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Evolutionary
Biology and The Simultaneous Policy
Vision-Logic
for the Next Stage in our Evolutionary
Future
Author
John M. Bunzl

Evolutionary biologists
are increasingly questioning the Darwinist
view of evolution which describes
it largely in terms of competition
and natural selection in favour of
a "post-Darwinist" stance
that more properly recognises the
crucial role of co-operation. But
since major transitions from competition
to co-operation occur only at certain
critical and short-lived points of
evolutionary crisis, it is perhaps
unsurprising that co-operation's significant
role has hitherto been under-valued
and under-explored. Today, as humanity
increasingly faces a critical point
of crisis in terms of our survival
on planet Earth, it is essential that
light now be shed on how co-operation
has worked in evolution, and how it
can be made to work now if we are
to have a sustainable future.
Holonic progression
to ever-larger scales of cooperation
An important theory
underlying the view that cooperation
plays just as important a role as
competition is Koestler's concept
of holons and holarchies; the idea
that reality is composed of holons
or "whole/parts": wholes
that are simultaneously composed of
smaller parts and are themselves also
parts of larger wholes. For example,
molecules are holons and yet they
are made up of smaller atom holons
while also being part of larger cell
holons. The entire system is a "holarchy":
a heirarchy of holons or 'whole/parts'
which is endless in either direction
and in which each new higher-level
holon emerges out of its predecessor,
transcending and yet including it.
The importance of Koestler's thinking
is that it allows us to move beyond
two-dimensional, systems-thinking
approaches to a three dimensional
view of evolution which recognises
not just that it has span, but also
depth, and that it is directional
towards ever-larger scales of co-operation.
Between each holon
on the same level there exists an
inherent tension between its 'wholeness'
on one side, and its 'partness' on
the other; i.e. between a desire for
individuality, and a need for conformity
to the society - or holarchy - to
which it belongs. This tension drives
evolution towards ever-larger scales
of cooperation as evolutionary biologist
Elisabet Sahtouris explains: "There
is a cycle of evolution that occurs
all over, across time and space, at
the tiniest levels of biology, and
in the largest cosmic processes. It
always begins with unity that then
individuates-as in the ancient Vedic
creation story in which a little wavelet
forms in a smooth sea, and forever
after is torn between loving its own
individuality and wanting to merge
back into the One. This universal
tension between part and whole, and
among parts, drives evolution. Individuation
always leads to a kind of tension
and conflict [i.e. to competition].
And if the parts don't kill each other,
they start negotiating. Negotiations
can lead to resolutions of some of
the tensions, moving from conflict
to cooperation, and then to some new
level of unity" [i.e. to a new,
higher-level, larger-scale holon].
Of course recent
human evolution is occuring primarily
through cultural, rather than through
genetic processes. Nevertheless, the
processes of cultural evolution -
just like biological/genetic processes
before them - still tend to produce
cooperative organisations (or holons)
of increasing scale. In large-scale
human societies cooperation is essentially
made possible by their forms of governance;
by their political systems. An ideal
system of governance is one in which
all entities in the system capture
both the harmful and positive effects
of their individual behaviour, with
harmful acts being punished and positive
acts rewarded within a framework which
aligns individual self-interest with
the common good. As evolutionist John
Stewart points out, "cooperative
organisations were formed through
the emergence of constraints that
limit the independence of the independent
entities. These constraints (e.g.
governance, management, etc) restrain
destructive competition and enable
cooperation to emerge." In terms
of the evolving governance of human
societies, we could thus identify
the following holarchy: individual
- family - local/regional government
- national government.
Cooperative
global governance: the next level
in the holarchy
The highly developed
nature of global communications and
the interconnectedness of economies
we see today (i.e. globalisation),
as well as threats humanity now faces
such as global warming, global poverty
and ecological destruction etc, now
presage a further move in this evolutionary
development; the emergence of a holon
of democratic planetary governance
that transcends and includes the lower
holons in the holarchy. This, as post-Darwinist
evolutionists contend, is but the
next natural - but by no means assured
- stage in humanity's evolution towards
ever-larger scales of cooperation.
The problem is
that the present highest holons of
governance - nation-states - are configured
to govern only in the national space.
But under globalisation, the holons
of global capital, trade and transnational
corporations (and international crime
and terrorism) already operate in
the global space. Furthermore, we
live in a world of competing nations
who are unwilling to relinquish their
sovereignty to any institution of
global governance and the UN, not
possessing any binding authority over
them, is not configured to provide
it.
Indeed, far from
co-operating to implement appropriate
global laws and taxes to balance the
needs of society and the global environment
against the needs of transnational
business, governments are far more
preoccupied with competing with one
another for inward investment and
jobs. They are thus easy prey for
free-riding global investors and transnational
corporations who happily play one
government off against another for
tax breaks and a loose regulatory
environment. Governments, by the same
token, destructively compete with
one another to boost employment and
inward investment by down-leveling
social and environmental protection
laws and by reducing corporate taxes.
Or, as with the USA, it free-rides
on other governments by not participating
in the Kyoto Protocol, the International
Criminal Court, etc. The nations of
the world, like the wavelets in the
smooth sea of the ancient Vedic creation
story, now love too much their own
individuality; their own "national
interest"!
But this governmental
imperative to maintain "international
competitiveness" also has an
important consequence for democracy.
Since the threat of capital and employment
flight forces governments, regardless
of the party in power, to conform
to a very narrow span of market and
business-friendly policies it necessarily
reduces democracy to an electoral
charade in which voting no longer
has any significant meaning. Little
wonder we have growing social unrest
in deprived areas with a noticeable
swing towards Far-right political
parties and, at the same time, widespread
protests against globalisation; and
all this characterised by chronic
"voter apathy". All unmistakable
signs that democracy - the system
by which negative feedback should
be provided - is no longer functioning
properly.
Hitting the
age-old barrier
.
But in evolutionary
terms, is this destructive competition
and free-riding with its attendant
dysfunctions and feed-back shortfalls
anything new? Indeed, Stewart identifies
precisely this same barrier to co-operation
as preceding all major evolutionary
shifts, such as the formation of the
modern eurykaryote cell from associations
of simpler cells, the formation of
multicellular organisms from aggregations
of cells, and the formation of societies
of organisms from aggregations of
organisms. This barrier to cooperation,
Stewart explains, applies "to
all living processes. The circumstances
that cause it are universal. Individuals
[i.e. individuals, corporations or
nations] who use resources to help
others without benefit to themselves
will be out-competed. They will be
disadvantaged compared to those who
use the resources for their own benefit.
And the barrier applies no matter
what the evolutionary mechanisms are
that adapt and evolve individuals.
The barrier has applied whether the
evolutionary mechanisms are those
that adapt corporations, individual
humans, other multicellular organisms,
single cells, or autocatalytic sets."
Sahtouris further
points out that destructive competition
and free-riding are especially characteristic
of immature species: "Young species
are found to have highly competitive
characteristics: They take all the
resources they can, they hog territory,
they multiply wildly. Sound familiar?
But a lot of species have managed
to grow up, to share things and territory,
to cooperate. It's what keeps them
alive." To survive, therefore,
humanity will - like all other organisms
- have to grow up: we will have to
abandon the present immature, competitive
paradigm of international economic
relations and evolve it into a mature
and cooperative one. The human species,
like all others, is following the
same cycle of competitive individuation
leading (hopefully) to negotiation,
leading in turn to a new higher level
of cooperative unity. So, if we thought
we were separate from other species
or somehow "above" them,
the joke is on us!
..and
overcoming the barrier?
However, the barrier
to cooperation is not insurmountable,
as Stewart points out: "If the
barrier completely prevented the evolution
of cooperation, evolution could not
progress", and yet it has progressed
and has done so, says Stewart, "by
building cooperative organisations
out of self-interested components";
by finding ways to make it in the
interests of individual entities to
cooperate. But how can cooperation
possibly be made in the interests
of individual nations when first-movers
will suffer competitive disadvantage?
This impasse may
potentially be overcome by citizens
around the world who are increasingly
joining the International Simultaneous
Policy Organisation (ISPO), initiated
in 2000. ISPO provides a process for
moving to a cooperative global society
which requires neither nations nor
politicians, nor individuals to act
against their interests.
The Simultaneous
Policy (SP) is a range of legislative
measures designed by ISPO's members
and their chosen experts to bring
economic justice, environmental sustainability
and peace to the world. SP is to consist
only of those desirable measures which
cannot be implemented unilaterally
by any nation due to the fear of first-mover
competitive disadvantage and it is
therefore to be implemented by all,
or virtually all, nations simultaneously,
so removing the crucial barrier to
cooperation. With SP, no nation, corporation
or citizen loses out to any other.
Citizens all over
the world are presently being invited
to "adopt" SP and are doing
so in increasing numbers. Adopting
SP means they pledge to vote in future
elections not for a specific politician
or party, but for ANY politician or
party - within reason - that pledges
to implement SP. Or, if they have
a party-political preference, adopting
SP indicates their desire for their
preferred politician/party to pledge
to implement it. For politicians,
pledging to implement SP signifies
their intent to implement it simultaneously
only when all or virtually all nations
do likewise. As such, there's no political
risk for them since they can make
the 'SP Pledge' while continuing to
implement their competition-based
policies until such time as all or
sufficient nations have made the SP
Pledge and implementation can proceed.
But ISPO's power
to actually catalyse cooperation becomes
effective because, as citizens increasingly
adopt SP, politicians world-wide will
increasingly be presented with an
attractive yet compelling "carrot
and stick" proposition:- Making
the SP Pledge is a strong incentive
to politicians because it involves
no political risk and can deliver
the additional votes of SP's citizen
adopters. But with more and more elections
around the world being won or lost
on very small margins (eg. by just
a few thousand votes in Florida at
the last US Presidential election),
failing to make the SP Pledge could
cost politicians dearly, for they'll
likely lose to rivals who have made
it to attract the SP voting bloc.
Those extra votes - even if few -
could make the vital difference between
winning or losing a seat, or even
an entire election. By adopting SP
in sufficient numbers, therefore,
citizens and previously apathetic
voters thus have a powerful technology
for making it in politicians' self-interest
to pledge to implement SP and, by
the same token, to make it potentially
disastrous for them if they fail to
do so.
An invitation
to conscious evolution
By aligning individual
self-interest with the global common
interest at every level, SP thus fulfills
the age-old requirement for evolution
to progress, providing a practical
political technology for humanity
to drive politicians and governments
to cooperate for the global common
good. As Sahtouris recognises, "Simultaneous
Policy is an imperative if we are
to evolve humanity from its juvenile
competitive stage to its cooperative
species maturity. A wonderful 'no
risk' strategy for finding agreement
on important issues in building a
global community!"
The paradox of
all previous major evolutionary transitions
is, of course, that if left to reach
a critical stage, competition ultimately
ceases to be a strategy for individual
survival but instead becomes a strategy
for collective suicide. At that point
- a point humanity is now fast approaching
- co-operation becomes in everyone's
self-interest. But for wipe-out to
be avoided and for cooperation to
emerge, not only is simultaneous action
required to overcome the barrier to
cooperation; an appropriate catalysing
process is also needed. This is what
SP potentially offers: a technology
for global citizens to consciously
co-create the now-vital holon of global
governance; a world-centric governance
born of an aperspectival vision-logic
that transcends and includes political
parties and nation-states and "through
which runs the blood of a common humanity
and beats the single heart of a very
small planet struggling for its own
survival, and yearning for its own
release into a deeper and a truer
tomorrow."

FOOTNOTE
John
M. Bunzl is Founder and Director of
the International Simultaneous Policy
Organisation (www.simpol.org).

Notes
i.
Janus: A Summing Up, Arthur Koestler,
Pan Books, 1979.
ii. For a more comprehensive explanation
of holons, see Sex Ecology Spirituality,
Ken Wilber, Shambhala, 1995, 2000,
pp 43-85.
iii. Elisabet Sahtouris, adapted from
Understanding Globalization as an
Evolutionary Leap presented to the
Institute of Noetic Sciences (http://www.noetic.org/),
July 2001. For more by Sahtouris go
to: http://www.ratical.org/Lifeweb
iv. From a personal email to John
Bunzl, 11th June 2002.
v. Article 2:1 of the UN Charter specifically
denies the UN any binding authority
over its member nations.
vi. Evolution's Arrow - The Direction
of Evolution and the Future of Humanity,
The Chapman Press, 2000.
vii. The Simultaneous Policy - An
insider's guide to saving humanity
and the planet, John Bunzl, New European
Publications, 2001.
viii. Sex, Ecology, Spirituality,
Ken Wilber, Shambhala, 1995, 2000.

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