Page 4--Wednesday, November 30, 1977-The Michigan Daily r v ,T tbr 3itbian atI Eigh oy-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 68 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan PART TWO The sociobiology myth Newest prison deaths in LAfrica must spur inquest A MIDST THE rumblings surround- ing the government's inquest into the death of political detainee Steven Biko, comes the news: yet another political detainee has died in a South African prison. The sum now totals 214 deaths of blacks held without trial in just 20 months. From that white supremacist regime, in which blacks are treated subhumanly by society, such news comes with an appalling lack of sur- prise. The fact that government and security officials there claim they treat blacks arrested as threats to white supremacy "very well" at all serves as a blatant example of that re- gime's arrogance. Official explanations of the 21 deaths include: suicide by hanging, tumbling over chairs, falling down stairs, choking on food and toppling from the 10th floor outdoor ledge of a police station. And then there was Steven Biko, a black civil rights leader. Biko, they claimed, died of starvation at the end of a hunger strike. But at the inquest a different story came out. Biko had been locked in his cell, stripped, then shackled to the bed. He later died of massive brain injuries 4 suffered from a crushed skull. Officials -R said Biko "may have hit his head" in a j scuffle during an interrogation. It is just far too incredible to believe. Political prisoners -especially those labeled as a threat to the regime and held wihout trials - do not just die in prison. They do not just trip over chairs, stumble on soap cakes or fall out of 10th story windows for no reason. Political prisoners - especially black ones held by white racist securi- ty officers - do not get bruised, cut, suffocated or have their skulls crushed accidentally. The inquest tells us that much. But if a government-run investigation dares to reveal that much about its own law enforcement agencies, just how much more is really going on? How many prisoners are being beaten, starved, shackled and abused daily in those cells? Inquests into the treatment of all detainees in South Africa must be held by impartial juries immediately. If ob- jective juries cannot be found within South Africa's borders - and presumably they will not be found there - outsiders must be found. Then and only then will fewer prisoners experience daily torture. Then and only then will fewer prisoners die. And somewhere along the way, police and government of- ficials actively or inactively promoting current. prisoner treatment policiesI might be brought to world justice. This is the second article in a two-part series on the "Sociobiology myth." What evidence do sociobiologists offer us that a behavior is "genetic"? First they claim that if a behavior is found universally in all human societies, it must be genetic. Univer- sality, though, does not show that a behavior is genetic. People in essentially every human culture wear clothes. Does that mean that we have a gene for wearing clothes? Even if the universality of a trait were sufficient evi- dence of genetic determination, the sociobiologists' arguments would remain un- supportable, because they rest on distortions of the available data. They have drawn se- lectively on certain pieces of ethnographic data to support their assertions, while com- pletely ignoring those which refute them. For example, the universality of warfare is a prime tenent of sociobiology. This is in direct contradiction to the mass of ethnographic evi- dence which indicates its non-universality. The absence of any form of warfare has been reported among the Adaman Islanders, the Arunta, the Eskimos, the Mission Indians, the Semang, the Todas, the Western Shoshoni, and the Yahgan (War, Fried, M., Harris, M., and Murphy, R.). The Tasaday of the Phil- lipines do not even have a ord for war. In societies where it does occur, warfare often consists of threats, insults, and single com- bat between aggrieved individuals. Rarely are more than a few individuals killed in an episode of warfare; in some cases, such as that reported of the Tiwi of Northern Australia, the war is stopped as soon as one person is wounded. Another key element in the sociobiologists' view of human nature is the universality of sex roles as we know them. Again, this is clearly refuted by the ethnographic data. Margret Mead's classic study, Sex and Tem- perament in Three Primitive Societies, describes a society in which both sexes con- form to our ideal of the "feminine" role, another where both sexes fit our "masculine" norm, and a third in which women are "mas- culine" and the men are "feminine." Many societies have little division of labor; the Tasaday are reported to have none. Even where this division exists to some extent, the form which it takes is not necessarily the "man, the hunter," "women, the homemak- er" model set out'as genetically "preordain- ed" by the sociobiologists. There is relatively little specialization by sex among both the Pygmies of _the Congo, and the Tasaday. Neithersare roles always more aggressive, another component among the scenario. Among the Arpesh, Pygmies and Tasaday so- cieties, both sexes are non-aggressive. Re- cent visitors to China also report that children there of both sexes are non-aggressive. THE USE BY sociobiologists of primate behavior as evidence of genetic determina- tion of human traits is equally misleading: Patterns of aggressive, dominance, sex roles, and other features of social organization vary greatly even among primates of the same species. Baboons living on the savannah, which are the most frequently cited models of primate behavior, display a rigid authority hierarchy, male dominance, and extreme ag- gressiveness. There is, however, another side to the story which the sociobilogists have managed to obscure. Forest baboons show lit- tle aggression and no male dominance hierar- chies. In times of danger, the males run up trees, leaving the females to protect the young. Adult females frequently direct troop movements as well. Clearly, males are neith- er more dominant nor more aggressive in these groups. Similar behaviors have been found among chimpanzees and mountain gorillas, who are our closest relatives evo/ lutionarily. These groups also display a lack of aggressive behavior and rigid male domi- nance hierarchies. Then again, if a certain behavior can't be found in primates (i.e., it is "species- specific" to humans), it is argued that this must be due to genetic differences between primates and us, and this too is taken as evi- dence of its genetic nature (Wileen, Fall 1977, Daedalus). The analogy from primate be- havior to ours is too often a consequence of our biased perception of their behavior, pro- jecting our social interactions onto nature and then turning around and describing our be- havior as "natural." The adaptiveness of a behavior is often given as the final piece of "proof" of its genetic basis. If you can figure out some way a behavior could possibly benefit an individu- al or his/her genes, sociobiologists will claim that is due to the action of natural selection operating over evolutionary time. This is the sociobiologists' favorite pasttime, to think up adaptive explanations for even the most bizarre behavior. For example, why is it adaptive for children to dislike spinach? De- vore, et. al., in a high school text (EDC, 1972) remind us that spinach has oxalic acid in it, which combines with calcium and may inhibit bone formation. Children may therefore have a genetically-based dislike for the vegetable. Perhaps they also like to eat candy because it is really, genetically, the best thing for them to eat. But even when you see a behavior that could be defined as maladaptive, these, too, are genetic, they are just being selected against. In discussing the problem of divorce, Devore et. al. explain it as " 'holdovers' from prehuman history. Perhaps natural selection has simply not had enough time to perfect the human pair bond." And, if all else fails you can claim that it was adaptive during the Pleistocene, even though it isn't now. Heads they win, tails we lose. THUS SOCIOBIOLOGISTS have conveni- ently constructed a set of criteria for deciding whether a behavior is genetic so that they can claim that any behavior has a genetic basis. And indeed they have made such claims on a list of behaviors that is increasing every day to include such recent additions as "economic behavior" (Wilson, Daedalus, 1977) and "space travel" (Yinger, Ann Arbor News, Oct. 19, 1977). But even if they were to find a certain behavior to be adaptive according to a more fair set of criteria, this would not be enough to show that it was genetic, for it would also make sense for a purely cultural phenomenon to be adaptive. What do sociobiologists mean when they say that something has a genetic basis? The common notions, that it is natural, pre-or- dained, inevitable or difficult to change, are either false or not well-defined. Certainly everything we do has a genetic basis in the sense that if we didn't have any genes, we wouldn't have any behavior. Further, an indi- vidual with the genes of a frog or a tape worm would presumably exhibitumuch different be- havior than the rest of us even if it were brought up in the same social environment (whatever that means). So what do we learn by knowing that a behavior is genetic? Only that frogs and tape worms are not likely to exhibit human-like social behavior? No, sociobiologists, Petersen included, claim that from genetic knowledge we learn of our "true nature" and can learn to better overcome these tendencies. But if this is the "promise of sociobiology," it is a hollow one. Does knowl- edge of a genetic basis really help us to change a behavior? PKU diseasehwhich is due to a single mutation, produces severe brain damage if the person's diet includes phenylalanine, but no bad effects at all if a diet lacking phenylalanine is provided. The knowledge of the cure was not a result of the knowledge of the genetic basis. On the other hand, we have no idea how to cure Tay-Sach's disease, also known to be caused by a single mutation. There is no reason to believe that know edge of a genetic basis for racism or warfar will clue us in to the environmental or socia changes that we should make to alleviat these problems. Petersen describes sociobiology as "a ne set of revolutionary scientific theories." W have argued above that in fact these theorie have little scientific validity. We should als point out that they are not particularly new Sociobiologists like to ignore the long histor of Social Darwinism. (Trivers, for example claims that despite the power of the concep of natural selection, it "has lain dormant, o virtually dormant, for 110 years since Darwi enunciated it; in particular, people have bee very reluctant to apply it systematically t human behavior, especially to human socia behavior") Social Darwinists explained wo an's subordinate role as a natural cons quence of her biology, and thus argued agai st women suffrage or even coeducation. The claimed that whites were the fittest race, an were greatly worried about inter-racial ma riage and immigration. This movemen resulted in the passage of eugenics laws fo sterilization of the "unfit" in 31 states, and t the Immigration Act of 1924, which severel limited immigration from Southern and Eas er Europe, Asia and Latin America. Thes limits on immigration led to America's den ing refuge to many persons who were lat victims of the Nazi extermination camps i World War II. THE IMPORTANT point about Social Da winism, however, is that in its time, it wa viewed as just as scientific as sociobiology i seen today. Social Darwinists produce massive books filled with impressive scie tific evidence, and their numbers include many of the most respected names in co temporary science - Nobel Prize winner members of learned societies, and universit presidents (including the University's ow C.C. Little). Social Darwinism, too, claime to have found revolutionary new tools of a alysis (for example, the IQ tests which prove that, among immigrants to America, 79 pe cent of the Italians, 89 per cent of the Poles and 83 per cent of the Jews were "feeble minded"). It is quite possible that 50 year from now scientists will look back on soci biology in much the same way we look bac on Social Darwinism. Sociobiology is a political issue. It ca have as profound social and political ramifi cations as Social Darwinism did in the earl 1900's. Sociobiological claims about our "tru human nature" have already been accepte by many as scientific fact, despite the lack o evidence and poor methodology. This view o human nature breeds contentment with th status quo. If our behaviors are so deepl rooted and difficult to change, why should w bother trying? If that's the natural way to act why should we try and fight nature? It is no accidentathat sociobiology ha become popularized at this time in history. With social problems; crime, war, pollution, etc., getting worse, it is convenienf to place the blame on the individual's behavior and not on the economic and political structure o our society. If we blame war on individual patriotic fervor or the tendency "innate in man (sic) that has brought us to our grave- site," then we can let IBM, Standard Oil, Dow Chemical, ITT, etc. off the hook. Sociobiology is not realism, but cynicism. It is a sinister ideology whose effect is to con- tribute to the perpetuation of racial, sexual and economic oppression in our society. The real lesson we learn from sociobiology is how easily ideology can be disguised as science. This article was prepared by the Socio- biology Study Group of Ann Arbor Science for the People. They helped edit the recently published book Biology as a Social Weapon. Petition against apartheid A NEW COALITION has formed to put pressure on the University to withdraw it's investments from firms in South Africa. The Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid is one of the first groups to attack the University's im- mobility on the investments issue, not only with words, but with action. The Coalition consists of campus groups as well as individuals, and.has adopted three major objectives to put new pressure on the University. They are demanding that the University make public all holdings in corporations in South Africa. The group is also calling for disclosure of all ties with South Africa other than investments: Lastly, but in many ways most important, the Coalition is calling for the creation of a timetable by which the administration should meet all goals. The group realizes that what is truly needed to get the University out of South Africa is grass-roots pressure, and they plan to accomplish this by circulating petitions around the campus and the city which demand for immediate action by the administra- tion. We urge everyone to go out of their way to search out and sign these peti- tions if they don't come to you first. The invested money, after all, belongs in part to each tuition-paying student. The end of apartheid in South Africa can only come when organizations like the University withdraw their support from the white regime. Support the Coalition Against Apartheid. ~~I ~ DIST. FIELD NEWSPAPER SYNDICATE;197: Health Service Handbook ,. i By SYLVIA HACKER and NANCY PALCHIK QUESTION: How can I prevent vaginal and urinary infections? I am not on the pill but get them of- ten. I don't hold in my urine either. Answer: In seeking a physician to consult with on this question, we found one who is female, pregnant, and considerably ex- perienced in gynecological ser- vices. She is Dr. Thirza Smith and her answer is as follows: The best way of avoiding vaginal and bladder infections is to be born male. However, assuming it's too late for that, there are some other ways. Most women at some time in their lives will get these infec- tions. Many women get them recurrently and this can, be a frustrating problem for them and for their doctors. There are three major causes of vaginitis-yeast (candida on monilia), trichomonas (a parasite), and a bacterium (Hemophilus vaginalis,, also known by other names). Yeast in- fections are probably the most common. Yeast are normally found in the vaginia in small amounts but under certain con- ditions they will proliferate and fection may result. If you get yeast infections frequently you should mention this to your doc- tor when and if an antibiotic is prescribed for other conditions and s /he may give you something to prevent it. Avoid deodorant tampons, deodorant sprays and soaps in the vaginal area, since these will kill off the bacteria. Tight clothing, nylon underclothes, etc. will decrease the air supply to the area and make conditions better for yeast, too, so avoid these. Other con- ditions such as being pregnant, having diabetes, or taking the Pill make these infections harder to cure. TRICHONOMAS is generally caused by sexual relations with an infected partner and if you get it, it is important to have him treated so as not to keep passing the infection back and forth. Homophilis or non-specific vaginitis can arise in the same way as yeast but if you get it frequently, your sex partners may need to be treated too. No matter what you do, you may keep getting vaginitis, but if you follow the aforementioned precautions, they should be less frequent. Unfortunately, the vagina is a great place for these. tum, a region with many bac- teria, and therefore one which can be infected more easily. It is impossible to keep bacteria out of the bladder, but you might deter their growth by frequent urination. This means drinking enough fluid so that you will have to urinate every 2-3 hours during the day. Many infections are related to sexual relations because the vagina is immediately behind the bladder and urethra and the ac- tion of intercourse can push bac- teria into the bladder. It is useful (although annoying) to urinate right after sex and to drink some fluids. In fact, some women will get an infection any time they don't follow this procedure. Other suggestions are to always wipe from front to back when using the bathroom, use tampons instead of sanitary napkins, and be sure you have a good fluid intake. IF YOU DO all these things and still get frequent infections, you should be examined by a urologist to look for structural abnormalities, although these are not very common. If they still persist, you may need to be on a program of antibacterial medication daily for a prolonged neriod or after- each time von occasional infection because of the female anatomy, but I hope this will help. QUESTION: Do you have any simple rule for figuring the proper limit of fat in the diet? I read somewhere that no more than 1/3 of one's calories should come from fat but the food labels always give fats, carbohydrates and proteins in grams. I know grams and calories are not the same thing, but I don't know how to make the conversion. ANSWER: There are only three things to remember: There are 9 calories in a gram of fat There are 4 calories in a gram of carbohydrate or protein The total grams of protein and carbohydrate combined should be at least 4 times the number of grams of fat in your diet. Now, you can take the number of calories which your diet con- sists of, calculate the proportions of fat, carbohydrate and protein, and convert it all to grams. If the total of the protein and. car- bohydrate together equals 4 times the fat, you will end up with the /. which is recommened. / I I