Some FWers might be interested in the New Scientist review of "The Blank
Slate"

Keith Hudson

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The Blank Slate: The modern denial of human nature, by Steven Pinker (Allen
Lane/ The Penguin Press) 

The blank slate of Steven Pinker's title is the "white paper void of all
characters, without any ideas" to which philosopher John Locke compares the
original state of the mind, as it passively waits for experience to provide
it with the materials of thought and knowledge. Generalised beyond anything
Locke intended, the idea would be that the mind is empty of any powers or
dispositions at all until life's journey gets under way. 

Gottfried Leibniz and David Hume, to mention but two, saw how hopeless this
idea was, since at the very least the mind or brain needs the capacity to
make something of whatever it is that experience affords us. But according
to Pinker's messianic book the idea lives on, often harnessed
(inconsistently) with the romantic view that the blank mind is inherently
noble and that violence, aggression, even a deficient sense of humour or a
tin ear, must be the fault of bad parenting, bad environment or other
defects of culture or society.

Pinker believes that this bad idea infuses a whole cocktail of practical
mistakes, including utopian politics, madcap schemes of social engineering,
optimistic educational programmes and ludicrous views about gender. To
oppose it he mobilises the most modern of sciences, notably neuroscience,
genetics, evolutionary theory, and particularly evolutionary psychology. 

The Blank Slate is brilliant in several dimensions. It is enjoyable,
informative, clear, humane and sensible. Pinker is well aware of the
emotions and self-deceptions that swirl around the science of human nature,
and he parades a lurid cast of villains from behaviourist B.F. Skinner to
psychologist Jerome Kagan. 

It is difficult to be morally sensitive while treading on people's dreams.
But Pinker manages it, while never compromising on the point that good
morals and politics need to acknowledge the truth about human beings as
they are, rather than how we might like them to be. Its political motto
might be the remark E. O. Wilson made about Karl Marx: "Wonderful theory.
Wrong species." 

All this is very sound. But is the breathless deference to the new sciences
of the mind and brain appropriate? Pinker writes rhetorically: "Every
student of political science is taught that political ideologies are based
on theories of human nature. Why must they be based on theories that are
three hundred years out of date?" Yet his chapter on conflict and violence
explicitly relies almost entirely on Thomas Hobbes, and his perceptive
remarks on human greed and status come from political economists Adam Smith
and Thorstein Veblen. Pinker contrasts real science with "armchair"
theorising. But most theorising is done in armchairs, and such writers were
gifted observers of human nature long before they sat in theirs.

If we read carefully, the contributions of evolutionary theory, psychology
or neuroscience appear to be either little or controversial. For example,
Pinker says that there is an overwhelming consensus among experts that
exposure to media violence does not make children more violent. But I read
the book immediately after attending a conference on law and human nature
which was told with equal certainty of a consensus among experts on just
the opposite. Evidently measuring what the experts think is as hard as
measuring anything else.

When it comes to evolution and psychology the matter is no different.
Pinker is unusually clear about the distinction between underlying
evolutionary mechanisms (selfish genes) and proximate psychological
mechanisms (overt motivations, such as lust or envy, altruism or malice).
But politics and education need to assess the degree of freedom evolution
may leave to those mechanisms, as we seek to influence them for the better.
If we want to know about that, Hobbes or Leo Tolstoy may still be better
guides than the American Psychological Association. 

Simon Blackburn is professor of philosophy at the University of Cambridge 
Simon Blackburn
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Keith Hudson, General Editor, Handlo Music, http://www.handlo.com
6 Upper Camden Place, Bath BA1 5HX, England
Tel: +44 1225 312622;  Fax: +44 1225 447727; mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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