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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2022
In 1886 Friedrich Nietzsche noted the following basic error in the philosophies of his day, ”…to place the goal in the herd and not in single individuals! The herd is a means, no more! But now one is attempting to understand the herd as an individual and to ascribe to it a higher rank than to the individual—profound misunderstanding!!! Also to characterize that which makes herdlike, sympathy, as the more valuable side to our nature!” (Nietzsche 1901, p. 403).
The recent flap over sociobiology has stemmed largely from the fear that biology is being used to justify a Nietzschean view of human societies, as if the chief good in human relations must be basically selfish, as if apparently altruistic behavior is fundamentally hypocritical. From Darwin to the present, biologists have blithely attributed the presence and persistence of all sorts of traits, including behavioral traits, to the “good of the species”.
The research for this paper was supported by a Guggenheim Fellowship for 1980-1981. I wish to thank Elliott Sober and William Wimsatt for commenting on an early draft of this paper.