems can not only be solved, but easily solved, when they are approached in the right way. • ACT provides outstanding examples of this difficult-made-easy phenomenon.

  6. Why I Know • Trained in evolutionary biology • Involved in the academic study of human biocultural evolution throughout my career. • Became involved the applied study of human biocultural evolution app. 5 years ago. • The Evolution Institute: The world’s first evolutionary think tank. • The Binghamton Neighborhood Project: Community-based research from an evolutionary perspective.

  7. Nature, 9 June 2011

  8. A little help from my friends Tony Biglan Dennis Embry Steve Hayes

  9. Some Tools from the Evolutionary Toolkit • Multilevel selection and major evolutionary transitions. • Evolutionary mismatch. • Adaptations to harsh environments. • Learning and symbolic thought • Using the tools to solve real-world problems • What a society such as ACBS can do

  10. Multilevel SelectionA Simple Subject with a Complex History Individual level adaptations are locally advantageous. • Sharp teeth • Thick fur • Cryptic coloration

  11. Multilevel SelectionA Simple Subject with a Complex History Social adaptations tend to be locally disadvantageous. • Altruism • Public good provision • Most behaviors that are “for the good of the group”

  12. The Fundamental Problem How can “for the good of the group” traits evolve when they are locally disadvantageous?

  13. The (Partial) Solution • Because “for the good or the group” traits are advantageous at a larger scale. • Groups whose members behave “for the good of the group” will survive and reproduce better than groups whose members are more self-serving. • The solution is only partial because positive between-group selection must be strong enough to prevail against negative within-group selection.

  14. Sociobiology, standing on one foot • Selfishness beats altruism within single groups. • Altruistic groups beat single groups. • Everything else is commentary.

  15. New Scientist, August 2011

  16. Major Evolutionary Transitions • The balance between levels of selection is not static but can itself evolve. • When between-group selection becomes sufficiently strong, the group becomes so cooperative that it becomes a new higher-level organism in its own right. • The fact that evolution takes place, not only by mutational change, but also by groups turning into organisms, is one of the most profound developments in evolutionary thought.

  17. Major Evolutionary Transitions • The origin of life • The first cells • Nucleated cells • Multicellular organisms • Social insect colonies

  18. Major Evolutionary Transitions • The origin of life • The first cells • Nucleated cells • Multicellular organisms • Social insect colonies • Human biocultural evolution

  19. This comparison needs to be taken very seriously

  20. The Ancestral Human Social Environment • Small groups • Important shared objectives • Low-cost social control

  21. Modern Relevance • Elinor Ostrom • 2009 Nobel Prize in Economics • Showed that groups are capable of managing their own affairs, but only if certain conditions are met. • These conditions are highly consilient with evolutionary science and provide a practical how-to guide for most groups attempting to achieve common goals.

  22. How To Make Groups Work • Strong group identity and purpose • Proportional equivalence of costs and benefits • Consensus decision making • Monitoring • Graduated sanctions • Fast, fair conflict resolution • Local autonomy • Polycentric governance among groups

  23. Multilevel Selection and the Invisible Hand • Invisible hand metaphor states that the pursuit of self-interest robustly leads to a well-functioning society. • MLS states that adaptation at any given level requires a process of selection at that level and tends to be undermined by selection at lower levels. • Taking MLS alters the discourse about what’s required for society to function at a large scale (consult Tony Biglan for more)

  24. Evolutionary Mismatch • All evolutionary processes can only adapt organisms to their past environments. • Can go tragically wrong when the environment changes. • Only solution is to engineer the environment so that this doesn’t happen or to adapt to the new environment. • This has profound implications for understanding and improving the modern human condition.

  25. Evolutionary Mismatch • Diet • Exercise • Immune system dysfunction • Our built environment • Our social environment • Mechanisms of social learning and cultural transmission

  26. Mechanisms of social learning and cultural transmission • The concept of reinforcers from learning theory can be elaborated to include copying behaviors from others. • Examples: Conformance bias, Prestige bias. • Our instincts for cultural transmission evolved to facilitate the spread of the most adaptive behaviors in the ancestral social environment, but can seriously malfunction in modern environments, leading to the phenomenon of practices that work but don’t spread.

  27. The dysfunctional consequences of harsh environments • Many problems result from harsh environmental circumstances. • It’s easy to conclude that human development and psychological functioning are optimal in benign environment and become compromised in harsh environments, so that the problems are similar to a car that has broken down. • Evolutionary science offers another possibility…

  28. The dysfunctional consequences of harsh environments • Like all species, humans have experienced a range of environmental conditions, from benign to harsh, throughout their evolutionary history. • When the environment becomes harsh, people don’t fall apart—they exhibit adaptations to harsh environments. They are like a car that is functioning well for its given purpose. • Adaptations to harsh environments are oriented toward immediate survival and reproduction, often at the expense of societal and long-term individual welfare. • The need to address these problems is just as important as before, but recognizing their adaptive nature leads to new solutions.

  29. The Adaptive Calibration Model of Stress Responsivity • Highly sophisticated set of mechanisms operating throughout development, including before birth. • The key to healthy development and psychological functioning is to provide a safe, secure, and nurturing environment. • The importance of genetic variation in sensitivity to the environment.

  30. Sensitive to Environment High FUNCTIONING Insensitive to Environment Low Harsh Benign ENVIRONMENT

  31. Learning and symbolic thought • B.F. Skinner, evolutionary psychologist. • Clearly regarded learning as both a product and process of evolution. • His tradition, which is now represented by ACBS, deserves to be central to the evolutionary perspective.

  32. Learning and symbolic thought as different inheritance systems • Both count as inheritance systems that can result in the transmission of traits across generations. • The learning inheritance system exists in many species. • Symbolic thought more uniquely human.

  33. Where contextual psychology comes in • RFT is consilient with an emerging paradigm of human symbolic thought as an inheritance system with the same kind of combinatorial possibilities as genetic evolution and the immune system. --Nearly an infinite number of genotypes, antibodies, and “symbotypes” • Each is heritable and has phenotypic consequences that are subject to selection. • RFT provides mechanistic detail and real-world applications that are far ahead of the evolutionists.

  34. The Power of Narrative • Long appreciated by social constructivists who regarded their position as opposed to “genetic determinism.” • Now firmly a part of the evolutionary story. • Accounts for some of the “difficult-made-easy” success stories of ACT, which helps people create new “symbotypes” for themselves, which can sometimes be done in as little as a single hour. • Major ACBS theorists such as Hayes, Biglan, and Embry are now integrating ACT and RFT with modern evolutionary science.

  35. How to Make the Difficult Easy • Suppose you wanted to change the color of this lizard species . • How easy would it be if you didn’t change the background environment? • How easy would it be if you did change the background environment?

  36. How to Make the Difficult Easy • Changing the lives of at-risk adolescents is one of the most difficult problems of modern life. • High school programs for at-risk youth succeed only through heroic efforts, such as extended days, extended years, and so on. • Can this difficult problem be made easy by applying evolutionary insights?

  37. Regents Academy • Program for at-risk 9th and 10th graders in Binghamton, NY. • Explicitly tries to apply the following evolutionary principles: • The optimal human social environment, including the Ostrom design features. • A safe, secure, and nurturing environment conducive to “broaden and build” human development. • Principles of “selection by consequences” for both behavior management and academic learning.

  38. The distinction between design features and their implementation DESIGN FEATURES 1) Strong group identity and purpose 2) Proportional equivalence of costs and benefits 3) Consensus decision making 4) Monitoring 5) Graduated sanctions 6) Fast, fair conflict resolution 7) Local autonomy 8) Polycentric governance among groups IMPLEMENTATIONS • Self-contained program with own principle, teaching staff, and location (1,6,7). • T-shirts, eating together, a successful image, other group-building exercises (1). • Involving students in decision making and the formation and enforcement of norms as much as possible (3-6).

  39. The one-to-many relationship between design features and their implementations • In general, there are many ways to implement any particular design feature. • The best way is highly contingent on local circumstances, cannot be provided by a cookie-cutter approach. • It is therefore important to distinguish between design features, which are relatively invariant, and implementations, which are highly variable. • E.g., “You must have monitoring but how you accomplish it is up to you.”

  40. Randomized Control Trial • Students who entered the program must have failed at least three of their basic classes during the previous year. • Randomly divided into Regents Academy (RA) and comparison group that experienced the normal high school routine. • Outcome variables: Quarterly grades State-mandated exams Developmental assets (non-academic)

  41. Class grades

  42. State Mandated Exams

  43. Too Good to be True? • Seems like a miracle, compared to previous efforts. • Previous efforts were like trying to change the color of the lizard species without changing the environmental background. • Group-level equivalent of the “too good to be true” results achieved at the individual level with ACT.

  44. What can a society such as ACBS do to accelerate the science of intentional change? 2007: Tony Biglan reads Darwin’s Cathedral by chance. Get’s excited. Invites me to SPR meeting. I learn about his domain. I get excited. 2009: Tony, Dennis, Steve and I start interacting in a number of contexts. We’re all excited. 2011: Here we are at the ACBS annual meeting. Are you excited?

  45. What can a society such as ACBS do to accelerate the science of intentional change? 2007: Tony Biglan reads Darwin’s Cathedral by chance. Get’s excited. Invites me to SPR meeting. I learn about his domain. I get excited. 2009: Tony, Dennis, Steve and myself start interacting in a number of contexts. We’re all excited. 2011: Here we are at the ACBS annual meeting. Are you excited? THIS ISN’T FAST ENOUGH!

  46. The Need to Operate in Catalytic Mode • Catalysis: A substance, usually used in small amounts relative to the reactants, that modifies and increases the rate of a reaction without being consumed in the process. Cultural processes can be catalyzed, no less than chemical processes

  47. The role of programs and societies for operating in catalytic mode • EvoS (higher education) • The Evolution Institute (public policy) • The Binghamton Neighborhood Project (community-based research)

  48. The role of programs and societies for operating in catalytic mode • I invite a collaboration with ACBS to make a science of intentional change a reality sooner rather than later.

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