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So, another millennium, another blissful dawn. How do we get there this time? No problem: human brains in all their fallibility will analyse the brains of others by means of fallible machinery and produce fallible theories, to be implemented by those same fallible brains. The time to watch for is when neuroscientists claim they can tinker with our heads to make us more creative, rectify harmful thinking or "cure" homosexuals (machines are not of the Left or Right), such improvements in our condition to be overseen, as with Lysenko, by scientised bureaucrats. 

Paranoid? Only mildly. Remember we have been there already: the dark "science of eugenics" was practised in Sweden as well as the US well before the Führer took a more active interest. And ask yourself what use Stalin or Mao might have made of machines capable of identifying and eliminating what the Chinese called "black thoughts".

Meanwhile the neuro industry will grow and grow, together with its claim for investment and state subsidies. Particle physics, I was assured when I visited CERN in Geneva armed with a programme of budget cuts, is the ne plus ultra of understanding the universe, but not any more: the existence or otherwise of the Higgs Boson particle is presumably a percept of the human brain, whose study must logically be awarded a prior claim to cash. 

Fortunately, powerful critics are lining up to deflate the worst neuro-pretensions, including Tallis, Robinson and Bryan Appleyard, the Sunday Times writer. As well as being in different degrees scientifically literate all are highly cultivated folk. Listen to Tallis, himself a neuroscientist, Darwinian and atheist, in his remarkable book Aping Mankind: Neuromania, Darwinitis and the Misrepresentation of Humanity (Acumen, 2011):

Even if we accepted (which I do not) that brain activity is a complete explanation of ground-floor phenomena such as sensations, neuroscience cannot capture what happens to the human world created by the joint activity of hundreds of millions of brains created over tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands of years.

An obvious area of interest for the new utopians is criminality, and Tallis has fun with the advocates of biological justice. The idea that criminals are in thrall to their amygdala (the seat of aggression, it seems) is no more, he says, than a materialist updating of demonic possession. And instead of justice taking an understanding view of offenders, logically they should be given longer sentences, because nothing can change them. When Zeno whipped him, a thieving slave protested: "But I was fated to steal." "Yes, and be whipped for it too," the philosopher replied. Getting a moral grip on oneself is possible, Tallis believes, but that cannot be the view of those who insist there is no "self" to grip, or do the gripping. 

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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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