"Evolution has embedded four major structural elements of society in the human genome," Nicholas Wade claims in his book The Origin of Politics. "These are the family, the specialized roles of the two sexes, social institutions [such as religion, commerce, politics, and war], and the tribe with its successor institution the nation-state" (60, 205).
It is confusing, however, for Wade to identify "social institutions" as one of the four major elements of social order. Because Wade defines "institutions" broadly as "socially agreed ways of accomplishing the tasks required for a society's survival" (59), and therefore all of the structural elements of society are "social institutions." The family, for example, is a social institution because it is a socially agreed way of pair-bonding a man and a woman for the purposes of sexual mating and producing and rearing children.
Wade thinks that while conservatives tend to support the authority of these evolutionary pillars of social order, liberals tend to scorn that authority as a threat to individual liberty. And he sees this political polarization as rooted in the genetic divergence of political orientations, in that some people are genetically predisposed to conservative attitudes, and others are genetically predisposed to liberal attitudes.
As I have already suggested in previous posts, I find his argument for the genetic polarization of conservatives and liberals implausible for three reasons. First, Wade admits that no one have ever found the genes for conservative or liberal predispositions because it's so difficult to identify the genes for social behavior (144-146, 153-158, 165-166, 212).
Second, even if we could identify those genes, we would see that the genetic influence on human attitudes and behavior is always very indirect and dependent upon a complex interaction of many factors in a specific context. Genes influence but do not specify behavior, because genes interact with other genes, with other biological factors, and with the physical and social environment.
Third, Wade's assumption that all political ideology must ultimately be bifurcated into left and right, liberal and conservative, ignores the multidimensional character of political ideology that includes ideologies like libertarianism and classical liberalism that show a fusion of liberal and conservative principles.
Moreover, as I have argued elsewhere, the political theory that would be compatible with Wade's evolutionary theory of politics would have to be a Darwinian liberal conservatism that would fuse liberalism, conservatism, and Darwinism (Darwinian Conservatism [Exeter, UK: Imprint Academic, 2009]; "The Evolution of Darwinian Liberalism," Journal of Bioeconomics 17 [2015]: 3-15).
Consider how a Darwinian liberal conservatism can account for what Wade presents as the major evolutionary pillars of social order: social institutions, the family, the social roles of the two sexes, religion, commerce, political coalitions, war, and the nation-state.
SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Liberal conservatives agree with John Locke that human beings create social institutions by consenting to them. As Locke said, human beings have created not only government, but also language, families, morality, religion, and money by consenting to their existence. For example, Locke explains language as a socially created institution in which certain sounds are given symbolic meaning by a "tacit consent" among the speakers of the language. Language can then be used as the primary instrument by which people create all other institutions by agreeing to their existence. Thus, all institutions arise from a Lockean social contract.
Wade implicitly recognizes this when he quotes Michael Tomasello as saying that "the ultimate outcome of social norms in human groups is the creation of social institutions whose existence is constituted by the collective agreement of all group members that things should be done in a particular way" (61). "Collective agreement" is what Locke called "consent."
Liberal conservatives agree with Adam Smith that the Lockean consenting to institutions shows the evolution of largely unintended (spontaneous) social orders. That the evolution of unintended order is the unifying theme of all of Smith's writing has been well stated by James Otteson (Adam Smith's Marketplace of Life [Cambridge University Press, 2002]). He argues that Smith applies a "market model" to explain the origin, development, and maintenance of all extended human institutions as unintended orders, which includes language, economics, morality, and law. What Otteson calls "unintended order" is what Michael Polanyi and Friedich Hayek called "spontaneous order" and what Vernon Smith and others call "emergent order." Otteson defines "unintended order" as "a self-enforcing, orderly institution created unintentionally by the free exchanges of individuals who desire to satisfy their own individual wants" (270).
An unintended order is contrasted with an intended order that has been rationally designed by some mind or group of minds for a deliberately planned purpose. The contrast between these two kinds of order underlies a fundamental debate in social theory between the constructivists and the evolutionists: between the constructivists who think that a good social order must be deliberately and rationally designed for some foreseeable end-state and the evolutionists who think a good social order arises through an evolutionary process of free exchanges between individuals acting for individual ends with no overall end in mind. Since the success of unintended order depends on individual liberty constrained only by rules of justice protecting life, liberty, and property, the idea of unintended order is the fundamental idea of classical liberalism in the Smithian tradition.
Darwinian liberal conservatives agree with Charles Darwin that consenting to institutions that emerge as unintended orders like language, morality, and religion is uniquely human because it arises through the human capacity for symbolic thought and culture. The symbolic inheritance system is uniquely human because it shows the qualitative leap that defines our humanity as based on our capacity for symbolic thought and communication. Other animals can communicate through signs. But only human beings can communicate through symbols. The evolution of human language was probably crucial for the evolution of symbolism. Symbolic systems allow us to think about abstractions that have little to do with concrete, immediate experiences. Symbolic systems allow human beings to construct a shared imagined reality. These symbolic constructions are often fictional and future-oriented. Art, religion, science, and philosophy are all manifestations of human symbolic evolution.
THE FAMILY AND THE TWO SEXES
The family is a symbolic construction--an institution created by our consent--because it exists through our collective agreement on the social meaning of husband, wife, father, mother, and child. In Darwinian Conservatism, I argued that Darwinism supports the conservative view of sexual differences, family life, and parental care as fundamental for the social order of a free society. A Darwinian account of the natural desires for sexual identity, sexual mating, and parental care confirms the conservative commitment to the traditional social order of sex, marriage, and the monogamous nuclear family. While those on the extreme left tend to see sexual differences, family life, and parental care as social constructions that can be changed, and perhaps even abolished, by social engineering, Darwinian biology sustains the conservative understanding of sexual conduct and familial bonding as innate propensities of human nature.
Wade agrees that the pair-bonding of husband and wife in the family for the production and rearing of children is deeply rooted in evolved human nature, and therefore it is not merely an arbitrary cultural construction. But he worries that the far-left cultural assault on the two-parent family is destroying the family and promoting declining female fertility rates, which is producing social disorder and a collapsing birth rate that will bring the extinction of the human population.
His forecast is apocalyptic:
This modernist subversion of the nuclear family conflicts with human nature just as the kibbutz experiment did. But its damage, wreaked through a set of interacting effects, is less reversible. Fewer people are getting married. Fewer children are enjoying the benefit of being brought up in two-parent homes. And fewer babies are being born. The declining fertility rate in the United States and most other advanced economies is no mere curiosity but rather the first step on a road that leads to extinction. With the birth rate less than the replacement level, populations will steadily decline (126).
I disagree. If this attack on the nuclear family "conflicts with human nature just as the kibbutz experiment did," then we should expect that human nature will prevail. If the nuclear family really does satisfy some of the deepest natural desires of human beings, then the family will endure because human beings will always want it.
Now some of the statistics cited by Wade would seem to deny this. For example, he reports: "Fewer children than ever are growing up in a traditional two-parent family--a mere 15% according to one estimate" (129). Only 15% of the children in the U.S. are living in a two-parent family? If that were true, that would be pretty good evidence that the nuclear family has largely disappeared in the U.S.
But then Wade's reader has to be surprised, after reading the sentence above on page 129, to read this sentence on page 130: "In 1980 some 77% of children lived with married parents, declining to 65% in 2019." So which is it--15% or 65%? If the reader checks the endnote to "a mere 15% according to one estimate," he'll see that the reference is Terri Carroll, "State of the American Family," BGSU Magazine, spring 2013. She's reporting on research conducted by the National Center for Family and Marriage Research at Bowling Green State University. She says that the popular ideal of the nuclear family depicted in the old television show "Leave It to Beaver" is no longer true. In the 1950s, "60 percent of families consisted of a breadwinning father and a stay-at-home mother," but today "only about 15 percent of American children now reside in a traditional breadwinner-homemaker family." So this 15 percent refers to children living in a two-parent family where the father earns the family's only income, and the mother stays at home and does not earn a second income.
But if we're interested in the prevalence of two-parent families--regardless of whether the mother works outside the home--the statistics look different. For example, two years ago, The Institute for Family Studies published an article by Nicholas Zill with the title "The Resurgence of the Two-Parent Family" (January 10, 2024). Reporting U.S. Census data, Zill noted that in 1960, 88% of children under 18 were living with two parents, 9% were living with a single parent, and 3.2% were living with no parent. In 2005, the statistics were 67% (two parents), 28% (one parent), and 4.5% (no parent). But by 2023, the numbers were moving slightly back in the direction of 1960--71% (two parents), 25% (one parent), and 3.8% (no parent). For Zill, this was evidence for "the resurgence of the two-parent family." This is what we should expect if we really believe that marriage and the two-parent family satisfy our natural human desires for conjugal bonding and parental care.
Moreover, in considering how marriage and the family can satisfy these natural desires, we should not limit ourselves to the traditional heterosexual married couple caring for their biological children. A married couple caring for adopted children are satisfying their desires for conjugal bonding and parental care. A married couple with no children is satisfying their desire for conjugal bonding without parental care.
And as I have argued previously, there's a good argument for same-sex marriages as satisfying these natural desires. Terri Carroll's article begins by describing a lesbian couple caring for their adopted daughter. Same-sex marriages with children can satisfy the natural desires for conjugal bonding and parental care.
Some of the gay proponents of gay marriage--such as John Corvino--concede that the ideal environment on average for raising children is a lifelong heterosexual marriage of mother and father jointing caring for the children. Corvino has said that he is grateful that he was raised in this environment, and that his parents are still married and still tied to their children.
But in defense of same-sex marriage and parenting, Corvino points out that same-sex couples will never kidnap any children from any heterosexual couples who want to keep their children. Homosexual parents will either produce children through artificial insemination, or they will adopt them. And it is surely better for the children to be brought into existence than not. And it is better for the children in foster care to be adopted. As long as it is true that adoptive homosexual parents are on average as good for children as adoptive heterosexual parents, then same-sex married parenting poses no special harm to children.
But then what about the problem of declining fertility rates in most of the economically advanced nations around the world? Is Wade justified in predicting that this will bring the extinction of the human population--or at least those populations in those nations with the lowest fertility rates (in North America, Europe, Asian countries like South Korea and Japan, and South Pacific countries like Australia and New Zealand)?
Consider the World Bank's estimates of total fertility rates (the average number of births per woman by the end of her reproductive years). The global average TFR is about 2.1, which is usually considered the replacement level. The low income countries tend to have higher TFRs than the high income countries. The highest TFRs are in Africa. The TFR for Chad and Somalia is over 6.0. The average for Sub-Sahara Africa is 4.26. The average for Europe is 1.55. The average for East Asia and Pacific is 1.34. The lowest TFRs are those for Hong Kong (0.84) and South Korea (0.75).
What we see here is the consequence of the "demographic transition" that began sometime in the 19th century: as societies become richer, the birth rate drops because richer people tend to invest heavily in a few children rather than invest a little in many children. This seems counterintuitive. Surely, rich people can afford to have lots of children. But it makes sense in economically advanced societies, where a heavy investment of parental resources (such as expensive education) in their children is required for those children to become successful adults. There is also a tradeoff here: the more parents invest in their children, the less they have to invest in themselves. This raises the costs of children, and consequently the demand for children goes down. But still, the natural desire for parental care is so strong that most human beings will pay that cost.
We can see this demographic transition in the TFR historical statistics for the U.S. In 1800, the estimated TFR was 7.03. Then there was a steady decline over the years until the TFR reached 2.06 in 1940. This was followed by a steady increase up to 3.58 in 1960. Then there was another steady decline down to 1.62 in 2023, followed by a slight increase to 1.79 in 2025. So a steady decline can be followed by a steady increase, although the general zigzag pattern seems to be a decline.
Amazingly, however, the U.S. has had a fast growing population. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the population of the U.S. has grown every year since 1900, except for one year during the Spanish flu epidemic, growing at an average of 0.85% per year since 2000. As of today, the population of the U.S. is 342,415,867, which makes it the third largest national population in the world, behind only India and China.
One birth every 9 seconds
One death every 10 seconds
One international migrant (net) every 97 seconds
Net gain of one person every 45 seconds
As long as this immigration into the U.S. continues, the U.S. population will continue to increase. The countries facing the greatest depopulation crisis are those with low TFRs and low immigration. For example, Japan's population has dropped by over 3 million in only 5 years--from 126.1 million in 2020 to 123 million in 2025. Japan has a TFR of 1.38, and it also has some of the most restrictive immigration policies of any nation in the world.
Now, of course, if Trump's policies for closing the U.S. borders and deporting immigrants continues, this could reverse America's century-long trend towards increasing population and create the sort of population crisis now faced by Japan.
This supports my argument for open borders and freedom of movement. But Wade disagrees. He sees immigration into the U.S. as a threat to America's national identity. I'll respond to Wade's argument for American nationalism in my next post.
