Thursday, October 02, 2025

Jane Goodall, 1934-2025: The Natural History, Cultural History, and Biographical History of Primate Politics



Jane Goodall has died at the age of 91.

I have written many posts about her work, which began in 1960 when she arrived at the Gombe Stream Preserve to observe the chimpanzee society there.  The New York Times has a good obituary.

As a high school kid, I had been fascinated--like millions of people around the world--by the National Geographic television documentaries on her work.  Then, in 1986, I was in the Hyde Park neighborhood around the University of Chicago; and I noticed her new book--The Chimpanzees of Gombe--in the display window of the 57th Street Bookstore.  When I read the book, I decided that students of political science--like myself--should read this book because it was about the political history of the chimpanzees at Gombe, and it showed the three levels of political history: the natural history of the species, the cultural history of this political community, and the biographical history of the individuals in that community.  That became a fundamental theme of my attempt to formulate a biopolitical science.

Her book also showed the evolutionary history of warfare because she showed how the chimpanzees at Gombe divided into separate communities that went to war with one another, with one community conquering and destroying the other.  I later saw how people that had worked with Goodall at Gombe--like Richard Wrangham--developed this idea to explain the evolution of human warfare.

In my posts on Trump's chimpanzee politics, I have agreed with Goodall's observation that she saw in Trump "the same sort of behavior as a male chimpanzee will show when he is competing for dominance with another.  They're upright, they swagger, they project themselves as really more large and aggressive than they may actually be in order to intimidate their rivals."

The same year that I read The Chimpanzees of Gombe--1986--I attended the "Understanding Chimpanzees" international conference at the Chicago Academy of Sciences, where Goodall was the keynote speaker and almost all of the major chimpanzee researchers gathered.  She began her speech by shouting out a chimpanzee pant-hoot greeting sound, with many in the audience responding with their own chimpanzee pant-hoots.  It was chilling.

I happened to be in an elevator with Goodall, but I was too shy to speak to her.  If I had spoken to her, I surely would have said something about how much she had taught me about chimpanzee political science.

Those of us who have learned from her will remember her.

Sunday, September 28, 2025

The Political History of Beethoven's 9th Symphony: Odes to Joy and Freedom


Leonard Bernstein Conducts Beethoven's Ninth Symphony on Christmas Day 1989 in Berlin.  The "Ode to Freedom" Movement Begins 57 Minutes into the Performance.


Ever since its premiere in 1824, Beethoven's 9th Symphony has deeply moved many millions of listeners.  It is widely considered one of the best symphonies ever composed, and some would say it is the greatest.  Can the social bonding theory of music explain the powerful appeal of this symphony?

Now, as I have indicated, no one claims that social bonding is the only function of music. Even if social bonding was the original evolutionary function of music, once music has emerged, it can serve many different functions for different people in different circumstances.  But still if this theory is correct, we should expect that music often does have a social bonding effect for many people.  And that does seem to be true for Beethoven's 9th.  After all, the "Ode to Joy" explicitly invokes the brotherhood of all humanity--a universal social bonding.  Moreover, Beethoven's 9th has a long political history of being used as a musical anthem by which people can mark their membership in a national or multinational community.  Esteban Buch has covered this history in his book Beethoven's Ninth: A Political History (2003). 


ANTHEMS AS MARKERS FOR SOCIAL MEMBERSHIP

That Beethoven's music can serve as a national or even international anthem that binds people together was asserted by Marcelo Lehninger in his conducting of the performance I heard in Grand Rapids.  He began by speaking to the audience.  He said that we needed to hear this music because "in these divisive times," we "need the message of brotherhood."  

He then began the concert by conducting the orchestra in playing the Star-Spangled Banner, which is customary for the opening night of a new concert season.  In 1931, the U. S. Congress passed a resolution to recognize this as the official national anthem for the United States.  Previously, My Country 'Tis of Thee and America the Beautiful had been two other informally accepted national anthems, and they are still often sung as if they were the national anthem.  This national anthem is a hymn (sacred or profane) sung by a chorus of people celebrating the unity of America.  Even when there's a solo singer, many in the audience will sing along.  

The Francis Scott Key's lyrics for the Star-Spangled Banner were inspired in 1814 by his seeing the U.S. flag flying triumphantly over Fort McHenry after a night of bombardment by the British Royal Navy in the Battle of Baltimore in the War of 1812, which was a sign that the British had failed to destroy the fort.  So here the flag as a symbol of victory in battle represents America.

My Country 'Tis of Thee (or America) has the same melody as God Save the King, the British national anthem, but for the American song, the only king is God himself ("Great God, our king").  And this American anthem celebrates America as the land of liberty or freedom:

My country, 'tis of thee,
sweet land of liberty,
of thee I sing:
land where my fathers died,
land of the pilgrims' pride,
from every mountainside
let freedom ring!

So this anthem for America could be called An Ode to Freedom.

America the Beautiful is also sung as if it were the national anthem.

O beautiful for spacious skies,
For amber waves of grain,
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain!
America! America!
God shed His grace on thee
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea!

Here there are three interconnected themes for unifying America into one people: the natural beauty of the American countryside, God's grace for America, and the brotherhood of Americans within the borders of America ("from sea to shining sea"). 

Similarly, in the fourth movement of the 9th Symphony, the chorus of mankind celebrates its unity--proclaiming "All men will become brothers."  But here the brotherhood is universal.  

We have to wonder: Can music really do that?  Can music make us believe in the myth of a nation--or even the whole world--speaking with a single choral voice?  And if so, what is the unifying theme through which millions or even billions of people can be one people?  If "Joy" is the theme, does that have any clear meaning?  Is "Freedom" a better theme with a clearer meaning?  Or is the intellectual meaning of the lyrics unimportant as long as the music creates an emotional experience of social bonding?  To have that emotional experience must the music have the sacred aura of a hymn that requires religious belief?  Or can we enjoy the religious feelings of a patriotic hymn without believing any religious doctrines?

I have argued that a natural desire for social membership in an imagined community is part of our evolved human nature.  It's an imagined community because it's a symbolic niche construction of our minds that we create by consenting to it, by agreeing to its reality.  Singing an anthem is one way that we imagine ourselves as belonging to such a community.  It's like a password or shibboleth.

In composing his 9th Symphony, Beethoven was building on a tradition that began in the 18th century.  George Frederic Handel composed anthems for chorus and orchestra for the Hanoverian kings of England.  The most memorable one--Zadok the Priest for the coronation of George II in 1727--used a revised biblical verse from the First Kings (1:39-40) about the coronation of Solomon:

Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anointed Solomon king.
And all the people rejoiced and said:
God save the King! Long live the King! God save the King!
May the King live for ever. Amen. Hallelujah.

The Priest and the Prophet anoint the King.  And then the people collectively rejoice and pray for the King.

But the first true national anthem for the British became popular in 1745--God Save the King--when it was sung in support of George II after his defeat at the Battle of Prestonpans by the army of Charles Edward Stuart, the grandson of King James II and the Jacobite claimant to the British throne.  It was a prayer from the people asking God to give the King victory over Charles.  

God save our gracious King!
Long live our noble King!
God save the King!
Send him victorious,
Happy and glorious,
Long to reign over us,
God save the King!

O Lord our God arise
Scatter his enemies
And make them fall
Confound their politics
Frustrate their knavish tricks
On thee our hopes we fix
God save us all

Thy choicest gifts in store,
On him be pleased to pour;
Long may he reign.
May he defend our laws,
And ever give us cause,
To sing with heart and voice,
God save the King!

God Save the King begins with the same biblical phrase as Zadok the Priest, but now it is a prayer by "us" the people, asking God for the victory and safety of "our" King.  The people ask for divine protection in the face of a political and military threat not only to the King but to the whole community.  Instead of the Stuart doctrine of divine right, the people suggest a contract between ruler and ruled: the people will be loyal to him only as long as he defends "our laws" and "ever give us cause, with heart and voice to sing, God save the King."

The God of Battles answered the people's prayer by giving George II victory over the Jacobites in the Battle of Culloden in 1746, which ended the Jacobite rising of 1745.  This is what Locke called the "Appeal to Heaven," in which divine providence is decided on the battlefield.

Two years ago, I wrote about the importance of such choral hymns for the coronation of King Charles III and how Charles transformed the Coronation Liturgy into a Lockean liberal proclamation of individual liberty, religious toleration, and popular consent to government, which was open not only to people of all faiths but also to atheists.


BEETHOVEN'S PATRIOTIC MUSIC

In 1803, Beethoven composed piano variations on God Save the King and Rule Britannia.  In 1813, he arranged God Save the King for soloist and unison chorus with an instrumental trio.  In his notebook, he wrote: "I must give the English some notion of the blessing they have in their God Save the King (Buch, 73).  This was part of Beethoven's patriotic action in supporting the English and their allies who were fighting against Napoleon's invading armies.  

The Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815) became one of the deadliest series of wars in human history--with a death toll of over 4 million human beings.  In 1803, Beethoven began work on a symphony that would eventually become the Eroica symphony, but in 1803 he called it Bonaparte, because he saw Napoleon as a heroic leader and liberator who was spreading the humanistic ideals of the Enlightenment.  But then, on December 2, 1804, Napoleon entered the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris, and in the presence of Pope Pius VII, Napoleon crowned himself Emperor of France by placing the Charlemagne Crown on his head.

When Beethoven heard this news, he complained to his student Ferdinand Ries: "So he too is nothing more than an ordinary man!  Now he also will trample all human rights underfoot, and only pander to his own ambition.  He will place himself above everyone else and become a tyrant!"  He then took up the title page of the symphony, ripped it in two, and threw it to the floor (Swafford, 2014, 384).

That Beethoven was right about Napoleon being a tyrant who would suppress all human rights soon became clear.  A few months after Napoleon's crowning himself Emperor, the French government issued an "Imperial Catechism" and directed the Church to teach this new catechism, which included these responses:

Q.  Why are we obligated to all of these duties to our Emperor?

A.  First, because God, who created empires and distributes them according to His will, in heaping on our Emperor gifts, both in peace and war, has established him as our sovereign and rendered him the minister of His power and image on earth.  To honor and serve our Emperor is thus to honor and serve God himself.

Q.  What should one think of those who fail in their duty to the Emperor?

A.  According to the Apostle Saint Paul, they would be resisting the order established by God Himself, and would render themselves worthy of eternal damnation.

Q.  What is forbidden to us by the Fourth Commandment?

A.  We are forbidden to be disobedient to our superiors, to injure them, or to speak ill of them (Swafford, 2014, 385-86).

In his biography of Beethoven, Jan Swafford has shown that Beethoven was a man of the eighteenth-century European Enlightenment who looked forward to a world ruled by reason, science, and the rights of man, which explains why he was so disgusted with Napoleon's tyrannical denial of freedom and human rights.  When Immanuel Kant asked the question "What Is Enlightenment?" he answered: Saper aude!  Dare to know!  "Have the courage to use your own understanding! is thus the motto of Enlightenment."  Similarly, Beethoven wrote: "Only art and science can raise men to the level of gods."  When one of his colleagues wrote on a score, "Finished with the help of God," Beethoven wrote under it, "O Man, help yourself!"  Beethoven also resolved: "To do good wherever we can, to love liberty above all things, and never to deny truth though it be at the throne itself." Swafford observed that while Beethoven "never quite spelled out those ideals in words," those Enlightenment ideals "would be found in his music, and in the lyrics he chose to embody in music--above all, An die Freude" (Swafford, 2014, 47-50, 54, 129, 306, 853).

This explains why Beethoven composed music in 1813 celebrating the victory of the Duke of Wellington leading allied troops against Napoleon's army on June 21, 1813, near the Spanish village of Victoria.  A few months later, Beethoven composed Wellington's Victory, or The Battle of Vittoria--often referred to as the "Battle Symphony."

This also explains why Beethoven became a composer of official state music for the Congress of Vienna (1814-1815), which was a series of international diplomatic meetings in Vienna to develop a plan for restoring peace and order to Europe after the fall of Napoleon.  The Congress was chaired by Austrian statesman Klemens von Metternich, who called the Congress's plan "The Concert of Europe."  Friedrich von Gentz, the Congress's secretary described the purpose of the plan: "By their geographic situation, through their customs, their laws, their needs, their way of life and their culture, the states of this continent, taken as a whole, constitute a great political federation that has--and rightly--been called the European Republic."  This echoed Immanuel Kant's proposal for a federation of European states that would enforce international peace and human rights (Buch, 2003, 76).

In 1814, Beethoven premiered his opera Fidelio, a revised version of Leonore, which had originally appeared in 1805.  Fidelio became so popular in Vienna that it had multiple performance, including a performance before an audience of political and diplomatic dignitaries in Vienna for the Congress.

In the opera, Fidelio is actually Lenore, a noblewoman disguised as a boy who plots to free her husband Florestan from prison where he is being held as a political prisoner and a victim of political tyranny.  The opera becomes a hymn to freedom and liberation from tyranny.  

After Leonore persuades a prison guard to allow the prisoners to walk in the courtyard for a few moments, the prisoners enjoy the open air and sunlight and talk about their hope that they will someday go free.  The chorus of prisoners sing about freedom (Freiheit), shouting : "O freedom, freedom, will you return?"

Later, we see Florestan alone in a dark dungeon.  He murmurs about his cruel fortune.  But then he has an ecstatic vision of Leonore as an angel who leads him to freedom.  Zur Freiheit!--"To Freedom!"--he cries over and over in spine-chilling high notes.

When Leonore finally succeeds in freeing Florestan, the two of them sing beautiful arias about the "inexpressible joy" (O namenlose Freude) they feel in being reunited as husband and wife.  In celebrating the happiness or joy that comes from conjugal love, the chorus sings a line from Schiller's Ode to Joy: "Happy he whom Heaven has granted/To be loved by such a wife!"

Fidelio thus suggests that freedom is the precondition of joy because we must be free to pursue joy.

At the Congress of Vienna, Fidelio was generally seen as a celebration of the defeat of the Napoleonic armies and as an allegory for a Europe liberated from tyrannical conquest.

Beethoven encouraged this interpretation of his music.  During the early months of the Congress, he composed The Glorious Moment, a cantata for soloists, chorus, and orchestra that was a musical representation of this European Moment that was announced in the opening statement:

Europe is risen!  Europe is risen!

And the times in their headlong rush,

The chorus of peoples and former centuries,

Look on in amazement!

This European Moment was universalized in the repeated phrase: "In the peaceful union of brothers/Liberated mankind itself embraces!"  Thus, the "chorus of peoples" invokes the freedom and brotherhood of mankind in the glorious European moment.

Here Beethoven's political music representing the Enlightenment vision of international peace, liberty, and brotherhood anticipated what he would do in 1824 in the 9th Symphony's Ode to Joy.


THE NINTH SYMPHONY

In his program notes for the GRSO's performance of the 9th Symphony, John Varineau suggests that "the first three movements can be heard as a search for that ultimate expression signifying the fellowship of humanity that we hear in the fourth."  He then explains:

The last movement begins in chaos with the woodwinds and brass.  The cellos and basses, imitating an operatic baritone, demand to know what is going on.  The orchestra tentatively suggests the first movement.  No!  Then the second.  No!  The third?  No!  The cello and basses then suggest the answer with the famous tune.

That famous tune is taken mostly from Friedrich Schiller's poem Ode to Joy, except for the first few lines added by Beethoven (indicated by italics).  Here's the English translation: 

O friends, not these sounds!
Let us sing more cheerful songs,
More songs full of joy!
Joy!
Joy!


(1)  Joy, beautiful spark of divinity,
Daughter from Elysium,
Fire-inspired we tread
Within thy sanctuary.
Thy magic power re-unites
All that custom has divided,
All men become brothers,
Under the sway of thy gentle wings.

(2)  Whoever has been lucky enough
to become a friend to a friend,
Or has won
A true and loving wife,
All who can call at least one soul theirs,
Join our song of praise;
But those who cannot must creep tearfully
Away from our circle.

(3)  All creatures drinks in joy
At nature's breast.
Good and Evil 
Alike taste of her gift;
She gave us kisses and the fruit of the vine,
A true friend even in death.
Even the worm can feel sexual desire,
And the cherub stands before God!

(4)  Gladly, like the heavenly bodies
Which He sent on their courses
Through the splendor of the firmament;
Thus, brothers, you should run your race,
Like a hero going to victory!

(5)  You millions, I embrace you.
This kiss is for all the world!
Brothers, above the starry canopy
There must dwell a loving Father.
Do you bow before him, you millions?
World, do you sense your creator?
Seek Him above the canopy of stars;
Above the stars must He dwell. 

When the baritone soloist first shouted "Oh friends, not these sounds!", that was the first time that a singing voice had entered a symphony.  The search for "more joyful sounds" requires a combination of instrumental and vocal music--a choral symphony.

The baritone identifies all the members of the orchestra and the singers as his friends.  And throughout the Ode, "friends" (Freunde) and "joy" (Freude) are linked, which is underscored in German by the similarity of the two German words.  Originally, Schiller wrote his Ode as a tribute to his close friend Christian Gottfried Korner. 

But then the poem expands to include all forms of love or social bonding, including not only friendship but also conjugal love, brotherly love, love of God ("the cherub stands before God"), and God's love for His creatures ("a loving Father").  Joy, it seems, is found in love.  And the most joyful sounds are the music of love.

Joy is first identified as the "beautiful spark of divinity, / Daughter from Elysium," the afterlife in Greek mythology.  But then this image of joy as a supernatural infusion is followed in the third stanza with the claim that joy comes from natural longings.  "Every creature drinks in joy at nature's breast," and even the worm feels something like joy in his sexual desire.

How can the pursuit of joy be both natural and supernatural?  Could it be a natural desire for happiness that can never be fully satisfied in this life because it's really a desire for the supernatural happiness of eternal bliss with God in Heaven? 

That was C. S. Lewis's primary argument for the existence of God: 
the desire for Joy points to God as the supernatural object that will satisfy that desire.  We all desire whatever we think will make us fully happy or joyful.  But then when we possess the object of our desire, we discover that it does not give us Joy.  Lewis wrote: "A baby feels hunger; well, there is such a thing as food.  A duckling wants to swim, water exists to do it.  So if I find within myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most likely explanation is that I was made for another world."

"I am not asking anyone to accept Christianity if his best reasoning tells him that the weight of the evidence is against it."  That was C. S. Lewis's claim in Mere Christianity that he had rational arguments for showing how the weight of the evidence supported Christianity.  In the Reason/Revelation debate, Lewis thought that Reason could prove, or at least render probable, the truth of Christian Revelation.  

I have responded to Lewis by arguing that while there is an evolved natural desire for religious transcendence, or for what Lewis calls "Joy," the existence of this desire provides no evidence for the real existence of the supernatural object--God--that would satisfy this desire.  In the Reason/Revelation debate, neither side can conclusively refute the other.  But the debate must continue because this is the deepest debate that human beings can have--the debate over whether the highest good for human beings is earthly happiness or Joy in the natural world that we can experience, or whether that highest good can only be found in the eternal happiness or Joy of Heaven.

The "Ode to Joy" is not clearly on one side or the other in this debate.  The last stanza does lean towards Revelation's vision of heavenly happiness: "Do you bow down before Him, you millions?/Do you sense your Creator, O world?/Seek Him above the canopy of stars!/He must dwell beyond the stars."  And yet this could also be intimating my position--that while many people will feel a natural desire for religious Joy in Heaven with God, the natural reality of this desire does not prove the supernatural reality of the Heavenly Joy that is sought.  Notice that the Ode speaks of people seeking God, but it does not say that they will surely find what they seek.

If Fidelio is correct in suggesting that freedom is the precondition of joy because we need to be free to pursue joy, that should apply here.  Only in a free society are we free to openly debate Reason and Revelation in arguing about whether our natural desire for happiness or joy can be satisfied in this life, or whether it points to a Heavenly Joy.  As I have indicated in my posts on Lewis, he was free to debate these issues in the Oxford Socratic Club, and other venues, where religious believers debated atheists and agnostics, because he lived in a modern liberal society that secured freedom of thought and speech.  In an illiberal closed society, this would not have been possible.  As I have indicated, Lewis understood this, and  that's why he was a Lockean liberal who rejected theocracy as a form of tyranny, who believed that government should not have the power to legally enforce Christian orthodoxy, and who thought the only proper aim of government was to secure individual liberty from legal interference except when necessary to prevent harm to others.


THE POLITICAL RECEPTION OF THE ODE TO JOY

The many attempts to adopt Beethoven's Ode to Joy as an anthem for a political community or political ideology are often confusing because of their implausible appropriations of the music.  For example, as planned by Joseph Goebbel, Hitler's birthday in 1937 was celebrated with a performance of the Ninth Symphony conducted by Wilhelm Furtwangler with the Berlin Philharmonic.  This was repeated in 1942.  Some of the Nazi cultural leaders said that Beethoven and Wagner were the two poles of truly German music that had been united in the personality of Adolf Hitler.  But in 1938, Hanns Eisler, a famous German-Austrian composer and a communist anti-Nazi, ridiculed the idea that the Ninth Symphony was pro-Nazi: "All men become brothers, with the exception of all the peoples whose lands we want to annex, with the exception of the Jews, the Blacks, and a great many others to boot" (Buch, 2003, 205-209).

The same absurd adoption of the Ode to Joy as an anthem for a racist regime occurred in 1974 when Ian Smith's white supremacist government in Rhodesia adopted the Ode to Joy as a national anthem to replace God Save the Queen.  A music critic for the Rhodesian Herald wrote that he was "stupefied" by the "plagiarism" for "local nationalistic ends" of music with "supra-national associations" and "indissolubly linked with ideas on the brotherhood of mankind" (Buch, 2003, 243-47).

A more credible appropriation of the Ode to Joy as a political anthem occurred in 1972 when a purely instrumental version of the opening melody of the Ode to Joy was adopted by the Council of Europe as the anthem of Europe.  In 1985, it was adopted by the European Union.


                                                      Anthem of the European Union


It's hard to imagine that an instrumental Ode to Joy without the singing can ever have the power of the original.  After all, Beethoven's baritone soloist was clear that a "more joyful sound" would have to be a song rather than a purely instrumental melody.  Moreover, it's not clear that this music has the emotional power to bind the European nations into one multinational community.

If the people of Europe were to sing an anthem that would express their membership in the European Community, what would be the words for that song?  Generally, national anthems tell stories about the heroic historical events that have made the nation great.  What heroic story could a European anthem tell?  Could the lyrics of the Ode to Joy--perhaps slightly altered--tell that European story?

One answer to those questions came on Christmas Day in 1989 in Berlin when Leonard Bernstein conducted a performance of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony that was broadcast by satellite transmission to countries around the world.  Bernstein made one change in the Ode to Joy: he replaced Freude with Freiheit.  In a program note for the concert, he wrote:

There is apparently conjecture that Schiller may have produced a second sketch of his poem, Ode to Joy, which carried the title Ode to Freedom. Most researchers today are of the opinion, however, that this rumor is a fraud originated by Friedrich Ludwig Jahn.  Whether true or not, I believe that this is a heaven-sent moment when we should sing the word "Freedom" wherever the score reads "Joy."  If there ever were a historical moment in which one can neglect the theoretical discussions of academics in the name of human freedom, this is it.  And I believe that Beethoven would have given us his blessing!  Let freedom live!" (Buch, 2003, 261-62).

The "historical moment" was the first year of the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the fall of communism that began with mass protests against communist rule across Eastern Europe.  In November of 1988, Estonia became the first Soviet Republic to declare its independence from Moscow.  Others followed.  On November 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall fell.  It had been built in 1961 to keep people in communist East Berlin from running away to freedom in West Berlin.  Once the Berlin Wall came down, it became clear that East and West Germany would eventually be reunified under the rule of a liberal democratic government.

Thus, in the fall of 1989, it seemed that the Cold War was coming to an end, and that the "Free World" had defeated communism.  In the journal The National Interest, Francis Fukuyama proclaimed "The End of History": history as the human search for the fully satisfying social order had come to an end, he argued, because most people in the world today agree in principle that liberal democracy is the best social order because it secures the freedom that allows human beings to pursue their happiness.  Fukuyama's article provoked an international debate over whether his argument was correct.

Apparently, Bernstein agreed with Fukuyama that 1989 was the "historical moment" for celebrating the triumph of freedom.  And if I am right about the message of Fidelio, Bernstein was justified in thinking that Beethoven would have given his blessing to turning the Ode to Joy into an Ode to Freedom because freedom is the precondition for joy.

So we see that music really can bind human beings into a social order--perhaps even a global social order--particularly when the theme of that music is the universal human longing for freedom.


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Prum, Richard O.  2017.  The Evolution of Beauty: How Darwin's Forgotten Theory of Mate Choice Shapes the Animal World--and Us.  New York: Doubleday.

Sachs, Matthew E., Robert J. Ellis, Gottfried Schlaug, and Psyche Loui.  2016.  "Brain Connectivity Reflects Human Aesthetic Responses to Music."  Social, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience, 884-891, doi: 10.1093/scan/nsw009.

Sacks, Oliver.  2007.  Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain.  New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

Thakur, Donovon, Marilee a. Martens, David S. Smith, and Ed Roth.  2018.  "Williams Syndrome and Music: A Systematic Integrative Review."  Frontieres in Psychology 9:2203.  doi: 109.3389/fpsyg.2018. 02203.

Savage, Patrick E., Psyche Loui, Bronwyn Tarr, Adena Schachner, Luke Glowacki, Steven Mithen, and W. Tecunseh Fitch.  2021. "Music as a Coevolved System for Social Bonding." Behavioral and Brain Sciences 44, e59: 1-22.  doi:10.1017/S0140525X20000333.

Savage, Patrick E., S. Brown, E. Sakai, and T. E. Currie.  2015.  "Statistical Universals Reveal the Structures and Functions of Human Music."  Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 112 (29), 8987-8992.

Swafford, Jan.  2014.  Beethoven: Anguish and Triumph.  Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.





Monday, September 22, 2025

The Evolution of the Natural Desire for Music

NATURAL DESIRES

In previous posts, I have argued that if the good is the desirable, then human ethics is natural insofar as it satisfies the natural human desires that naturally win social approval as useful or agreeable to oneself or to others.  The satisfaction of these natural desires constitutes a natural standard for judging social life as either fulfilling or frustrating human nature, although prudence is required in judging what is best for particular people in particular social circumstances.  

By this standard, the modern bourgeois liberal regime can be recognized as the best regime so far in human history, because no other regime has satisfied those natural desires so well for so many people.  Or, to put it another way, the liberal regime has been more successful than any other regime so far in securing for human beings their equal liberty for the pursuit of happiness.

In Darwinian Natural Right and Darwinian Conservatism, I have argued that there are at least twenty natural desires: human beings generally desire (1) a complete life, (2) parental care, (3) sexual identify, (4) sexual mating, (5) familial bonding, (6) friendship, (7) social ranking, (8) justice as reciprocity, (9) political rule, (10) war, (11) health, (12) beauty, (13) property, (14) speech, (15) practical habituation, (16) practical reasoning, (17) practical arts, (18) aesthetic pleasure, (19) religious transcendence, and (20) intellectual understanding.

I have argued that these twenty natural desires are universally found in all human societies, that they have evolved by natural selection over millions of years of human evolutionary history to become components of the species-specific nature of human beings, that they are rooted in the neurophysiological mechanisms of the brain, that they direct and limit the social variability of human beings as adapted to diverse ecological circumstances, and that different individuals with different temperaments and talents will rank these desires differently.  

Lockean liberal individualism recognizes that there is no single summum bonum or highest good for all human beings because there is no one right way to rank those natural desires.  But each individual will have a summum bonum--a ranking of those natural desires with one being the highest--depending on the propensities and capacities of each individual. A Socrates will rank intellectual understanding as the highest good.  A Saint Augustine will rank religious transcendence as the highest.  An Abraham Lincoln will rank political rule as the highest.  A General George Patton will rank war as the highest.

There is evidence that this pattern of twenty desires developed in the Late Pleistocene environment of our hunting-gathering ancestors, from about 130,000 years ago up to the invention of agriculture about 11,000 years ago.  This was the evolutionary environment in which human nature was shaped by natural selection.  This is what John Locke called "the state of nature."  The historical record of human civilization since the development of agriculture shows human beings as moved by these twenty desires.

I am now prepared to include the natural desire for music as one of the twenty natural desires--perhaps as belonging to aesthetic pleasure.  I was recently prompted to think more about this when I attended the Grand Rapids Symphony Orchestra's performance of Ludwig van Beethoven's Ninth Symphony or Choral Symphony--indeed, it was the first symphony to include choral singing--which is famous for its "Ode to Joy" chorus in the last movement.


THE MYSTERY OF MUSIC

For Charles Darwin, in The Descent of Man (1871), music was a mystery:

As neither the enjoyment nor the capacity of producing musical notes are faculties of the least use to man in reference to his daily habits of life, they must be ranked amongst the most mysterious with which he is endowed.  They are present, though in a very rude condition, in men of all races, even the most savage; but so different is the taste of the sever races, that our music give no pleasure to savages, and their music is to us in most cases hideous and unmeaning (2004, 636).

Darwin observed that while the nations of Western Europe were similar in their music, there were cultural differences in the way they interpreted music.  And in the eastern regions of the world, there were very different languages of music.

He saw evidence that our prehistoric human ancestors had music.  Prehistoric flutes made out of the bones and horns of reindeer found in caves together with flint tools was evidence of instrumental music.  The arts of singing and dancing also seemed to be very ancient and practiced today by all human races.  Poetry could be included as an ancient form of music because it arose from singing.

Darwin also saw that the anthropomorphous monkeys and apes use their vocal organs to express strong emotions through musical tones and rhythm--particularly during the season of courtship, when males are trying to attract females for mating and to repulse their male rivals.  For Darwin, this was to be explained as evolving by sexual selection rather than natural selection. 

From all of this evidence, Darwin inferred that "musical notes and rhythm were first acquired by the male or female progenitors of mankind for the sake of charming the opposite sex," and that "musical sounds afforded one of the bases for the development of language."  He noted, however, that Herbert Spencer had come to the opposite conclusion--"that the cadences used in emotional speech afford the foundation from which music has been developed" (2004, 638-39).

Darwin thus raised, either explicitly or implicitly, almost all the questions about the evolution of music that evolutionary scientists have debated over the past 150 years.  Is music a single propensity or capacity?  Or does music have many different components, such as rhythm, melody, and harmony, that produce many different forms of music--song, instrumental music, dance, and poetry?  

Is music a universal human instinct?  Or does the cultural diversity of music show that it is not a human universal?  

Did music evolve by natural selection or sexual selection?  Or did it arise only as a by-product of other traits that were selected for--such as language?  

Is music unique to human beings?  Or can we find at least some of the rudimentary components of music in other animals?

Is there any fossil record of prehistoric human music?

If music did arise through some process of evolutionary selection, what was it selected for?  What is its ultimate function?  Or does it potentially serve many different functions?

What is the evolutionary relation between music and language?  Did one come before the other?

Can we identify the neurobiological mechanism for music--perhaps a "music module" in the brain?  Or does music arise from many interconnected networks in the brain?

Although there has been no final resolution of the debates over these questions, it is now possible to plausibly argue for some tentative answers.


EVOLUTIONARY THEORIES OF MUSIC

We should begin by distinguishing music and musicality, which allows us to see that while musicality is culturally universal, music is culturally variable (Honing 2018; Fitch 2018).  Musicality includes components such as melodic, rhythmic, and harmonic cognition; and it is that part of our biological nature that gives human beings in all cultures the propensity and the capacity to generate and enjoy all forms of music.  But music in all its variety is culturally constructed through the biological power of human musicality.  Music then is like language in its biological universality and cultural diversity.  All human beings normally have a biological instinct for learning and using a language.  But different human beings will learn different languages in different cultures.

There are at least four explanations for how musicality is grounded in human biology.  The first is Darwin's theory of sexual selection in which music evolved as a way of attracting sexual mates and thus increasing reproductive success (Miller 2000; Prum 2017).  This theory often includes Darwin's idea that the neural structures that evolved for musicality were precursors of both music and language.

Another theory is that music originated in the maternal music-like vocalizations to infants, including soothing lullabies, and the dance-like maternal movements with infants that promote parent-infant bonding and the well-being of infants (Dissanayake, 2008, 2021).

A third theory is that music evolved to promote and maintain group cohesion.  Among prehistoric human ancestors, group singing and dancing would have glued people together in large groups (Dunbar, 2010, 2012).

These three theories are adaptationist explanations that see music as an evolutionary adaptation by natural or sexual selection.  But a fourth theory explains the origin of music not as originally an evolutionary adaptation but as an evolutionary by-product of other skills that were adaptive.  Music could have been originally a human invention--like the control of fire and the invention of cooking--that became universal in human societies because it was advantageous for human life, and then through gene-culture coevolution, this could have led to neurophysiological changes that deepened the grounding of music in human biology (Patel, 2010, 2018).


Music as Social Bonding

There is still another theory, however, that can embrace all four of these theories.  Patrick Savage and his colleagues (2021) have argued for the hypothesis that human musicality is a coevolved system for social bonding.  Actually, this can be seen as an expanded version of the "group cohesion" theory.  Let's define the three key terms in this statement

First, as already indicated, musicality denotes the biological capacities of all human beings that allow us to perceive and produce music, while the word "music" denotes the diverse musical systems produced by different cultures.

Second, social bonding refers to all kinds of affiliative connections that bind two or more people into a group.  Such social bonding would have enhanced the survival and reproduction of our prehistoric human ancestors by enhancing protection from predators, cooperative child-rearing, collaborative foraging and hunting, and the expansion and defense of territories (Dunbar, 2012b; Hrdy, 2009).  Music and dance would have promoted such social bonding by synchronizing and harmonizing the emotions, thoughts, and actions of two or more individuals.  This would have strengthened mate bonding, infant care, and group cohesion.

I have written about the natural desire for membership in a society and how such membership requires markers of social identity.  Music and dancing could have provided those markers for our prehistoric ancestors.  We see that today in how singing a national anthem (like America's "Star-Spangled Banner" or "My Country, 'Tis of Thee") can strengthen the emotional bonding of people in a nation.

But while social bonding through music sounds warm and cozy, we should recognize the dark side of this:  in-group social bonding often means hostility toward out-groups--the tribalism of "us" versus "them."  Throughout history, tribalist movements (like the Nazis) have used music to move their supporters to unite in attacking their perceived enemies.

We should also recognize that while social bonding might be the original overarching function of music, that does not mean that this is its only function.  Once music has become part of our evolved human nature, we can use it for purposes other than social bonding.  For example, people enjoy playing or listening to music alone.  Sometimes they do this to evoke memories of some previous social experience of the music--such as the lover who listens to music that he associates with his beloved.  But sometimes people listen to music alone just to regulate their moods.

The third key term in the music as social bonding hypothesis is coevolved.  This means that musicality has evolved through a process of gene-culture coevolution, which has been a topic in previous posts.  It is possible that "musical behavior first arose as a human invention and then had (unanticipated) beneficial effects on social cohesion" (Patel, 2018, 118).  This then created cognitive and social niches in which both biological and cultural selection could favor those particular forms of music that most effectively promoted social bonding.  This is what I have previously identified as symbolic niche construction.

This is all very clever, you are surely thinking, but isn't it just speculative "just-so storytelling" that can't be empirically verified or falsified--particularly since the fossil and archaeological record of prehistoric human evolution offers very little evidence of when and how our ancient ancestors made music and for what purposes?

Well, actually there is some fossil and archaeological evidence, even if limited, for prehistoric music.  And this is only the first of five kinds of evidence that can support the music as social bonding theory.


Five Kinds of Evidence

As we've seen, Darwin considered the discovery of Ice Age bone flutes as clear evidence for the antiquity of music among our earliest human ancestors.  As indicated in a previous post, the earliest bone flutes have been dated to over 35,000 years ago (Conard, Malina, and Munzel, 2009).  This is only a sample of an extensive record of prehistoric musical instruments (Morley, 2013).

The second kind of evidence that music is part of our evolved human nature is the cross-cultural evidence for music as a human universal.  Music, like language, is manifest universally in all known cultures (Brown, 1991).  Moreover, Mehr et al. (2019) found 20 widespread functional contexts in which music was important:  (1) dance, (2) infancy, (3) healing, (4) religious activity, (5) play, (6) procession, (7) mourning, (8) ritual, (9) entertainment, (10) children, (11) mood/emotions, (12) work, (13) storytelling, (14) greeting visitors, (15) war, (16) praise, (17) love, (18) group bonding, (19) marriage/weddings, and (20) art/creation.  Notice that all of these functional contexts relate to social bonding.

Also, Savage et al. (2015) have identified 19 features of musical structure that are widespread in all or most cultures.  Most of these support coordinated music-making:

Throughout the world, humans tend to sing, play percussion instruments, and dance to simple, repetitive music in groups, and this is facilitated by the widespread use of simple-integer pitch and rhythm ratios, scales based on a limited number of discrete pitches (usually no more than 7), and isochronomous beats grouped in multiples of two or three. . . . The widespread use of simple, discrete meters and scales also enables multiple people to memorize and coordinate their performances.  These widespread musical properties have few direct parallels in language.  Group coordination provides a common purpose that unifies the cross-cultural structural regularities of human music (Savage et al., 2021, 8).

This is impressive cross-cultural evidence for the universality of musicality as an evolved instinct of human nature that supports social bonding.

There is also developmental evidence for the early development of the social functions of music in infancy and early childhood (Savage et al., 2021, 9).  Infants respond to songs from their adult caregivers, such as lullabies, with similar, cross-culturally recognizable acoustic features.  Infants respond differently to lullabies as distinguished from play-songs.  Music improves parent-infant social bonding.  Young children also show more sociable behavior when they are engaged in group musical activities.  Music shapes children's social bonds.

A fourth kind of evidence for musicality as promoting social bonding is social psychological evidence.  Social psychologists have conducted behavioral experiments that show how musical behavior enhances social cooperation (Savage et al., 2021, 9-10).  For example, when people dance in synchrony, they feel connected to the group with whom they're dancing.  And people who sing in large choirs develop feelings of social closeness with their fellow singers.

The fifth kind of evidence for music as rooted in evolved human nature has to do with the neurobiological proximate mechanisms for music and social bonding.  There is some evidence "that the dopaminergic reward system interacts with the endogenous opioid system and the release of oxytocin, ultimately providing opportunities for individuals to synchronize their moods, emotions, actions, and/or perspectives through musical engagement," which would serve music's social bonding functions.  Moreover, "people who frequently experience chills when listening to music show high white matter connectivity between auditory, social, and reward-processing areas" (Savage et al., 2021, 10-12; Sachs et al., 2016).

One indirect way to infer how the normally functioning brain supports musicality and social bonding is to study those people with abnormal brains that cause some of them to be unable to "hear" music at all and others to be extraordinarily responsive to music.  This is what Oliver Sacks did in his book Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain (2007).  He described many cases of people with amusia--being unable to recognize or enjoy music.  In some cases, this was congenital (from birth).  In others, it was acquired (from some injury to the brain).  (The Wikipedia article on "Amusia" is a good short survey.)

Sacks tells the story of D.L., a seventy-six-year-old woman who had never heard music.  Although she came from a musical family in which everyone played an instrument, she never liked music because it just sounded like noise to her.  As a little girl, a family friend who was a specialist in teaching music tested her with pitches, but she could not tell if one note was higher than another.

When people asked her what she heard when music was played, she would say, "If you were in my kitchen and threw all the pots and pans on the floor, that's what I hear!"

She couldn't recognize the simplest tune, such as "Happy Birthday to You."  On the other hand, she seemed to have a good sense of rhythm in her body because as a girl she loved to tap dance.

While D.L. was an example of congenital amusia, Sachs also saw cases of acquired amusia.  Professor B. was a gifted musician who had played with the New York Philharmonic.  But after having a stroke, he was suddenly unable to discern a tune.  He perceived pitch and rhythm, but he could not synthesize them into a melody.

While Sacks saw Professor B. as an example of melody deafness, he saw Rachel Y. was an example of harmony deafness.  She had been a talented composer and performer.  But then she was in a car accident where she suffered severe head and spine injuries.  Afterwards, she heard all music as discrete lines but was unable to perceive the harmonic sense of chordal passages.  She could not harmonize different voices and instruments.

In contrast to these cases of musical deafness, Sacks also studied cases of hypermusicality--people who show an extraordinary love of music.  Some of the best cases were people with the congenital disorder known as Williams Syndrome.  They are visibly distinctive because of their elfin-like faces.



Williams syndrome is a rare genetic condition that causes facial characteristics including epicanthal folds at the eyes, large ears, an upturned nose, full cheeks, a wide mouth, a small jaw and small teeth.

Williams Syndrome is caused by the deletion of 26-28 genes on the long arm of chromosome 7.  Individuals with Williams Syndrome typically have mild to moderate intellectual deficits (IQs around 60), cardiovascular disease, and the distinctive facial characteristics just indicated.  Their cognitive profile includes normal language and facial processing skills but deficient visuospatial abilities (Martens, Wilson, and Reutens, 2008).

The personality of Williams Syndrome people is hypersociable: they're unusually friendly and loquacious--longing to connect and bond with others.  They also show a heightened interest in and emotional responsiveness to music and musical activities (Thakur et al., 2018).  Sacks tells the story of Gloria Lenhoff, a woman with Williams Syndrome who could sing over 2,000 operatic arias in more than 30 languages.  But she could not add five plus three.

This seems to confirm Howard Gardner's theory of "multiple intelligences"--that rather than having some kind of general intelligence (perhaps measured by IQ scores), human brains have as many as eight separate kinds of intelligence.  Williams Syndrome people seem to have high social intelligence and musical intelligence but are deficient in logico-mathematical intelligence.

Apparently, this has something to do with the abnormal size and shape of the brain in Williams Syndrome people.  Their brains on average are about twenty percent smaller than normal brains.  And the ratio of frontal lobe volume to combined parietal and occipital lobe volume is abnormally high.

But the primary point here for evolutionary theories of music is that the combination in Williams Syndrome people of hypermusicality and hypersociability seems to support the social bonding theory of the origin of music.  


My next post will be on "The Political History of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony."  That post will include a list of bibliographic references.

Friday, September 05, 2025

Open Borders and the Natural Desire for Social Membership

In my recent posts, I have argued that restrictions on immigration are immoral because they violate the natural human rights to freedom of movement and voluntary exchange.  If someone born outside the United States wants to live and work in the United States, and if there are some native Americans who want to employ that immigrant, and others willing to sell him a house or provide rental property where he can live, isn't it wrong for the American government to coercively prohibit these voluntary transactions?

The opponents of immigration will object, however, that it is morally right to prohibit these mutually beneficial transactions between natives and immigrants if they have severely harmful side-effects for other people.  

The most common objections to immigration point to four kinds of harmful side-effects:  immigrants are seen as harming American workers, American taxpayers, American public safety, and American culture.  But I will argue that there is little or no harm in each case; and even if people insist that there is some harm, there are ways to reduce the putative harm that are more moral than restricting immigration.  My thinking here has been shaped by the writings of Bryan Caplan (Caplan and Weinersmith 2019; Caplan 2012), Ilya Somin (2020), Hein de Haas (2023), and Ian Goldin (2024), who have surveyed the empirical research on immigration in America and around the world.

I will conclude by arguing that the free migration of people from one society to another satisfies the evolved natural desire for social membership.


HARMING AMERICAN WORKERS?

The most popular argument for restricting immigration is that this protects American workers from poverty because if the supply of labor (particularly, the low-wage and low-skilled labor of immigrants) increases, this will lower the wages of American workers or drive them into unemployment.

Empirical studies have shown, however, that immigration has little or no effect on unemployment or wage levels.  Although in the short run, low-skilled wages might fall slightly, over the long run, there is almost no decline in wages.  And even moderately educated native workers--high school graduates without college degrees--can show increased wages.  Moreover, while there is some correlation between levels of employment and levels of immigration, the correlation is negative.  Immigration goes up when unemployment goes down.  So, clearly immigrants are not taking away jobs from native workers (Caplan 2012, 7-9; de Haas 2023, 131-144).

The explanation for this, as de Haas says, is that immigrants don't steal jobs, they fill vacancies.  "Immigration is primarily a response to labor shortages caused by a dwindling supply of local workers willing and able to do various manual jobs in agriculture, construction, cleaning, domestic work and various other services" (de Haas, 132).  This is confirmed by what is happening now with Trump's increased detentions and deportations of immigrants.  As immigrants are forced to leave their jobs, their vacancies are not being filled by native American workers.  But if it were true that the immigrants stole the jobs of American workers, then we would have expected that now those unemployed Americans would be rushing to fill the new vacancies.

It is simply not true, as politicians often say, that "we don't need foreign workers."  Because many native workers would rather not work at all than to take the low-level jobs that immigrants are willing and able to fill.

There have been a few "natural experiments" in testing how a sudden massive surge in immigration can affect wages and employment.  The best example of this for the United States is the "Mariel boatlift" of 1980.  In April of 1980, Fidel Castro announced that all Cubans wanting to go to the US were free to board boats landing at the port of Mariel, west of Havana.  Cuban exiles already in Florida rushed to find boats to carry Cubans from Mariel to Miami.  This mass influx of refugees overwhelmed the US Coast Guard.  In October of that year, President Carter negotiated an end to this open migration to the US.  During this six-month period, as many as 125,000 Cubans crossed the sea to Florida, and most of them settled in the Miami area (de Haas, 132-34).

As a consequence of this, the labor force in Miami increased by about 7 percent, and the low-skilled labor force increased by 20 percent.  When labor economists studied the effects of this sudden increase in the labor supply, they found that it had either no effect or very little effect on the wages or unemployment rates of lower-skilled workers.

There have been similar cases elsewhere in the world.  After 1989, almost one million Russian Jews emigrated to Israel, which increased the population of Israel by 12 percent in five years.  At the same time, 2.8 million people migrated from East to West Germany over a period of fifteen years.  Like the Mariel boatlift, these sudden waves of migration had little if any effects on employment and wages.

Actually, immigration can create more jobs and make native workers more productive when the skills of migrants and native workers are complementary, and so they don't compete for the same jobs.

Migrant workers washing dishes, cooking food, waiting tables or delivering food increase the capacity of restaurants to serve more customers, thereby increasing jobs for senior management and income for the owners.  This also allows customers to eat out, or have food delivered for affordable prices, thereby freeing up more time to spend on their own work and be more productive.  Meanwhile, the sufficient supply of support staff like janitors, cleaners and various office workers enables (migrant and non-migrant) higher-skilled workers to concentrate on the work they're best at instead of doing manual tasks themselves.  In this way, all workers can derive mutual benefits from immigration (de Haas, 137).

Immigrants not only fill low-level job shortages, but they also introduce innovative ideas and practice entrepreneurship in ways that promote progress in all fields of human endeavor.  After all, immigrants are exceptional people who were often the most talented, resourceful, and ambitious people in the societies where they originated.  Immigrants to the US are more likely than native Americans to start their own businesses.  They are over-represented among Nobel laureates, National Academy of Science members, patent holders, and Oscar-winning film directors (Goldin, 228-31; de Haas, 138-39).

Nevertheless, there is some evidence, as I've said, that low-skilled native Americans might be a little worse off, at least in the short run, because of immigration.  But even if this is true, that doesn't justify restricting immigration because there are better ways to protect low-skilled Americans from immigration.  For example, as Caplan (2012, 9) has suggested, we could charge immigrants an admission fee or a surtax, which they could pay off by deductions from their earnings in the US; and then we could use that revenue to compensate low-skilled Americans.  Even if this seems unfair to the immigrants, it's not as unfair as denying their entry into the country.


HARMING AMERICAN TAXPAYERS?

Many people fear that immigrants create a burden on taxpayers because immigrants tend to become costly dependents on the welfare, healthcare, and education systems.  As Donald Trump has said, "illegal immigrants are lower skilled workers with less education" who "draw much more out from the system than they can ever possibly pay back" (September 1, 2016).  On the contrary, illegal immigrants on average probably pay more in taxes than they will ever get back in payments from the government because they don't have a valid social security number!  And indeed, it has been found that in general the fiscal benefits of immigrants exceed their costs (de Haas, 145-59).

The reason for this is that recent immigrants tend to be young, employed, healthy, and have no children. and so they are net contributors to public finance.  But then as they marry, have children, and become older, they use public services like schools and healthcare.  And yet, once their children become adults and enter the labor market, these children become taxpayers.

Most of the people who want to migrate to the US want to get a job and become a taxpaying worker--not to live off welfare.  After all, until recently, the US has been the most popular destination for migrants even though the US has the weakest welfare system in the Western world.

But let's say you're not convinced by this argument, and you still believe that immigrants draw more in government benefits than they pay in through taxation.  Even so, this does not justify restricting immigration because there are better ways to solve this putative problem.  You could freely admit immigrants on the condition that they will never be eligible for welfare benefits, but they will still have to pay taxes.  Or you could reduce their benefits.  Or you could say no benefits for 10 years.  Caplan (2012, 11) has suggested these and other similar ways to solve the problem.


HARMING AMERICAN PUBLIC SAFETY?

"They're bringing drugs.  They're bringing crime.  They're rapists.  And some, I assume, are good people."  Immigrant gang members "don't want to use guns, because it's too fast, and it's not painful enough.  So they'll take a young, beautiful girl, 16, 15, and others, and they slice them and dice them with a knife because they want them to go through excruciating pain before they die.  And these are the animals that we've been protecting for so long."

Was Donald Trump accurate in his description of immigrants as blood-thirsty criminals?  Even if some are "good people," are most of them violent criminals?

Here the evidence is indisputable:  immigrants have much lower crime rates than native Americans, and illegal immigrants have the lowest.  De Haas summarizes one typical study:

Using individual data on arrests from the Texas Department of Public Safety between 2012 and 2018, Light and his colleagues compared crime rates between illegal migrants, legal migrants and native-born US citizens.  Their findings were remarkable.  Illegal immigrants turned out to have the lowest crime rates, legal migrants were somewhere in the middle, while native-born citizens were twice as likely to be arrested for a violent crime compared to undocumented migrants, four times as likely to be arrested for property felony, and 2.5 times more likely to be arrested for drug crime.  These results were consistent across a broad range of crimes, including homicide, assault, robbery, sexual assault, burglary, theft and arson--undocumented migrants had consistently lower crime rates than native-born citizens.  For all criminal convictions in Texas in 2015, convictions among illegal immigrants were 50 percent below those of native-born Americans (de Haas, 200-201).

Of course, some immigrants will become violent criminals, and they should be deported.  But the fact that a few immigrants become criminals does not justify restricting the immigration of people with no record of crime.


HARMING AMERICAN CULTURE?

It has become common for nationalist conservatives like J. D. Vance to say that America needs severe restrictions on immigration because immigration creates too much cultural diversity, which dissolves the social cohesion and homogeneity of American culture: if America had open borders, it would cease to exist as nation because it would have no distinctive social identity.


        J D Vance's Speech to the Claremont Institute Accepting Claremont's Statesmanship Award


JD's wife Usha was born in 1986 in California to Lakshmi and Radhakrishna Chilukuri, who are both Telugu Indian immigrants, speaking the Telugu language, who immigrated to the U.S. in the 1980s from Andhra Pradesh, which is a state on the east coast of southern India.  Usha met JD at Yale Law School.  They married in 2014 in an interfaith marriage ceremony: Usha is a practicing Hindu, while JD was raised as an Evangelical Christian before converting to Catholicism in 2019.  They have three children.

Hmm.  Sounds like a heck of a lot of cultural diversity to me.  Does JD really believe that by marrying the daughter of Telugu Indian immigrants and creating a multicultural and interfaith family with biracial children that he is helping to dissolve the social cohesion of America?

No, of course not.  He doesn't really believe what he said at the Claremont Institute about immigration being a threat to America's cultural identity.  Because he knows that Telugu Indian immigrants--like most immigrants to America--have assimilated into American culture.

We need to remember that beginning in the 19th century, many Americans feared that German, Irish, Italian, Polish, Chinese, and Japanese immigrants would threaten the national identity of America by introducing foreign languages, religions, and cultural practices.  But all of those groups have shown the same intergenerational pattern of assimilation that we see today in the new Latino, Asian, and Muslim immigrants to America.  Initially, the first-generation migrants might be inclined to withdraw into ethnic enclaves separated from the mainstream of American culture.  But then the second and third generations show all the signs of socio-cultural integration--mixed marriages, speaking English as their first language, and adopting the social norms of American culture (de Haan, 160-79).

Ultimately, then, native Americans recognize these immigrant Americans and their descendants as full members of American society.  "They" become members of "our" society, and so "they" become "us."


MIGRATION AND SOCIAL MEMBERSHIP

I have argued against the claim made by people like Frank Salter and Stephen Sanderson that there is a natural desire for ethnic nationalism that is part of our evolved human nature.  But I do recognize that there is a natural desire for membership in a society, which arose in the evolutionary state of nature of our hunter-gatherer ancestors, and that this natural desire for social membership can be satisfied in a multiethnic Lockean liberal nation like the United States, which includes immigrants who have chosen to leave their native-born society to become members of American society.

As indicated in some previous posts, I have found support for these conclusions in Mark Moffett's book The Human Swarm: How Our Societies Arise, Thrive, and Fall.  Moffett is a field biologist who has wondered whether the capacity of invasive Argentine ants to form massive supercolonies might help to explain the human capacity for living in nations with huge populations of people whose society cannot be based on individual recognition of all the members of the society.  An Argentine ant colony is an anonymous society in which membership is marked by the distinctive scent of the colony, which distinguishes us from them, so that individual ants will be accepted into the colony if they carry the colony's scent, but if they carry the scent of a foreign colony, they will be attacked.  Similarly, a human society is an anonymous society with markers of social membership that distinguish those who belong to the society from those who are outsiders; but for a human society the markers of membership are not chemical signals but shared symbols (such as the flag, the language, or the history of a society).

Moffett's brief definition of "society" is "an enduring territorial group whose members recognize each other as belonging" (2019, 3).  He also provides a longer definition:

"A society is a group extending beyond an immediate family, capable of perpetuating its population for generations, whose members ordinarily perceive one another as belonging together and set apart from other groups (notwithstanding transfers between societies, either mutually agreeable or initially forced) and which regulates access to a space or spaces it ultimately controls, across which its members travel with relative impunity" (Moffett 2019, 13).

Societies so defined include prehistoric hunter-gatherer and horticultural groups, modern nation states, and some groups in other species.  Thus, beginning in the evolutionary state of nature, human beings have always lived in societies.  And that suggests to me that a natural desire for membership in a society is part of our evolved human nature.

That natural desire for social membership can motivate many human beings to stay in the society where they were born.  But it can also motivate some human beings to leave the society of their birth and to seek membership in another society that they believe will give them better opportunities to live a flourishing life.  To succeed in doing that, they must show the cultural markers of membership in that new society to persuade the native-born people to recognize that they belong--that "they" have become "us."

Open borders would make that easier for all those people who want to improve their lives through immigration, which will also improve the life of the society that they join.


REFERENCES

Caplan, Bryan. 2012. "Why Should We Restrict Immigration?" Cato Journal 32:5-24.

Caplan, Bryan, and Zach Weinersmith. 2019. Open Borders: The Science and Ethics of Immigration. New York: First Second.

Goldin, Ian. 2024. The Shortest History of Migration: When, Why, and How Humans Move--From the Prehistoric Peopling of the Planet to Today and Tomorrow's Migrants. New York: The Experiment.

de Haas, Hein. 2023. How Migration Really Works: The Facts About the Most Divisive Issue in Politics. New York: Basic Books.

Moffett, Mark. 2019. The Human Swarm: How Our Societies Arise, Thrive, and Fall. New York: Basic Books.

Somin, Ilya. 2020. Free to Move: Foot Voting, Migration, and Political Freedom. Revised edition. New York: Oxford University Press.