MILES TO READ B4 I SLEEP
Tuesday, 17 March 2026
Evolution as ruthless accountant
Calling evolution a “ruthless accountant” is a vivid metaphor—and a pretty accurate one if you unpack it carefully.
What the metaphor captures
In Evolutionary Biology, natural selection doesn’t care about comfort, fairness, or meaning. It “tracks” only one thing:
What increases reproductive success gets kept; what doesn’t gets cut.
Like an accountant balancing books:
- Traits that pay off (survival + reproduction) → retained
- Traits that are costly without benefit → eliminated
- Trade-offs are constantly evaluated, but blindly
Why “ruthless” fits
Evolution operates without intention or mercy:
- No concern for suffering
Pain, disease, and aging persist if they don’t prevent reproduction. - Short-term over long-term
Traits that help early reproduction can persist even if they cause problems later (e.g., aging-related decline). - Good enough, not perfect
Evolution settles for “works well enough,” not optimal design.
This perspective is strongly associated with thinkers like Richard Dawkins, who emphasize the gene-centered view of selection.
Examples of the “accounting”
- Human back pain
Walking upright has benefits, but the spine is a compromise—not perfectly engineered. - Peacock’s tail
A huge cost (visibility to predators), but “worth it” because it boosts mating success. - Aging
Evolution “doesn’t invest” heavily in maintaining the body after reproduction is likely complete.
Where consciousness fits into this
Linking back to your earlier idea (consciousness as an epiphenomenon):
If evolution is truly this kind of accountant, it raises a sharp question:
Why would something like consciousness exist if it has no causal value?
This creates tension:
- If consciousness is causally useless, evolution shouldn’t “pay for it”
- Yet it’s widespread and metabolically expensive (brains are costly)
So either:
- Consciousness does have a function (even if indirect), or
- It’s a byproduct of something else that is selected for (like complex information processing)
A deeper interpretation
The metaphor also hints at something more unsettling:
- Evolution doesn’t optimize you
- It optimizes gene propagation across generations
In that sense, the “accounting unit” isn’t the organism—it’s closer to what Dawkins called the “replicator.”
Bottom line
“Evolution as a ruthless accountant” means:
- Every trait is implicitly “costed” against reproductive success
- There’s no compassion, foresight, or design goal
- Only differential survival and reproduction shape what persists
If you want, we can push this further—some philosophers argue this metaphor undermines trust in human reasoning itself (an idea explored by Alvin Plantinga).
C as epiphenomenon
The idea of consciousness as an epiphenomenon comes from philosophy of mind and is most closely associated with Thomas Henry Huxley.
What does it mean?
An epiphenomenon is something that is produced by a process but doesn’t influence that process in return.
So, the claim is:
Consciousness is generated by brain activity—but has no causal power over it.
A common analogy:
- The brain is like a steam engine
- Consciousness is like the whistle
- The whistle is caused by the engine, but it doesn’t make the engine run
Core idea in simple terms
- Your thoughts, feelings, and experiences feel like they cause your actions
- But under epiphenomenalism, all actions are actually caused by physical brain processes
- Conscious experience is just a byproduct, not a driver
Why do some philosophers consider this?
It’s mainly a response to tensions between:
- Neuroscience (which explains behavior in physical terms)
- and subjective experience (what it feels like to be conscious)
Some think:
- If the physical world is causally closed (everything physical has a physical cause),
- Then consciousness might not have any independent causal role
Famous arguments connected to this view
1. The causal closure problem
If every physical event has a sufficient physical cause, then:
- Where would consciousness fit in?
- Either it does nothing, or it overdetermines events (which seems unnecessary)
2. The “hard problem” of consciousness
Associated with David Chalmers:
- Why do physical processes produce subjective experience at all?
- Epiphenomenalism says: they just do—but that experience doesn’t affect anything
Criticisms of epiphenomenalism
- It seems counterintuitive
- It feels like pain causes you to withdraw your hand
- Epiphenomenalism says: the withdrawal happens first (physically), and pain is just along for the ride
- Evolutionary problem
- Why would consciousness evolve if it does nothing?
- Natural selection typically favors traits with causal impact
- Self-knowledge paradox
- If consciousness has no causal power, how can you talk about it?
- Your saying “I am conscious” would have to be caused purely by brain activity, not your experience itself
Alternatives
Philosophers who reject epiphenomenalism often support:
- Physicalism: consciousness is identical to brain processes
- Dualism (e.g., René Descartes): mind and body both have causal power
- Panpsychism: consciousness is a fundamental feature of reality
Bottom line
Epiphenomenalism takes a radical stance:
- Consciousness is real, but causally impotent
- It preserves the physical world’s causal structure—but at the cost of making our inner lives strangely irrelevant
If you want, I can compare this directly with physicalism or explain how modern neuroscience views the issue.