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In Nature vs. Nurture, a Voice for Nature
By NICHOLAS WADE
Who should define human nature? When the biologist Edward O. Wilson set
out to do so in his 1975 book "Sociobiology," he was assailed
by left-wing colleagues who portrayed his description of genetically shaped
human behaviors as a threat to the political principles of equal rights
and a just society.
Since then, a storm has threatened anyone who prominently asserts that
politically sensitive aspects of human nature might be molded by the genes.
So biologists, despite their increasing knowledge from the decoding of
the human genome and other advances, are still distinctly reluctant to
challenge the notion that human behavior is largely shaped by environment
and culture. The role of genes in shaping differences between individuals
or sexes or races has become a matter of touchiness, even taboo.
A determined effort to break this silence and make it safer for biologists
to discuss what they know about the genetics of human nature has now been
begun by Dr. Steven Pinker, a psychologist of language at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. In a book being published by Viking at the end
of this month, "The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature,"
he seeks to create greater political elbow room for those engaged in the
study of the ways genes shape human behavior. "If I am an advocate,
it is for discoveries about human nature that have been ignored or suppressed
in modern discussions of human affairs," he writes.
A principal theme of Dr. Pinker's argument is that the blank slaters
the critics of sociobiology and their many adherents in the social
sciences have sought to base the political ideals of equal rights
and equal opportunity on a false biological premise: that all human minds
are equal because they are equally blank, equally free of innate, genetically
shaped, abilities and behaviors.
The politics and the science must be disentangled, Dr. Pinker argues.
Equal rights and equal opportunities are moral principles, he says, not
empirical hypotheses about human nature, and they do not require a biological
justification, especially not a false one.
Moreover, the blank slate doctrine has political consequences that have
been far from benign, in Dr. Pinker's view. It encourages totalitarian
regimes to excesses of social engineering. It perverts education and child-rearing,
loading unmerited guilt on parents for their children's failures.
In his book he reproaches those who in his view have politicized the
study of human nature from both the left and the right, though in practice
more of his fire is directed against the left, particularly the critics
of sociobiology. They have created a climate in which "discoveries
about human nature were greeted with fear and loathing because they were
thought to threaten progressive ideals," he writes.
He accuses two of them Dr. Richard Lewontin, a population geneticist
at Harvard, and the late Dr. Stephen J. Gould, a historian of science
of "25 years of pointless attacks" on Dr. Wilson and
on Dr. Richard Dawkins, author of "The Selfish Gene," for allegedly
saying certain aspects of behavior are genetically determined.
And he chides the sociobiology critics for turning a scholarly debate
"into harassment, slurs, misrepresentation, doctored quotations,
and, most recently, blood libel." In a recent case, two anthropologists
accused Dr. James Neel, a founder of modern human genetics, and Dr. Napoleon
Chagnon, a social anthropologist, of killing the Yanomamö people
of Brazil to test genetic theories of human behavior, a charge Dr. Pinker
analyzes as without basis in fact.
With this preemptive strike in place, Dr. Pinker sets out his view of
what science can now say about human nature. This includes many of the
ideas laid out by Dr. Wilson in "Sociobiology" and "On
Human Nature," updated by recent work in evolutionary psychology
and other fields.
Dr. Pinker argues that significant innate behavioral differences exist
between individuals and between men and women. Discussing child-rearing,
he says that children's characters are shaped by their genes, by their
peer group and by chance experiences; parents cannot mold their children's
nature, nor should they wish to, any more than they can redesign that
of their spouses. Those little slates are not as blank as they may seem.
Dr. Pinker has little time for two other doctrines often allied with
the Blank Slate. One is "the Ghost in the Machine," the assumption
of an immaterial soul that lies beyond the reach of neuroscience, and
he criticizes the religious right for thwarting research with embryonic
stem cells on the ground that a soul is lurking within.
The third member of Dr. Pinker's unholy trinity is "the Noble Savage,"
the idea that the default state of human nature is mild, pacific and unacquisitive.
Dr. Pinker believes, to the contrary, that dominance and violence are
universal; that human societies are more given to an ethos of reciprocity
than to communal sharing; that intelligence and character are in part
inherited, meaning that "some degree of inequality will arise even
in perfectly fair economic systems," and that all societies are ethnocentric
and easily roused to racial hatred.
Following in part the economist Thomas Sowell, he distinguishes between
a leftist utopian vision of human nature (the mind is a blank slate, man
is a Noble Savage, traditional institutions are the problem) and the tragic
vision preferred by the right (man is the problem; family, creed and Adam
Smith's Invisible Hand are the solutions).
"My own view is that the new sciences of human nature really do
vindicate some version of the tragic vision and undermine the utopian
outlook that until recently dominated large segments of intellectual life,"
he writes.
With "The Blank Slate," Dr. Pinker has left the safe territory
of irregular verbs. But during a conversation in his quiet Victorian house
a few blocks from the bustle of Harvard Square, he seemed confident of
dodging the explosions that have rocked his predecessors. "Wilson
didn't know what he was getting into and had no idea it would cause such
a ruckus," he said. "This book is about the ruckus; it's about
why people are so upset."
"It's conceivable that if you say anything is innate, people will
say you are racist, but the climate has changed," he says. "I
don't actually believe that the I.Q. gap is genetic, so I didn't say anything
nearly as inflammatory as Herrnstein and Murray," the authors of
the 1994 book "The Bell Curve," who argued that inborn differences
in intelligence explain much of the economic inequality in American society.
Despite his confidence, Dr. Pinker is explicitly trying to set off an
avalanche. He compares the overthrow of the blank slate view to another
scientific revolution with fraught moral consequences, that of Galileo's
rejection of the church's ideas about astronomy. "We are now living,
I think, through a similar transition," he writes, because the blank
slate, like the medieval church's tidy hierarchy of the cosmos, is "a
doctrine that is widely embraced as a rationale for meaning and morality
and that is under assault from the sciences of the day."
Dr. Pinker is not the fire-breathing kind of revolutionary. He has a
thick mop of curly brown hair, edged respectably with gray, and a mild,
almost diffident manner. A writer for the Canadian magazine Macleans described
Dr. Pinker, who was born in Montreal, as "endearingly Canadian: polite,
soft-spoken, attentive to what others say." Teased about this description,
he notes that Canadians also gave the world ice hockey.
Born in 1954, he grew up in the city's Jewish community, in the neighborhood
described in Mordecai Richler's novel "The Apprenticeship of Duddy
Kravitz." He was caught up in the debates of the 60's and 70's about
social organization and human nature, but found his teenage anarchist
views of the nobility of human nature dealt a sharp empirical refutation
by the Montreal police strike of 1969; in the absence of authority, Montrealers
turned immediately to lawlessness, robbing 6 banks and looting 100 stores
before the Mounties restored order.
Trained as an experimental psychologist at Harvard, Dr. Pinker took up
the study of language and became convinced that the brain's linguistic
ability must rest on built-in circuitry. This made him think other faculties
and behaviors could be innate, despite the unpopularity of the idea. "People
think the worst environmental explanation is preferable to the best innatist
explanation," he says.
Dr. Pinker first became known outside his specialty through his 1994
book "The Language Instinct," an approachable account of how
the brain is constructed to learn language. He followed up that success
with "How the Mind Works," in which he shared his enthusiasm
for the ideas of evolutionary psychology. "The Blank Slate"
further broadens his ambit from neuroscience to political and social theory.
Like Edward O. Wilson, who began as a specialist in ants and mastered
ever larger swaths of biology, Dr. Pinker has a gift of summarizing other
specialists' works into themes that are larger than their parts. Synthesisers
are rare animals in the academic zoo because they risk being savaged by
those whose territory they invade. "Everything in the study of human
behavior is controversial, and if you try to sum it up you will ride roughshod
over specialists, so you've got to have a strong stomach," Dr. Pinker
said.
The critics of sociobiology caricatured their opponents as "determinists,"
even though few, if any, people believe human nature is fully determined
by the genes. Could Dr. Pinker's description of the Blank Slate similarly
overstate their views? He says he shows at length how critics like Dr.
Lewontin have made statements that "are really not too far from the
collection of positions that I call the Blank Slate," with Dr. Lewontin
and others having even written a book called "Not in Our Genes."
Though Dr. Pinker believes the politics and science of human nature should
be disentangled, that does not mean political arrangements should ignore
or ride roughshod over human nature. To the contrary, a good political
system "should mobilize some parts of human nature to rein in other
parts." The framers of the Constitution took great interest in human
nature and "by almost any measure of human well-being, Western democracies
are better," he says.
Dr. Pinker believes that human nature "will increasingly be explained
by the sciences of mind, brain, genes and evolution." But if political
and social systems should be designed around human nature, won't that
give enormous power to the psychologists, neuroscientists, and geneticists
are in a position to say what human nature is?
"It's a game anyone should be able to play if they do their homework,"
he says, "so I hope it wouldn't become the exclusive province of
a scientific priesthood."
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