Today's Forum:
Selfish Genes Don't Mean Selfish Behavior
At the
kleptocracy called Enron, executives built a culture
dedicated to stealing from grandmothers—and they
justified it with one of the most misinterpreted ideas
in modern science.
Enron CEO Jeff Skilling’s favorite
book was The Selfish Gene, in which Oxford biologist
Richard Dawkins argued that we are a product of our
genes, and that these genes have survived by being as
ruthlessly competitive as Chicago gangsters. Dawkins
merely meant that the basic business of a gene is to get
as many copies of itself as possible into the next
generation, by whatever means. He has protested ever
since that he never meant to advocate selfish behavior
as the best way to accomplish that.
But Enron executives latched onto the
idea of our innate selfishness with glee. To be fair,
plenty of other voices also seemed to be advocating
selfish behavior. The economist Milton Friedman was
famous for declaring that "The social responsibility of
business is to increase its profits."
Read more in our
Forum section.