The Times Australia
The Times World News

.
Times Media

.

150 years ago, Charles Darwin wrote about how expressions evolved – pre-empting modern psychology by a century

  • Written by Ben Bradley, Professor Emeritus (Psychology), Charles Sturt University
150 years ago, Charles Darwin wrote about how expressions evolved – pre-empting modern psychology by a century

Was Charles Darwin a one-hit wonder? According to scientists who take a gene’s-eye view of evolution, the 19th-century English naturalist contributed one crucial idea to understanding how species change: natural selection, or “design without a designer”.

However, a book of Darwin’s that is little read by modern evolutionists – The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals – turns out to contain valuable lessons for scientists seeking to understand how and why humans do what we do.

Published 150 years ago, the book has long bemused scientific readers because it hardly mentions natural selection. Instead, it puts how organisms behave at the heart of evolutionary adaptation – an idea that is becoming commonplace in 21st-century biology.

Read more: Curious Kids: how do scientists know evolution is real?[1]

Putting agency into evolution

Since the 1940s, evolutionists have viewed natural selection as an aimless mechanism: random genetic variations arise, and chance environmental events allow the most beneficial (or “fittest”) ones to survive.

More recently, biologists have found it necessary to introduce the actual behaviour of living creatures[2] into this picture. From this perspective, organisms adapt to their circumstances, and genetics then stabilises the changes.

As I show in my book Darwin’s Psychology[3], for Darwin, the agency of organisms – their ability to do things – was the key, whether in driving the struggle for existence, or in explaining the antics of climbing plants, babies and earthworms.

This was because actions produce reactions: what a creature does has consequences for itself and its surroundings.

Those consequences shape its own subsequent actions, and how its descendants eventually evolve.

Read more: Social plants: in the wild, staghorn ferns grow in colonies to improve water storage for all members[4]

Some consequences prove injurious or fatal. Others enhance the doer’s life, even if it is in ways that are not immediately obvious, such as forest trees[5] and honeybees who render “mutual aid” to other members of their own species.

Darwin took this view of agency and applied it to what he called the most social of social species, ourselves.

Expressions and meaning

Darwin studied the mechanics of facial expressions in great detail. The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals / Wikimedia[6]

He analysed in great detail more than 70 different components and types of facial expressions plus other non-facial gestures.

Darwin concluded the movements we call expressions, such as smiling and crying, did not evolve to communicate. For Darwin, smiles and tears do not arrive at the body’s surface already steeped in emotional meanings brewed in the hidden recesses of the expresser’s mind. They are accidental side-effects of other “habits”, or of the ways the nervous system works.

“Expressions” only become meaningful when others read them as such, so the meaning of any so-called “emotional expression” depends on context and other people.

Viewed this way, Darwin’s book argues an expression could only ever have evolved or “become instinctive” if the ability to recognise it had also evolved and “likewise become instinctive”. And if recognising expressions is instinctive, Darwin reasoned, humans should be born able to understand gestures and facial displays.

Child’s play

To find out whether this was the case, Darwin carefully studied the social behaviour of his firstborn child, Doddy. He observed Doddy understood, “at a very early period, the meaning or feelings” of those who took care of him, “by the expression of their features”.

Recent research has confirmed Darwin’s theory that even very young babies can interpret the expressions of others. Shutterstock

Darwin tells us he aimed many “odd noises and strange grimaces” at his four-month-old son. These did not scare Doddy, however, being “taken as good jokes”, because they were “preceded or accompanied by smiles” – the smiles proving legible to Doddy as making humorous his father’s otherwise-fearsome growling and gurning.

These observations pre-empted by more than a century modern psychology’s discovery babies have an inbuilt capacity for sympathetic mind-reading and mental sharing[7].

Universal emotions?

Darwin made clear his book presented a theory of expression rather than a theory of emotion. While he painstakingly pioneered a modern physiological way of studying the human movements it discusses, he found the meanings of such movements – whether emotional or not – to be inescapably social.

Modern psychologists argue[8] over a split between supposedly “basic”, “biological” or “universal” emotions such as anger, which are held to be directly linked to one’s physical state, and “social” emotions such as envy, which are supposed to result from our readings of others.

Darwin’s work sidesteps this controversy, arguing only the observable patterns of facial action we call “expressions” can ever be universal. Whatever meanings are attributed to those actions must derive from the social relationships they reflect.

Reading faces

Darwin used the experiments of the neurologist Guillaume Duchenne, who used electrical stimulation of face muscles to produce expressions. Wikimedia[9]

In Darwin’s time, the traditional way of studying emotions was to ask people about why they were smiling or what they were angry about. However, Darwin’s research went the opposite way: he asked people about how they understood the expressions of others.

He asked expatriate Europeans living on six continents to fill in a survey about the forms of expressive movement they had seen in diverse indigenous peoples “who have associated but little with Europeans”.

He also asked 20 or so well-educated members of his circle to judge what meanings they saw in photographs of 11 facial displays neurologist Guillaume Duchenne had produced by attaching electrodes to muscles in the faces of volunteers so as to simulate different emotional expressions.

Darwin held that only photographs which judges agreed about could be called “genuine” expressions. Pictures of terror, sorrow or laughter produced unanimous responses. Other photos, including Duchenne’s portrait of hatred, proved indecipherable.

Blushing

The masterstroke of The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals comes in its longest chapter, on blushing. Blushes, Darwin shows, result from the rebounding of our faculty for reading others: it is “the thinking what others think of us which excites a blush”.

Thus blushers will blush when they imagine someone blames them for something, even when they are innocent. This conclusion, that one’s reading of others’ attitudes shapes how one acts, underpins the treatments of conscience and morality, sexual coquetry and culture which fill Darwin’s earlier book The Descent of Man (1871).

It also inspired social theorist George Herbert Mead’s invention of what sociologists now call “symbolic interactionism[10]” – the view that all human actions are shaped by what they signify in the groups where they occur.

Read alongside The Descent of Man, of which it was at first intended to form part, The Expression of the Emotions proves that Darwin’s vision of nature as a theatre of agency did more than anticipate biology’s newest theory of adaptation. That same vision laid the groundwork for an idea of psychology based in evolution, where all human meaning has a social origin.

Read more: Guide to the classics: Darwin's The Descent of Man 150 years on — sex, race and our 'lowly' ape ancestry[11]

Read more https://theconversation.com/150-years-ago-charles-darwin-wrote-about-how-expressions-evolved-pre-empting-modern-psychology-by-a-century-170880

The Times Features

Will the Wage Price Index growth ease financial pressure for households?

The Wage Price Index’s quarterly increase of 0.8% has been met with mixed reactions. While Australian wages continue to increase, it was the smallest increase in two and a half...

Back-to-School Worries? 70% of Parents Fear Their Kids Aren’t Ready for Day On

Australian parents find themselves confronting a key decision: should they hold back their child on the age border for another year before starting school? Recent research from...

Democratising Property Investment: How MezFi is Opening Doors for Everyday Retail Investors

The launch of MezFi today [Friday 15th November] marks a watershed moment in Australian investment history – not just because we're introducing something entirely new, but becaus...

Game of Influence: How Cricket is Losing Its Global Credibility

be losing its credibility on the global stage. As other sports continue to capture global audiences and inspire unity, cricket finds itself increasingly embroiled in political ...

Amazon Australia and DoorDash announce two-year DashPass offer only for Prime members

New and existing Prime members in Australia can enjoy a two-year membership to DashPass for free, and gain access to AU$0 delivery fees on eligible DoorDash orders New offer co...

6 things to do if your child’s weight is beyond the ideal range – and 1 thing to avoid

One of the more significant challenges we face as parents is making sure our kids are growing at a healthy rate. To manage this, we take them for regular check-ups with our GP...

Times Magazine

Russia Banned from the Olympics: What Can We Expect?

With Russia being already forced to compete under the name ROC, it is now questionable if there’ll be further sanctions for Russian athletes? Russian Athletes to Face Bans and Championship Disqualifications Is Russia technically banned from com...

Innovative Ways in Which Digital Marketing Can Be Used To Boost Engagement and Profits

The global business environment is subjected to a number of external factors which can have an impact on whether it is experiencing a period of growth or recession. Indeed, the global business environment has changed dramatically during the last fe...

What to Expect at Our Ultimate Indoor Golfing Venue in Rockingham

Here, dear gentlemen, is what the future of golfing looks like in Rockingham! This dream place for those who want to play golf in any weather or at any time of the day will become our ultimate indoor golfing venue. Envision a scenario where one is ...

Elevate Your Construction Projects with Evolve Construction's Innovative Software Suite!

Revolutionising Construction Management with Evolve Construction In the dynamic realm of construction, efficiency is paramount. Evolve Construction is a beacon of innovation, offering a suite of cutting-edge tools meticulously designed to empower ...

Navigate the Complex World of Workers Compensation Care Lawyers

Workers' comp care lawyers specialize in representing injured workers who have been denied benefits or are facing difficulty obtaining the compensation they are owed. They understand the complexities of workers' comp laws and can help injured worke...

Space Machines partners with four start-ups for 2022 Orbital Transfer Vehicle launch

Space Machines Company (SMC), Australian in-space logistics provider, today announces four Australian startups, Spiral Blue, Esper Satellite Imagery, Sperospace and Dandelions, as customers for the launch of its first Orbital Transfer Vehicle, ...