Tuesday, March 23, 2010

In the Next Life, Canto I, stanzas 5-10

If like a chimp, I’d be so much more free.
With women I would share no more than fun.
I would not take responsibility
for what might happen after I am done.

Chimpanzees, one might say, don’t have our brains.
They haven’t near as much to learn, at least.
A mother ape, by instinct, merely trains
her young to gather food, just like a beast.

Our aptitudes increase as knowledge grows.
We gain a big advantage when we’re taught.
We think, invent, establish, and propose.
That extra parent’s handy, is he not?

Okay, that’s fine so far: We’ll say a dad’s
behavior is adaptive; that’s resolved.
But not too long ago, all men were cads.
How rapidly have families evolved?

Besides, if fatherhood were ours innate,
then men not brought up right would still behave
a lot more like the rest, whose chosen fate
is kin to volunteering as a slave.

That’s not to say, I should point out, that men
are under women’s orders. That’s too far.
It only seems a greater contrast when
considering what our genetics are.

© 2010 Louis A. Merrimac

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  3. Greater contrast: Men participate in the raising of children despite the lack of any apparent benefit to themselves and of any genetic predisposition to do so. Merrimac poses the solution of this riddle as the theme of the work, and then proceeds to address a related but quite different question.

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