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Why An Obituary To A Gorilla Is A Dharmic Deed While Attacking Darwin Is Not

  • The anti-science rhetoric, which is now becoming a pattern, is doing great harm.

Aravindan NeelakandanJul 04, 2018, 12:03 PM | Updated 12:00 PM IST
Koko, the gorilla. (Gorilla Foundation @kokotweets)

Koko, the gorilla. (Gorilla Foundation @kokotweets)


The latest anti-science quip from Minister of State for Human Resource Development, Satyapal Singh, shows that the anti-science attitude that was once an aberration is fast becoming a pattern. Given that the minister is associated with the most ambitious institutional reform agenda in education, he is doing great harm to his work with his anti-evolution remarks. The minister finds himself in the company of nineteenth century fundamentalist Christian clergy and the peddlers of modern-day pseudo-sciences of creationism and the 'intelligent design' that is fundamentalist creationism with a different name

Hindus will do well to keep their distance from these anti-science movements inspired by fundamentalists. At the same time, we need to look into the historical roots of this malaise of anti-Darwinism. Already, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) has given Dharmic traditions a bad name with their crusade against evolution. Their version of pseudo-scientific Vedic devolutionism, is more a comic term that appeared in the classic film Inherit the Wind (1960, directed by Stanley Kramer). There, a fundamentalist speaks of “human devolution”, demonstrating it to the onlooking children with a chimpanzee in a cage.


Meanwhile, it will be good for the anti-Darwin enthusiasts among Hindutva proponents to revisit the 1974 speech of Bala Saheb Deoras, the third sarsanghachalak of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. Today, this speech is considered to be a vital document defining the vision and guiding the mission of the Hindutva movement. Here Deoras says:


Great savants of Hindutva and Vedanta: Vivekananda, Aurobindo, Savarkar, Upadhyaya, and Deoras were all comfortable with the theory of evolution.



The emphasis here, again, is not on prana, but the fact that Upadhyaya did not differ fundamentally but only slightly from Darwinian evolution, even as he rejected social Darwinism. This has also been the hallmark of all Hindu savants, particularly Swami Vivekananda and Sri Aurobindo. (For a more detailed article on the Hindutva acceptance of the science of evolution, read here.)

Anti-Darwinian Left


Marxists have always resented natural selection as a factor in shaping human evolution. One should note that Marxist aversion is not just to social Darwinism – a horrible misappropriation of the science by colonial-era racists and unethical ‘competitionists’. Marx, after his early infatuation with Darwin, came to the conclusion by 1866 that the English naturalist had been superseded by Pierre Tremaux, a French orientalist and architect, who advocated a racist notion of evolution.

In his 1876 essay "The Part played by Labour in the Transition from Ape to Man”, Friedrich Engels, the founding father of Marxist dialectics, offered an explanation as to how labour had shaped and fine-tuned the human hand. This, according to him, made our branch of apes uniquely human. Darwinian synthesis of evolution and Mendelian genetics was suppressed ruthlessly by the Soviet regime. Volumes of Soviet anthropological work towed the Engels line and restated the uniqueness of human species through collective labour.

Anti-Darwinians emphasising human uniqueness: Bishop Wilberforce, Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, archaeologist Gordon Childe and linguist Noam Chomsky. 

Even in the non-Marxist academia of the West, tool-making was considered a uniquely human feature. Then that human uniqueness claim was demolished by the discovery of tool-making by chimpanzees. Thus, the left in its own way emphasised the Christian human exceptionalism. They only replaced the Christian deity with dialectical materialism – an equally unscientific article of belief. The point is that the left has its human uniqueness, which, in turn, comes from Christian theology. (For a detailed understanding of how the left is fixated with human uniqueness, opposing Darwinian evolution, read here.)

If Christianity rejects souls in animals and makes them exclusive human possession, in its own way the left-influenced academia refuses languages for non-human animals. So linguist Noam Chomsky, even as he accepts evolution, finds it hard to attribute Darwinian natural selection to the evolution of language. Daniel Dennett rightly points out that “if Darwin readers ever wanted a champion... deeply and influentially enmeshed within science itself, they could not do better than Chomsky.”


Hindu Anti-evolution

Now it is important to trace the Indian roots of the anti-Darwinian stand that Singh is taking. Essentially, he just made a very crude Indian imitation of the “human uniqueness” stand. One can only wish that he could have been more on the side of Chomsky than the assorted anti-science fundamentalists.

Swami Dayananda Saraswathy, left, of Arya Samaj and his letter, right, to a disciple wherein he declares all castes have the right to study the Vedas.




So there is nothing sacrosanct about the stand of Swami Dayananda on evolution. In fact, in the same lecture, Dayananda also hints at a possibility of an involution-evolution process despite his faulty rejection of evolution.



Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur, Srila Prabhupada, Michael Cremo (top), Richard L Thompson (below), ISKCON’s anti-Darwin publication



The passage perhaps can be applied to all Hindu opposition to evolution, which in itself has been a fringe phenomenon until it gained notoriety recently with the statement of the central minister. This also points out that there is nothing axiomatic about being anti-Darwin or anti-evolution, even in the most vocal anti-evolution streams within Hinduism, even as predominantly Hindu traditions have no or little conflict with evolution.


In all those denunciations of Darwin, one can see that the emphasis is on human uniqueness. But the attempts to establish human uniqueness through science have been proved wrong again and again. Darwinian evolution does explain language and we have witnessed non-human primates use sign languages to speak. For decades, animal cognition scientists have explored the ability of non-human primates to use symbolic language. We now know that they may even be evolving as we speak – what we call culture and probably rudiments of religion. And in this line of research, Koko the gorilla played an important role. Koko, who was born in 1971, was the first gorilla to learn a modified version of human sign language. She was also the first to use a computer.

Koko with researcher and her friend Francine ‘Penny’ Patterson. The 1980s kids in India learnt about the linguistic skills of Koko from the LIC advertisement, which informed also that when caught eating a red crayon, Koko pretended like she was applying lipstick.

In other words, the empirical scientific Darwinian understanding of the inner world of the co-travelling species on ‘spaceship’ Earth is more holistic and full of empathy than the ideologically and theologically motivated views of our relation to fellow species predicated on our supposed superiority. We are apes, or the “naked apes” as Desmond Morris put it decades ago. And there is nothing to be ashamed of in being an ape. We, including humans and chimpanzees and gorillas, are all apes.


Unlike Christian theology (Francis of Assisi is an exception), almost all Indic streams of spirituality acknowledge, the richness of the inner lives of non-human life forms and also their ability for salvation. Temples in South India show non-human animals in worship, pointing out that they have an inner life. The Bhakti traditions of both Saivite and Vaishnavaite streams of Hinduism show non-human animals as equalling any human seer in their efforts for salvation and they are given liberation.

That non-humans also have the right to divine grace and connection is not just belief, but a conviction in Hinduism. Visual at right depicts the story of Gajendra Moksa.


No, this is not a commentary by the Discovery channel or the notes of a primatologist. The one referred as ‘he’ is actually Ramana Maharishi. The sage of Tiruvannamalai recognised the rich inner lives of non-human animals with remarkable clarity. The passage quoted is about the observations made by Maharishi after living closely with the monkey tribes in Tiruvannamalai for 15 years.



Both Ramana Maharishi and Jane Goodall used “he” and “she” to refer to non-human primates. Maharishi’s observations on monkey communities are insightful treasures which need to be studied by cognition scientists. 

When Koko coined new words using the American sign language, she perhaps reinforced this Advaitic vision of inner oneness that was also stated by Darwin when he considered the mental processes between humans and non-human animals. She also demolished the ideologically and theologically motivated claims of human uniqueness.


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