Noaḥ
Beyond Nature
Are we naturally good or naturally bad? On this great minds have argued for a very long time indeed. Hobbes believed that we have naturally “a perpetuall and restlesse desire of Power after power, that ceaseth onely in Death.”1Leviathan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 48. We are bad, but governments and police can help limit the harm we do. Rousseau, to the contrary, believed that naturally we are good. It is society and its institutions that make us bad.2See Discourse on the Origin and Foundations of Inequality Among Men (Discours sur l’origine et les fondements de l’inégalité parmi les hommes), 1754.
The argument continues today among the neo-Darwinians. Some believe that natural selection and the struggle for survival make us, genetically, hawks rather than doves. As Michael T. Ghiselin puts it, “Scratch an ‘altruist’ and watch a ‘hypocrite’ bleed.”3The Economy of Nature and the Evolution of Sex (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1974), 247. By contrast, naturalist Frans de Waal in a series of delightful books about the primates, including his favourite, the bonobos, shows that they can be empathic, caring, and even altruistic.4See, for example, Good-Natured: The Origins of Right and Wrong in Humans and Other Animals (Harvard University Press, 1996); Primates and Philosophers: How Morality Evolved (Princeton University Press, 2006); Chimpanzee Politics (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007); The Age of Empathy: Nature’s Lessons for a Kinder Society (Broadway Books, 2009); The Bonobo and the Atheist (W. W. Norton, 2013); Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are? (W. W. Norton, 2016). So by nature are we.
T. E. Hulme called this the fundamental divide between Romantics and Classicists throughout history. Romantics believed that “man was by nature good, that it was only bad laws and customs that had suppressed him. Remove all these and the infinite possibilities of man would have a chance.”5T. E. Hulme, “Romanticism and Classicism,” in T. E. Hulme: Selected Writings, ed. Patrick McGuiness (New York: Routledge, 2003), 69. Classicists believed the opposite, that “man is an extraordinarily fixed and limited animal whose nature is absolutely constant. It is only by tradition and organisation that anything decent can be got out of him.”6Ibid., 70.
In Judaism, according to the sages, this was the argument between the angels when God consulted them as to whether He should or should not create humans. The angels were the “us” in “Let us make mankind.” The angels of ḥesed (mercy) and tzedek (righteousness) said, “Let him be created because humans do merciful and righteous deeds.” The angels of shalom (peace) and emet (truth) said, “Let him not be created because he is full of falsehood and never ceases quarrelling.” What did God do? He created humans anyway and had faith that we would gradually become better and less destructive.7See Bereshit Rabba 8:5. That, in secular terms, is what Harvard neuroscientist Steven Pinker argues in The Better Angels of Our Nature.8New York: Viking, 2011.
The Torah suggests we are both destructive and constructive, and evolutionary psychology tells us why. We are born to compete and cooperate. On the one hand, life is a competitive struggle for scarce resources – so we fight and kill. On the other hand, we survive only within groups. Without habits of cooperation, altruism, and trust, we would have no groups and we would not survive. That is part of what the Torah means when it says, “It is not good for man to be alone” (Gen. 2:18).
But the Torah is much too profound to leave it at the level of the old joke: a rabbi, hearing both sides of a domestic argument, tells the husband, “You are right,” and the wife, “You are right”; when his disciple says, “They can’t both be right,” the rabbi replies, “You are also right.” The Torah states the problem, but it also supplies an answer that is not obvious. This is the clue that helps us decode a very subtle argument running through the previous parasha and this one.
The basic structure of the story that begins with creation and ends with Noah is this: In the beginning God created a universe of order. He then created human beings, who created a universe of chaos – “the land was filled with violence” (Gen. 6:11). So God, as it were, deleted creation by bringing the Flood, thus returning the earth to the way it was at the very beginning when “the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the spirit of God hovered over the waters” (Gen. 1:2). He then begins again, with Noah and his family as the new Adam and Eve and their children.
Genesis 8–9 is thus a kind of second version of Genesis 1–3, but with two differences. The first is that in both accounts a keyword appears seven times: in Genesis 1 the word is “good”; in Genesis 9 it is “covenant.” The second is that in both cases, reference is made to the fact that humans are in the image of God – but the two sentences have different implications. In Genesis 1 we are told that “God created mankind in His own image, in the image of God He created them, male and female He created them” (Gen. 1:27). In Genesis 9 we read, “Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for in the image of God has God made man” (Gen. 9:6).
The difference is striking. Genesis 1 tells me that “I” am in the image of God. Genesis 9 tells me that “you,” my potential victim, are in the image of God. Genesis 1 tells us about human power. We are able, says the Torah, to “rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air” (Gen. 1:28). Genesis 9 tells us about the moral limits of power. We can kill but we may not. We have the power, but not the permission.
Reading the story closely, it seems that God created humans in the faith that they would naturally choose the right and the good. They would not need to eat the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil because instinct would lead them to behave as they should. Calculation, reflection, decision – all the things we associate with knowledge – would not be necessary. They would act as God wanted them to act, because they had been created in His own image.
It did not turn out that way. Adam and Eve sinned, Cain committed murder, and within a few generations the world was reduced to chaos. That is when we read:
The Lord saw how great the wickedness of the human race had become on the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart was only evil all the time. The Lord regretted that He had made human beings on the earth, and His heart was deeply troubled. (Gen. 6:6)
Everything else in the universe was tov, “good.” But humans are not naturally good. That is the problem. The answer, according to the Torah, is covenant.
Covenant introduces the idea of a moral law. A moral law is not the same as a natural, scientific law. Scientific laws are observed regularities in nature: drop an object and it will fall. A moral law is a rule of conduct: do not rob or steal or deceive. Scientific laws describe, whereas moral laws prescribe. When a natural event does not accord with the current state of science, when it “breaks” the law, that is a sign that there is something wrong with the law. That is why Newton’s laws were replaced by those of Einstein. But when a human act breaks the law, when people do rob and steal and deceive, the fault is not in the law but in the act. So we must keep the law and condemn – and sometimes punish – the act. Scientific laws allow us to predict. Moral laws help us to decide. Scientific laws apply to entities without free will. Moral laws presuppose free will. That is what makes humans qualitatively different from other forms of life.
So, according to the Torah, a new era began, centred not on the idea of natural goodness but on the concept of covenant – that is, moral law. Civilisation began in the move from what the Greeks called physis, nature, to nomos, law. That is what makes the concept of being “in the image of God” completely different in Genesis 1 and Genesis 9. Genesis 1 is about nature and biology. We are in the image of God in the sense that we can think, speak, plan, choose, and dominate. Genesis 9 is about law. Other people are in God’s image. Therefore we must respect them by banning murder and instituting a system of justice. With this simple move, morality was born.
What is the Torah telling us about morality?
First, that it is universal. The Torah places God’s covenant with Noah and through him all humanity prior to His particular covenant with Abraham and His later covenant with his descendants at Mount Sinai. Our universal humanity precedes our religious differences. This may well be the single most important contribution of monotheism to civilisation. All societies, ancient and modern, have had some form of morality but by and large they concern only relations within the group. Hostility to strangers is almost universal in both the animal and human kingdoms. Between strangers, power rules. As the Athenians said to the Melians, “The strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.”9Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War 5.89.
The idea that even the people not like us have rights, and that we should “love the stranger” (Deut. 10:19), would have been considered utterly alien to most people at most times. It took the recognition that there is one God sovereign over all humanity (“Do we not all have one father? Did not one God create us?”; Mal. 2:10) to create the momentous breakthrough to the principle that there are moral universals, among them the sanctity of life, the pursuit of justice, and the rule of law.
Second, God Himself recognises that we are not naturally good. After the Flood, He says: “I will never again curse the ground because of humankind, even though the inclination of their minds is evil from childhood on” (Gen. 8:21). The antidote to the yetzer, the inclination to evil, is covenant.
We now know the neuroscience behind this. We have a prefrontal cortex that evolved to allow humans to think and act reflectively, considering the consequences of their deeds. But this is slower and weaker than the amygdala (what the Jewish mystics called the nefesh habehemit, the animal soul), which produces, even before we have had time to think, the fight-or-flight reactions without which humans before civilisation would simply not have survived.
The problem is that these reactions can be deeply destructive. Often they lead to violence – not only the violence between species (predator and prey) that is part of the order of nature, but also to the more gratuitous violence that is a feature of the life of most social animals, not just humans. It is not that we only do evil. Empathy and compassion are as natural to us as are fear and aggression. The problem is that fear lies just beneath the surface of human interaction, and it threatens all else.
Daniel Goleman calls this an amygdala hijack. “Emotions make us pay attention right now – this is urgent – and give us an immediate action plan without having to think twice. The emotional component evolved very early: Do I eat it, or does it eat me?”10Daniel Goleman, Emotional Intelligence (London: Bloomsbury, 1996), 13ff. Impulsive action is often destructive because it is undertaken without thought of the consequences. That is why Rambam argued that many of the laws of the Torah constitute a training in virtue by making us think before we act.11Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Temura 4:13.
So the Torah tells us that naturally we are neither good nor bad but have the capacity for both. We have a natural inclination to empathy and sympathy, but we have an even stronger instinct for fear that leads to violence. That is why, in the move from Adam to Noah, the Torah shifts from nature to covenant, from tov to brit, from power to the moral limits of power. Genes are not enough. We also need the moral law.