Abstract
The ground‐zero premise (so to speak) of the biological sciences is that survival and reproduction is the basic, continuing, inescapable problem for all living organisms; life is at bottom a ‘survival enterprise’. It follows that survival is the ‘paradigmatic problem’ for human societies as well; it is a prerequisite for any other, more exalted objectives. Although the term ‘adaptation’ is also familiar to social scientists, until recently it has been used only selectively, and often very imprecisely. Here a more rigorous and systematic approach to the concept of adaptation is proposed in terms of ‘basic needs’. The concept of basic human needs has a venerable history – tracing back at least to Plato and Aristotle. Yet the development of a formal theory of basic needs has lagged far behind. The reason is that the concept of objective, measurable needs is inconsistent with the theoretical assumptions that have dominated economic and social theory for most of this century, namely, ‘value‐relativism’ and ‘cultural determinism’. Nevertheless, there have been a number of efforts over the past 30 years to develop more universalistic criteria for basic needs, both for use in monitoring social well‐being (‘social indicators’) and for public policy formulation. Here I will advance a strictly biological approach to perationalizing the concept of basic needs. It is argued that much of our economic and social life (and the motivations behind our revealed preferences and subjective utility assessments), not to mention the actions of modern governments, are either directly or indirectly related to the meeting of our basic survival needs. Furthermore, these needs can be specified to a first approximation and supported empirically to varying degrees, with the obvious caveat that there are major individual and contextual variations in their application. Equally important, complex human societies generate an array of ‘instrumental needs’ which, as the term implies, serve as intermediaries between our primary needs and the specific economic, cultural and political contexts within which these needs must be satisfied. An explicit framework of ‘Survival Indicators’, including a profile of ‘Personal Fitness’ and an aggregate index of ‘Population Fitness’, is briefly elucidated. Finally, it is suggested that a basic needs paradigm could provide an analytical tool (a ‘bio‐logic’) for examining more closely the relationship between our social, economic and political behaviors and institutions and their survival consequences, as well as providing a predictive tool of some value.
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Corning, P.A. Biological Adaptation in Human Societies: a ‘Basic Needs’ Approach. Journal of Bioeconomics 2, 41–86 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1010027222840
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1010027222840