The Hundredth Monkey Revisited
Going back to the original sources
puts a new light on this popular story
by Elaine Myers
One of the articles in Strategies For Cultural Change (IC#9) Spring 1985, Page 10
Copyright (c)1985, 1997 by Context Institute
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Is there some magic key that provides a short cut to cultural transformation?
Elaine Myers has had articles in issues #2, #5, and #7. She lives
in rural southwest Washington state.
THE STORY OF "The Hundredth Monkey" has recently become popular
in our culture as a strategy for social change. Lyall Watson first told
it in Lifetide (pp147- 148), but its most widely known version is
the opening to the book The Hundredth Monkey, by Ken Keyes. (See
below.) The story is based on research with monkeys on a northern Japanese
Island, and its central idea is that when enough individuals in a population
adopt a new idea or behavior, there occurs an ideological breakthrough that
allows this new awareness to be communicated directly from mind to mind
without the connection of external experience and then all individuals
in the population spontaneously adopt it. "It may be that when enough
of us hold something to be true, it becomes true for everyone." (Watson,
p148)
I found this to be a very appealing and believable idea. The concept
of Jung's collective unconscious, and the biologists' morphogenetic fields
(IN CONTEXT #6} offer parallel stories that help strengthen this
strand of our imaginations. Archetypes, patterns, or fields that are themselves
without mass or energy, could shape the individual manifestations of mass
and energy. The more widespread these fields are, the greater their influence
on the physical level of reality. We sometimes mention the Hundredth Monkey
Phenomenon when we need supporting evidence of the possibility of an optimistic
scenario for the future, especially a future based on peace instead of war.
If enough of us will just think the right thoughts, then suddenly, almost
magically, such ideas will become reality.
However, when I went back to the original research reports cited by Watson,
I did not find the same story that he tells. Where he claims to have had
to improvise details, the research reports are quite precise, and they do
not support the "ideological breakthrough" phenomenon. At first
I was disappointed; but as I delved deeper into the research I found a growing
appreciation for the lessons the real story of these monkeys has for us.
Based on what I have learned from the Japan Monkey Center reports in Primates,
vol. 2, vol. 5 and vol. 6, here is how the real story seems to
have gone.
Up until 1958, Keyes' description follows the research quite closely,
although not all the young monkeys in the troop learned to wash the
potatoes. By March, 1958, 15 of the 19 young monkeys (aged two to seven
years} and 2 of the 11 adults were washing sweet potatoes. Up to this time,
the propagation of the innovative behavior was on an individual basis, along
family lines and playmate relationships. Most of the young monkeys began
to wash the potatoes when they were one to two and a half years old. Males
older than 4 years, who had little contact with the young monkeys, did not
acquire the behavior.
By 1959, the sweet potato washing was no longer a new behavior to the
group. Monkeys that had acquired the behavior as juveniles were growing
up and having their own babies. This new generation of babies learned sweet
potato washing behavior through the normal cultural pattern of the young
imitating their mothers. By January, 1962, almost all the monkeys in the
Koshima troop, excepting those adults born before 1950, were observed to
be washing their sweet potatoes. If an individual monkey had not started
to wash sweet potatoes by the time he was an adult, he was unlikely to learn
it later, regardless of how widespread it became among the younger members
of the troop.
In the original reports, there was no mention of the group passing a
critical threshold that would impart the idea to the entire troop. The older
monkeys remained steadfastly ignorant of the new behavior. Likewise, there
was no mention of widespread sweet potato washing in other monkey troops.
There was mention of occasional sweet potato washing by individual monkeys
in other troops, but I think there are other simpler explanations for such
occurrences. If there was an Imo in one troop, there could be other Imo-like
monkeys in other troops.
Instead of an example of the spontaneous transmission of ideas, I think
the story of the Japanese monkeys is a good example of the propagation of
a paradigm shift, as in Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.
The truly innovative points of view tend to come from those on the edge
between youth and adulthood. The older generation continues to cling to
the world view they grew up with. The new idea does not become universal
until the older generation withdraws from power, and a younger generation
matures within the new point of view.
It is also an example of the way that simple innovations can lead to
extensive cultural change. By using the water in connection with their food,
the Koshima monkeys began to exploit the sea as a resource in their environment.
Sweet potato washing led to wheat washing, and then to bathing behavior
and swimming, and the utilization of sea plants and animals for food. "Therefore,
provisioned monkeys suffered changes in their attitude and value system
and were given foundations on which pre-cultural phenomena developed."
(M Kawai, Primates, Vol 6, #1, 1965).
What does this say about morphogenetic fields, and the collective unconscious?
Not very much, but the "ideological breakthrough" idea is not
what Sheldrake's theory of morphogenetic fields would predict anyway. That
theory would recognize that the behavior of the older monkeys (not washing)
also is a well-established pattern. There may well be a "critical
mass" required to shift a new behavior from being a fragile personal
idiosyncrasy to being a well-established alternative, but creating a
new alternative does not automatically displace older alternatives. It
just provides more choices. It is possible that the washing alternative
established by the monkeys on Koshima Island did create a morphogenetic
field that made it easier for monkeys on other islands to "discover"
the same technique, but the actual research neither supports nor denies
that idea. It remains for other cultural experiments and experiences to
illuminate this question.
What the research does suggest, however, is that holding positive ideas
(as important a step as this is) is not sufficient by itself to change
the world. We still need direct communication between individuals, we need
to translate our ideas into action, and we need to recognize the freedom
of choice of those who choose alternatives different from our own.
The Hundredth Monkey
by Ken Keyes
The Japanese monkey, Macaca fuscata, has been observed in the wild
for a period of over 30 years.
In 1952, on the island of Koshima, scientists were providing monkeys
with sweet potatoes dropped in the sand. The monkeys liked the taste of
the raw sweet potatoes, but they found the dirt unpleasant.
An 18-month-old female named Imo found she could solve the problem by
washing the potatoes in a nearby stream. She taught this trick to her mother.
Her playmates also learned this new way and they taught their mothers, too.
This cultural innovation was gradually picked up by various monkeys before
the eyes of the scientists.
Between 1953 and 1958 all of the young monkeys learned to wash the sandy
sweet potatoes to make them more palatable.
Only the adults who imitated their children learned this social improvement.
Other adults kept eating the dirty sweet potatoes.
Then something startling took place. In the autumn of 1958, a certain
number of Koshima monkeys were washing sweet potatoes - the exact number
is not known.
Let us suppose that when the sun rose one morning there were 99 monkeys
on Koshima Island who had learned to wash their sweet potatoes.
Let us further suppose that later that morning the hundred monkey learned
to wash potatoes.
THEN IT HAPPENED!
By that evening almost everyone in the tribe was washing sweet potatoes
before eating them.
The added energy of this hundredth monkey somehow created an ideological
breakthrough!
But notice.
A most surprising thing observed by these scientists was that the habit
of washing sweet potatoes then jumped over the sea -
Colonies of monkeys on other islands and the mainland troop of monkeys
at Takasakiyama began washing their sweet potatoes!
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