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Nature finally gets even with nurture (Are We Blank Slates?)
Financial Times (Book Review) ^ | 4 October 2002 | By Galen Strawson

Posted on 10/07/2002 7:53:51 AM PDT by shrinkermd

I was standing by a swimming pool in Australia in 1993, entangled in a rapidly degenerating politico-philosophical argument, when my interlocutor saw the light. I was, she said, a humanist. I thought this was a nice thing to be (still do), but she emitted the word with anger and derision and took it to end the argument in her favour. I discovered that humanism is a term of heavy moral opprobrium in fashionable, post-modern, politically correct areas of the academy; a term of abuse that denotes someone like Winston in George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four - someone who believes in a fundamental shared human nature in the teeth of his opponent, government agent O'Brien, who insists that "men are infinitely malleable", that "we create human nature".

Agent O'Brien subscribes to the "Blank Slate" - the subject of Steven Pinker's excellent new book: the doctrine (in its extreme form) that we are born mentally the same in every way, intellectually, emotionally and so on; boys and girls alike. Genes are for nothing in how we turn out to be; environmental influences are everything. Human nature is Silly Putty: "man has no nature" (José Ortega y Gasset); "the human being is instinctless" (Ashley Montagu); "our emotions are cultural products" (Clifford Geertz); "a blank sheet of paper has no blotches" (Mao Tse Tung).

No one now accepts the extreme Blank Slate, except perhaps for the zany anthropologists, and many of its supporters also embrace the strictly speaking incompatible doctrine of the "Noble Savage", Rousseau's (anti-Hobbesian) idea that we are all naturally kind and good and have "no selfish or evil instincts".

These two ideas are perhaps the most characteristic and most idealistic - but in practice the ugliest - product of the Enlightenment, and together they hold out promise of future bliss. Human beings can live in total harmony. All we have to do is to get our social and educational arrangements right. It's true that we've failed to do so throughout recorded history, but the problem can be fixed.

Aren't idealism and optimism good things? No. Blank Slate and/or Noble Savage led to totalitarian communism and hundreds of millions of deaths. Realism is the thing. You have to be a dough-brained ideologue to believe either of these views, even in their lighter versions. You have to lack any genuine understanding of what it is to be human (it is part of human nature to be rather good at this).

Pinker documents the error in detail, examining the fabulous damage that the Blank Slate has done and setting out the scientific findings that demolish it. The Blank Slate gives the full story of how it is reeling back from advances in neuropsychology, experimental psychology, cognitive science and evolutionary psychology.

How alike are we, psychologically, given all our striking differences? How deep does our common nature run? Well, the extent of the differences between human minds is exactly like the extent of the differences between human bodies: body differences can be highly dramatic, but they are all variations on a massive base of body similarity (we all have heads, limbs, hearts, kidneys and so on).

So too mental differences can be dramatic, but they all depend on a vast base of mental similarity (from ability to talk and sense to a profound common susceptibility to fundamental emotions such as surprise, anger, disgust, joy and fear). And all the truly fundamental mental variation between people (between the introvert, the extravert, the sanguine, the phlegmatic, the choleric, the melancholic) is to be found within a given society; not when we compare different societies.

Can we quantify how much mental variation is down to the genes, and how much to environmental influence? Studies of identical twins raised apart from birth show the huge influence of genes on intellectual ability and personality, and also on peculiarly trivial matters (both like to pretend to sneeze in lifts, wear rubber bands round their wrist, dip buttered toast in coffee).

The figure that's constantly confirmed is that about half of the variation in intelligence, personality and life outcomes is "heritable" - a correlate or indirect product of the genes. One particularly striking finding is that family environment has no significant effect on variations in character or personality, and that "virtually all the differences in parenting within a family can be explained as reactions to the genetic differences that the children were born with".

Pinker lays it all out with clarity and wit; he also gives the history of the Blank Slate and Noble Savage, ranging widely and quoting copiously and devastatingly. He considers the fears raised by proof of the profound extent of genetic influence on minds - fear of determinism (no free will), of ineradicable human inequality, of nihilism, of insoluble human discord - and shows, first, that abandoning the Blank Slate makes no real difference to these issues, second, that problems of human inequality and conflict are far better dealt with by admitting the truth about human nature.

He has excellent chapters on politics, violence, gender, children and art - in particular the anti-human character of post-modern art which allows someone like Karlheinz Stockhausen to call the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 "the greatest work of art imaginable for the whole cosmos".

Humanists, then, fight for the existence of something utterly obvious (so often one has to fight for the obvious): a deep, complex, specific, shared, fundamentally unalterable human nature with wonderful inlaid variations. And they also point out, against the Noble Savage, that some parts of human nature are pretty bad news.

What follows? Well, human nature is certainly the problem; but it is also the solution, as Pinker says. You want to bring about change in society? Forget the utopia freaks whose utopias are always dystopias because they ignore human nature. Listen instead to the long history of humanity's mature thought about itself, from Buddha to Bellow. Listen to Chekhov: "Man will become better when you show him what he is like."

THE BLANK SLATE by Steven Pinker , Penguin Press £25/Viking $27.95 528 pages


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: evil; humanism; iq; nature; nurture; personality
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Most "realists" have either seen human nature's short-comings either through the "original sin" concept or the Freudian "id" concept. Essentially, most realize there is intrinsic human capability of evil. Dealing with this is a lifetime struggle for all except, perhaps, the Saints.

In spite of our natures, Alfred Adler's dictum still stands --"..We are all more alike than we are different..."

1 posted on 10/07/2002 7:53:51 AM PDT by shrinkermd
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To: shrinkermd
We have our own "blank slatters" here on FR -- they insist that sexual orientation is programmed by culture. ha ha ha
2 posted on 10/07/2002 7:57:02 AM PDT by jlogajan
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3 posted on 10/07/2002 8:06:56 AM PDT by William McKinley
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To: shrinkermd
Well, it's an interesting mental model, but doesn't do real well in the face of centuries - oh, heck, millennia - of observation on higher animals. No one seems particularly upset at the claim that some of these are born predisposed to behavior one way, some another, and some learn behavior one way, some another. Anyone who's ever kept livestock or hunted deer can verify that (or go very hungry in either case).

It is certainly debatable that human culture is more or less responsible for offsetting or enhancing those behaviors that are influenced by one's physiological and chemical makeup - one's genetic inheritance if I may further misuse that already much-abused term. It may be true that genetic inheritance does not count in terms of human behavior, but it not we're the only animals on the planet that are like that.

4 posted on 10/07/2002 8:29:54 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: shrinkermd
I was standing by a swimming pool in Australia in 1993, entangled in a rapidly degenerating politico-philosophical argument, when my interlocutor saw the light. I was, she said, a humanist. I thought this was a nice thing to be (still do), but she emitted the word with anger and derision and took it to end the argument in her favour. I discovered that humanism is a term of heavy moral opprobrium in fashionable, post-modern, politically correct areas of the academy;

And that's where I stopped. I always thought the first paragraph of an essay was supposed to draw the reader in, not make him think he's too stupid to understand the gist of the essay.

Do people actually talk like this?

5 posted on 10/07/2002 9:50:56 AM PDT by Cable225
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To: Cable225
"Do people actually talk like this?"

Yes, quite commonly in formal essays and in academe.

6 posted on 10/07/2002 10:25:15 AM PDT by shrinkermd
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To: shrinkermd
Humanists, then, fight for the existence of something utterly obvious (so often one has to fight for the obvious)
. . . such as the fact that SCoNJ, in manipulating the election-law timetable for the benefit of the Democratic Party, is delegitimating our entire electoral process.

7 posted on 10/07/2002 11:51:15 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: shrinkermd
I am a huge Pinker fan! I greatly enjoyed his book, "How the Mind Works". The latest issue of Reason magazine has an excellent interview with him. He also has some interesting essays posted on his MIT website. This man has an incredible mind!
8 posted on 10/07/2002 11:57:14 AM PDT by shempy
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To: shrinkermd
I discovered that humanism is a term of heavy moral opprobrium in fashionable, post-modern, politically correct areas of the academy

What?!
Humanism is a term of HEAVY MORAL APPROVAL in the fashionable, post-modern,
politically correct areas of the academy.

Which of course means about 90% of the academy.
(Even the schools of engineering and physical sciences are being infested by
the politically-correct as time goes by.)
9 posted on 10/07/2002 12:01:18 PM PDT by VOA
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion
There is an excellent article in the October issue of Discover Magazine that totally debunks the notion of the "Tabula Rasa" and it talks about all the atrocities committed by the left over this idea, including Mao, The Khmer Rouge, B.F. Skinner and others. It's a good read. Nature loaded us up with all kinds of things to protect us. I was watching our new kitty cope with the outdoors at our farm the other day. That little sucker was so hyped full of adrenelin, it was bouncing around the yard like a soccer ball. It's little mind knew there was potential danger out there.
10 posted on 10/07/2002 12:01:28 PM PDT by tom paine 2
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To: Cable225
Do people actually talk like this?

Yes.
These are the sort of people running the show at universities that parents
gladly give >$20,000/year to...if their child is lucky enough to be admitted.

Pretty incredible, isn't it?
11 posted on 10/07/2002 12:03:27 PM PDT by VOA
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To: shrinkermd
Listen instead to the long history of humanity's mature thought about itself, from
Buddha to Bellow. Listen to Chekhov: "Man will become better when you show him
what he is like."


Funny how he gets through the B's (Buddha, Bellow), and makes it to the C's (Chekhov).
Just can't make it to the Chr area.
I guess the word Christianity or Judaism, which both talked a LOT about how
human nature needs positive direction are just too explosive for discussion.

Couldn't admit that a bunch of sheep-herds, fishermen and tentmakers (OK, including
some very educated ones) might have arrived at these conclusions without PhDs.
12 posted on 10/07/2002 12:08:55 PM PDT by VOA
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To: shrinkermd
"Blank slate" philosophers were generally single, childless men, except for Rouseau who abandoned all five of his children at an orphanage.
13 posted on 10/07/2002 12:11:41 PM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: VOA
Pinker is not even close to being politically correct.
14 posted on 10/07/2002 12:12:33 PM PDT by shempy
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To: shempy
I am a huge Pinker fan!

Me too! I really like it when he says parents can kill their children up until age two or something like that. Way cool!

15 posted on 10/07/2002 12:13:32 PM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: shempy
Pinker is not even close to being politically correct.

Let me clarify.
I was saying that whoever actually thinks the term "humanism" is a term
of moral approbrium in the academy probably hasn't been in the academy for 20-30 years.
I suspect that humanism has been essentially a religion for nearly a generation
in most of the academy.
I KNOW it has been such for even fairly conservative state U's in "flyover country"
for the past decade.

Such an outcome is not too suprising, when you find that the academy is now
little more than a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Democratic National Committee
(as per article in Sept. "The American Enterprise").
16 posted on 10/07/2002 12:45:06 PM PDT by VOA
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To: shrinkermd
>>Dealing with this is a lifetime struggle for all except, perhaps, the Saints. <<

I would say, especially for the saints. Fom what I read in this article it sounds like the author of "Blank Slate" is using his book to paraphrase the Christian concept of who we are, that man in by nature evil, etc.

I mentioned this in my "biological machines" post a few months ago. That is, the human body we occupy is just that, a vessel our spirit occupies. That is why the apostle Paul in Romans talks about it is not him but "sin working within his body." It influences our actions - the desire to eat, procreate, etc.

Christians are removed, spiritually, from the body and the body is recognised for what it is, a mere vessel - One to be treated with respect for sure for, as it is the dwelling place of the spirit. But ultimately the body is just that, a temporary vessel that will wear out or be destroyed. It then goes back to dust - the memories and instincts as well, as they are mere wrinkles on the brain, one of many organs which is just so much worm food at death.

I've bought into that belief for decades. That is why I'm not a utopian.
17 posted on 10/07/2002 3:03:27 PM PDT by RobRoy
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To: shrinkermd
Isn't Pinker the "ethicist" at Princeton who advocates killing crippled or stupid neonates?
18 posted on 10/07/2002 3:34:23 PM PDT by rmlew
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To: Aquinasfan
Me too! I really like it when he says parents can kill their children up until age two or something like that. Way cool!

You don't know what you are talking about. Stephen Pinker has advocated no such thing. Do some research.

19 posted on 10/07/2002 10:14:06 PM PDT by shempy
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To: rmlew
No. That is Singer.
20 posted on 10/07/2002 10:20:32 PM PDT by shempy
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