-- By TheodorBruening - 27 Feb 2009
But why would peahens choose the peacock with the most colorful tail, something which is so utterly impractical that it will attract predators and slow down an escape; why would any reasonable peahen want to hand this genetic handicap to their progeny? In fact, peahens, like any other female mammal, look for a mate with strong genes that provide for health, fertility, mental stability, longetivity and the smallest possible number of malevolent genetic mutations. Hence things like a peacock’s tail or a whale’s song are fitness indicators. The more complex the indicators, the more genetic information they summarize. Only an individual of high genetic strength could afford to grow a costly tail or spend hours on singing without dying through lack of energy or falling prey to predators. Precisely how the effort is wasted matters little. One species of apes displayed its fitness through growing large wasteful muscles and developed into gorillas, another through colorful facial skin and became baboons, while a third displayed its fitness through developing creative intelligence and became humans.
Wealth is still in almost every culture the determining factor of fitness. In the same way as the peacock’s tail developed did the rule that an engagement ring must cost two months’ salary. This handicap cost is moreover not fixed but commensurate with the fitness, or salary, of the individual. The most highly paid occupations – law, finance – each contain high levels of competition and prestige.
A peahen reading Veblen might think it preferable if the wasteful tail was abandoned and the energy used for more fruitful endeavors. Males should simply proclaim their fitness honestly. But this would be impossible to police and everyone would have incentives to lie. It would be equally pointless to forego human indicia of fitness; an edible potato is more useful than diamond ring or a night at the theatre, but I cannot forego millennia of evolution and replace the flirtatious handbook with a simple ‘Hi, I’m Theo. Love me.’ The wastefulness of courtship is what makes it romantic. And yes, non-transferable indicia have a direct relationship with wealth, for ambition, confidence and intelligence strongly tend to lead to wealth. For what other reason should lawyers enjoy such high prestige if not due to their intellect and ability? Incidentally, women do the same, for what do lipstick, rouge and silicone implants do other than enhance the display of fertility?
Moreover, the human drive for (conspicuous?) wealth and waste is arguably a ‘good’ thing. If it were not for the runaway evolution of creative intelligence in humans instead of, say, muscles, creating a brain that is both huge and hugely wasteful, humans would have never reached a state in which complex language can lead to aggregate information, which in turn was the founding stone of modern civilization. Modern conspicuous waste is but a logical continuation of this, pursued by different and more varied means.
It might be argued here that animals are not concerned with any of the troubles civilization has created for man and that humans might have been better off without it. But this puts the cart before the horse. Not only has civilization not created the problems, the problems (of waste) have created civilization. Moreover, animals, as shown above, are plagued by precisely the same issues of conspicuous consumption, if only on the basis of expending wasteful calories for singing instead of money for race horses.
For certain, society is plagued with problems of poverty and class segregation to name only two. Yet to see our desire for waste as the root of these problems is over-inclusive, for it will almost certainly be the solution too.