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2026年2月27日 星期五

Of Termites and Totalitarianism: When Perfect Order Breeds Decay

 Of Termites and Totalitarianism: When Perfect Order Breeds Decay

Evolution often hides its cruellest jokes under the mask of efficiency. A recent Science study revealed that termites — social cockroaches that have built some of the most structured colonies on Earth — achieved their order not through genetic advancement, but through loss. To sustain absolute harmony, they deleted complexity itself.

Compared to their solitary cockroach ancestors, termites possess fewer genes, especially those governing metabolism, reproduction, and mobility. The most astonishing mutation, however, lies in the males. Because termite queens mate for life and face no rival sperm competition, there is no evolutionary reason for sperm to swim. Over generations, the genes for movement simply disappeared. Termite sperm have no tails — they are, quite literally, evolution’s lying-flat generation.

This radical simplification unmasks a deeper irony: complexity of society often demands the decay of individuality. The termite’s empire thrives because its members no longer compete. Larvae that develop quickly become tireless workers; those that grow slowly are spared for royalty and reproduction. The colony’s stability depends on suppressing personal will and turning function into fate.

The metaphor for human societies is disquieting. Highly centralized or totalitarian systems also pursue perfection through uniformity — order through obedience, harmony through self-erasure. Individuals are streamlined to serve the system’s purpose, just as termite genetics are trimmed for collective survival. When creativity and dissent atrophy, the social “genome” contracts too, producing conformity at the cost of vitality.

Ironically, the “lying flat” youth of modern societies echo the same evolutionary fatigue. Faced with rigid hierarchies, over-optimization, and meritocratic exhaustion, they choose non-competition as silent resistance. Like the tailless sperm of termites, they stop running—not from weakness, but from realizing the race no longer leads to freedom.

Perhaps this is evolution’s warning: when the cost of order is the extinction of individuality, both nature and society risk collapsing into sterile stability.