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The results of his scan, he suggests, show "a science in its infancy":

So what were these blotches and streaks on the pictures of my brain? Were they the cause of consciousness or its effect? Or did they just indicate that something was happening in the brain without giving any clear indication of what? Either one day science will answer these questions or they are unanswerable, and the one thing the self-conscious mind cannot know is itself.

His neuroscientist agrees on the infancy of his discipline, while Colin Blakemore, a highly distinguished professor of neuroscience I recall meeting as a minister, tells him that its equipment is still at the stage of the telescope used by Galileo. And that is the point. If important figures in the field make the claims they do in its early years, what bulldozing of the human spirit will they attempt when it is more advanced? As for whether or not science will provide answers, for an entire generation of scientists, led in Britain by Richard Dawkins, that is no longer the question. For them the unanswerable does not exist, or has long been answered, and their public appears to be growing. 

On one level it is pointless to complain. The explorations of science and prudent implementation of the results are one way we advance. Or regress, when the science turns out to be phony. In the West free debate can put a brake on Faustian ambition, though it cannot entirely thwart it. A democratic, science-based consensus can sometimes be damaging too: it is enough to examine the role of the cognitive sciences in British education. As Appleyard suggests, good science should make us cautious, if only because it tends to throw up ever more complexity.

The part of the brain that is the seat of arrogance, I imagine, is the amygdala (the source of aggressivity). That for scepticism and doubt is presumably the frontal lobe, alongside self-control, conscience and so on. When we reach the stage of neuro-engineering can anything be done to diminish the first and reinforce the second? 

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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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