Fair enough, for as much stink and some people tended to make about your position on Werelist, I've always found your demeanor to be agreeable enough.
While I have a respect for Soviet science, and believe that its reputation is generally much less than what is deserved, none can deny some of its shortcomings. The most infamous of these failures, of course, was Lysenkoism, a genetic doctrine which assumed the heritability of acquired traits. Lysenkoism has been definitively disproven and is used as the textbook example of ideology dictating science, with the irony that since all scientists are human beings and part of society, there can be no science which exists beyond ideology, but that's a tangent.
Just to be sure I am understanding your argument correctly. You believe that Neanderthals interacted with wolves and other animals and that the psychological impact of these interactions was inherited by their offspring genetically?
I am not trained in genetics or neurology, but my instinct is to be doubtful of this. What is certain is that no social order can be naturalized, otherwise society would never change since it would create a psychological feedback loop that makes breaking out impossible. This is exactly what is popular for ideologues to do today, to proclaim that modern society is the form that best coincides with the 'natural needs' of humanity, that it coincides with common sense, human nature, etc. It seems they missed Francis Fukoyama's memo that he got it wrong.
Psychology doesn't flow in a straightforward way from physiology, I think you would agree with that, nor does it exist in isolation from it. Psychology, with respect to biology and society, have a mutually influential relationship. Determining where one begins and the other ends is the difficult part, but we have seen through the course of history that it is the social factors which tend to predominate over biological ones as the engine of history and change.
Your position seems like it comes close to suggesting that a social order can be encoded into ones genes, and passed on. Correct me if I'm wrong on that.
There are interesting questions about the role of animals in human society. As furries have pointed out, animals and their representations have played an important role in society since the dawn of civilization. What I think they have not paid so much attention to is how this role has changed over time, and why.
Animals have always had their most prominent role in pagan societies. Pagan theology revolves around a naturalized order, in which everything has its place. A slave is a slave, and can never aspire to be anything more. It is the slave's place to be a slave. The master's position as master is similarly part of the natural order. Animals also had naturally ordained places as teachers, which a human might emulate, but never usurp.
It is no coincidence that Christianity and Islam came to dominate the globe, in my opinion. Not only in terms of sheer numbers, but intellectually as well. The vast bulk of modern science and philosophy is built upon the foundations provided by those two cultures.. we owe no less to Averroes and Avicenna than we do Aquinas. The role of Islam is often excessively downplayed, but that's another tangent.
I am reminded of this passage from
The Oracle of the Dog by G.K. Chesterson:
Quote:People readily swallow the untested claims of this, that, or the other. It’s drowning
all your old rationalism and scepticism, it’s coming in like a sea; and the
name of it is superstition. It’s the first effect of not believing in God that you lose
your common sense and can’t see things as they are. Anything that anybody talks
about, and says there’s a good deal in it, extends itself indefinitely like a vista in
a nightmare. And a dog is an omen, and a cat is a mystery, and a pig is a mascot,
and a beetle is a scarab, calling up all the menagerie of polytheism from Egypt
and old India; Dog Anubis and great green- eyed Pasht and all the holy howling
Bulls of Bashan; reeling back to the bestial gods of the beginning, escaping into
elephants and snakes and crocodiles; and all because you are frightened of four
words: He was made Man.
I am not religious, but he touches the essentially revolutionary kernel of Christianity: the demolition of the old pagan naturalized order. The old pagan animal gods were nothing other than human contrivances. The essence of that Christian theology was that if there were slaves and masters, then it was only because we made it so ourselves, not that it was part of some natural order. It is about agency and responsibility. It is about freedom from the tyranny of a symbolic order that we ourselves have made, but presented as part of an immutable, natural world. That's my interpretation at least, but I have a lot of reading to do on the subject yet.
It was after the victory of Christianity and Islam and the destruction of antiquity that the status of animal representation in society went down dramatically, a decline from which there has never really been a full recovery from. Few would deny that the connection between human and animal is far more tenuous than it was several millennia ago.
If technological and social advancement renders possible a society in which animals are not needed for any purpose, for food, labor or companionship, a future which we have to admit is a possibility, we have to also ask ourselves what the symbolic significance of animals would be in such a society?
Is our connection to animals something that is contingent on the form of society, or is it something that immutable and exists beyond genetics, beyond society?
This is the question that first needs to be answered before one can even contemplate 'why so many wolves'. It seems that the latter possibility can't be considered without recourse to mysticism and supernatural explanations.