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The proliferation of pop neuroscience in the media has encouraged the belief that here is a cornucopia of panaceas in the making, and a fresh source of science-based omniscience is not without its attractions to political theorists — or worse still, politicians. The potential in economics hardly bears thinking about, but some have, like the neuro-economist George Loewenstein: 

Our emotions are like programmes that evolved to make important and recurring decisions in the distant past. They are not always well suited to the decisions we make in modern life. It's important to know how our emotions lead us astray so that we can design incentives and programmes to help compensate for our irrational biases.

Correcting human irrationality, like the pursuit of empathy, is a worthy project. So why does it give rise to instinctive suspicions? Maybe because a century ago utopian theories could hold a spring-like promise, whereas today they carry a whiff of the grave. 

The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature by Steven Pinker (Penguin, 2002), another of my common reader texts, pleased me at first by its insistence that there is such a thing as human nature, and denial that our minds were virgin white. ("On a blank sheet of paper free from any mark, the freshest and most beautiful pictures can be painted," Mao claimed, and guess who would wield the brush?) But then Pinker seems to me to have nudged his account of the evolution of the brain towards his own political and philosophical preferences. Some we might support, but that is not the issue. Bestseller though he is, he is one in an increasingly crowded field, and others are free to invent a different human trajectory leading to a different politics, and to call it science.

Bryan Appleyard's book The Brain is Wider than the Sky: Why Simple Solutions Don't Work in a Complex World (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2011) reminds us that there are sober folk in neuroscience who recognise the immaturity of their discipline, and while excited by its potential make no extravagant claims. Yet as the title suggests it is also about the dangers of reductionism, and the assault on the self. His most telling demonstration comes when he subjects himself to a scan, in the course of which he recalls his father's early death. His account of his own incarceration inside the fMRI machine, a physically stressful business during which he volunteered to recall painful memories, seems to me a vivid metaphor for its potential as a punitive form of parascience, as well as a means to enlighten humanity and promote cures for terrible diseases. At its worst it begins to feel as if the ultimate purpose of the giant machine were to crush the self out of us. The scientists Appleyard dealt with were people of great ability, integrity and considerateness, yet we feel that, in other hands, the potential for some new form of Inquisition is there.

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pbasch
April 4th, 2012
9:04 PM
Interesting essay, but: You say, "...mind, consciousness and religion are figments of his intemperate imagination." That's not how I read the field. Religion, yes - that lives entirely in the imagination. "Mind" is too broad a word, like "society", or "truth" - it exists in a semantic sense. "Consciousness" clearly does exist, and is a function of our biology - brain and/or body. In fact, I don't see how "consciousness" could be a figment - simply having an imagination which can generate a figment is evidence of real consciousness.

Michael Russell
April 4th, 2012
6:04 PM
Every discipline gets in trouble when it claims to have reached the level of full determinism from causes to effects. But I don't see those claims among those folks only some tendrils pushing out to find more answers. Eagleman's "Incognito" and Pinker's current book "The Better Angels of our Nature" are both evocative of more discovery without a sense of completion. I am surprised that you dealt with Pinker 2002 and not Pinker 2011. As an aside... for heaven's sake get ride of the sans serif type face it is ugly and hard to read when so densely packed!

Anonymous
April 4th, 2012
5:04 PM
Brilliant stuff - clearly puts the new eugenics in it's place and a plague upon reductionists everywhere. Sadly Michael Farr's comments only serve to demonstrate that so many people still miss the point entirely. E

runbei
April 4th, 2012
4:04 PM
The "method" for balancing the influences of the amygdala and prefrontal cortex has been known and tested for millennia. It is meditation; see the studies of Richard Davidson, Vilas Professor of Affective Neuroscience at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. Also, see "Out of the Labyrinth - For Those Who Want to Believe, But Can't." Walters makes an excellent case for the primacy of consciousness, not matter. If true, of course, that would change everything, turning the materialists' presumptions upside down.

Anonymous
April 4th, 2012
1:04 PM
"logically they should be given longer sentences, because nothing can change them." This gets it completely backward. The hard determinist claims we're unfree because characters and choices are causally determined--which means *everything* we do "changes them." But they can't be held morally responsible because they can't directly change themselves, and only can indirectly change themselves only *after* the deed for which they're held responsible. The anti-free will argument is not fatalism but determinism: put another way it's causalism, the belief that things don't happen magically, by chance, or arbitrarily, but by causes, and that there are no first causes (magic self causes like free agents). Ironically, it is the belief in free will that rejects change, because it rejects natural causality, the source of change. If a person's choice is not caused by any prior cause, it is arbitrary--it cannot be caused by anything, and so the person cannot do anything but what the magic 8 ball in their "will" tells them to do.

michaelfarr
April 4th, 2012
8:04 AM
sorry mate, a straw man if ever i have read one. Of course the "self' resides in the brain, connect body to heart-lung machine, remove brain, bit by bit, check sense of self, identify incremental loss of function and self then find eventually a deceased person even with heart and lungs pumping. The primitive machines we have at this time make rudimentary measures of the most complex organ we know of with trillions of connections and potential states, still it doesnt need a soul to explain it.

Shalom Freedman
April 4th, 2012
7:04 AM
I would also include in the bibliography of works debunking explain-and- cure- all neurocience the recent work of Roger Scruton. He also takes on the other great explainers-of- it- all these days the evolutionary psychologists. There is more I am not afraid in heaven and earth than is dreamt in all their computer- simulations.

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