The fourth chapter of the Selfish Gene talks about animals, evolution and how survival has lead the strong to rule the earth and the weak to parish. At first the author explains the 'gene machine' which is any living organism. Dawkin gives a small lecture on how the organism we know today have evolved from a certain branch and have been divided into sub-branches throughout history. As the reader advances, it is clear (given by the author) that the subject that is going to exposed is about behaviour and how it affects living organisms. "Animals became active go-getting gene vehicles: gene machines. The characteristic of behaviour, as biologists use the term, is that it is fast. Plants move, but very slowly. When seen in highly speeded-up film, climbing plants look like active animals. But most plant movement is really irreversible growth. Animals, on the other hand, have evolved ways of moving hundreds of thousands of times faster. Moreover, the movements they make are reversible, and repeatable an indefinite number of times. (The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkin, Ch. 4, pg. 47)" Throughout this chapter (as usual), Richard Dawkin uses an engine to explain how the body functions. For example when explaining how the muscles in a body work he compares them to valves in an engine and how they are timed to open and close at a specific moment which makes their functioning even more complex. One of the most interesting parts of the chapter is when Dawkin talks about how the 'behaviour gene' affects our survival probabilities. For example hygiene is one of the fundamental characteristics of this gene, because without hygiene diseases are just the beginning, instead if hygiene does exist their is a probability that this diseases will not appear, thus incrementing our possibilities of survival.
The connection I decided to make was to an experiment I say in a movie about fear and power. This test was done by Stanford University and it consisted of twenty students (ten as officers and the other ten as inmates) living together and taking on their roles during two weeks. The main idea of this experiment was to see if the feeling of authority could take control of the students and make them do unthinkable acts. Throughout the whole project no teacher or student could interact with those in the test and if something went really wrong only then and there could something be done. The policemen where ten 'nerds' and the inmates where ten guys from the American football team. At the end of the first week the experiment had to be terminated because the policemen where taking advantage of their power and had started to mistreat the inmates and in a certain case had almost beaten a student to death. This project showed a certain superiority of behaviour from the policemen and this is why I decided to use it as my connection. During the test survival of the fittest was show at it's best because the policemen when hungry would use their 'superior' power to take food from the inmates by intimidating them. "Therefore, in order for a behaviour pattern -altruistic or selfish- to evolve, it is necessary that a gene 'for' that behaviour should survive in the gene pool more successfully than a rival gene or allele 'for' some different behaviour. (The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkin, Ch. 4, pg. 60)"
Up until know no questions have been answered, but I have a wide variety of uncertainties I would like them to be answered along the book, because the last questions were not really answered.
- Does the selfish gene have to be in every organism?
- Do we create the selfish gene or are we born with it?
- How can the behaviour gene affect altruism, if we are born selfish?
- Does our behaviour depend on our parents genes?
- Selfishness and behaviour go hand by hand, but can they both inherit or do you acquire them in your life?