Two possible answers have been suggested. One is that males are
necessary to combat disease: without sexual reproduction, a
clonal species is vulnerable to increasing parasitic attack. The
other theory holds that sex helps purge the species of genetic
mutations by shuffling the genes in each generation.
Neither of these explanations need trouble us. We are not going
to use cloning to make the whole of the next generation from one
individual (though in the 1930s several eminent geneticists
thought that when IVF became available, lots of people would
rush out to choose prominent men such as Lenin as a
father--which just goes to show how wrong geneticists can be
about the future). Also, genetic mutations accumulate much too
slowly to worry us.
And even if sex proved to be genetically unnecessary, it still
wouldn't be a total waste of energy. It is to sex, after all,
that we owe most of the things we consider aesthetically
appealing in nature. If it were not for sex, there would be no
blossoms and no birdsong. A flower-filled meadow resounding with
the dawn chorus of songbirds is actually a scene of frenzied
sexual competition. Geoffrey Miller, an evolutionary
psychologist at University College London, has pointed out that
everything extravagant about human life, from poetry to fast
cars, is rooted in sexual one-upmanship.
"If women didn't exist, all the money in the world would have no
meaning," said Aristotle Onassis, who should know. Or, as Henry
Kissinger put it, "power is the great aphrodisiac." So where
would humans - and human civilization - be without sex? Probably
back with the aphids and dandelions, I suspect, procreating
effortlessly but building neither empires nor cathedrals.
Matt Ridley is the author of "The Red Queen: Sex and the
Evolution of Human Nature." His newest book, "Genome: The
Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters," is due out in February
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