๐Ÿค– Why Advancing Societies Must Become More Diverse

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When the evolutionary origin of autonomy is that natural selection never gets the whole species, then autonomy alone cannot do the job. It cannot be known in advance what we will be selected for. For this reason evolution would drive the genome of a species towards a suitable level of diversity. What diversity does is create the spread โ€” so that the likelihood of a selection event eliminating all of us is minimised โ€” while staying coherent enough that we can play on the advantage of fulfilling our needs together.

Evolutionary biology calls this bet-hedging: a risk-spreading strategy in which populations diversify their traits, accepting lower average fitness in stable times in exchange for survival when conditions shift. It has been observed across bacteria, plants, insects, and vertebrates. It may be one of the earliest evolutionary solutions to life in fluctuating environments. Diversity is not a byproduct of evolution. It is a strategy.

This reframes individuality. We tend to experience autonomy as something personal โ€” my freedom, my boundaries, my survival. And it is. But from the perspective of the species, individuality is a statistical protection. My death does not cause your death. My failure does not guarantee yours. The species survives because its members are not identical. Diversity is our collective immune system.

Here is what makes me wonder. As a species increases its capabilities, it controls the flow of more and more energy. Alfred Lotka observed in 1922 that natural selection tends to maximise the energy flux through a system โ€” organisms and populations that capture and use more energy than their competitors gain a selective advantage. This means that as a species advances, it does not merely occupy its environment more effectively. It reshapes its environment more powerfully, creating new possibilities and new risks in the process.

A species that controls more energy operates in a more complex environment โ€” one with more dimensions along which selection can act. More niches open. More ways to fail emerge. More ways to succeed become available. If diversity is the strategy that keeps a species resilient against unpredictable selection, then a more capable species โ€” one flowing more energy through more complex systems โ€” would need more diversity to maintain the same level of resilience.

The relationship is unlikely to be linear. A population that doubles its energy throughput does not need double the diversity. But the direction seems clear: as capability increases, the required diversity increases with it. Joseph Tainter’s work on the collapse of complex societies points to a related dynamic from the other direction โ€” societies invest in complexity to solve problems, and those investments eventually reach diminishing marginal returns. When the cost of maintaining complexity exceeds the benefit, collapse follows. Diversity is a component of that complexity. Accommodating diverse perspectives, lifestyles, and strategies requires institutional infrastructure, coordination mechanisms, and trust โ€” all of which have energy costs.

This suggests a pattern. Advancing societies do not merely happen to become more diverse. They must become more diverse, because the selection pressures they face grow with their capabilities. And they face a tension: the very diversity that protects them also increases the complexity they must manage. A society that cannot accommodate its increasing diversity will eventually face selection pressures it cannot survive โ€” not because diversity caused the collapse, but because the refusal to accommodate it left the society brittle in exactly the dimensions where flexibility was needed.

The homework, then, is not to tolerate diversity as a concession. It is to build the infrastructure that makes diversity coherent โ€” that allows a population of deeply different individuals to coordinate without collapsing into sameness and without fragmenting into isolation. This is what empathic communication does. It does not ask us to agree. It asks us to understand what the other actually needs. That is a much lower bar โ€” and a much more stable foundation.

Any society which cannot accommodate its ever increasing diversity will go down. Not because diversity is the problem. Because diversity is the solution, and refusing it means facing the future without your immune system.


Further reading:

Cohen, Dan. “Optimizing Reproduction in a Randomly Varying Environment.” Journal of Theoretical Biology 12, no. 1 (1966): 119โ€“129. โ€” The foundational paper on bet-hedging theory in evolutionary biology.

Lotka, Alfred J. “Natural Selection as a Physical Principle.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 8, no. 6 (1922): 151โ€“154. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.8.6.151 โ€” Proposes that natural selection tends to maximise the total energy flux through a system, linking evolutionary fitness to thermodynamic principles.

Tainter, Joseph A. The Collapse of Complex Societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. โ€” Argues that societies collapse when investments in complexity reach diminishing marginal returns.

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