The Blank Slate: The Denial of Human Nature and Modern Intellectual Life by Steven Pinker

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  • Pub. Date: September 2002
  • 528pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2002
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Hardcover, 528pp

    Synopsis

    Our conceptions of human nature affect everything aspect of our lives, from child-rearing to politics to morality to the arts. Yet many fear that scientific discoveries about innate patterns of thinking and feeling may be used to justify inequality, to subvert social change, and to dissolve personal responsibility.

    In The Blank Slate, Steven Pinker explores the idea of human nature and its moral, emotional, and political colorings. He shows how many intellectuals have denied the existence of human nature and instead have embraced three dogmas: The Blank Slate (the mind has no innate traits), The Noble Savage (people are born good and corrupted by society), and The Ghost in the Machine (each of us has a soul that makes choices free from biology). Each dogma carries a moral burden, so their defenders have engaged in desperate tactics to discredit the scientists who are now challenging them.

    Pinker provides calm in the stormy debate by disentangling the political and moral issues from the scientific ones. He shows that equality, compassion, responsibility, and purpose have nothing to fear from discoveries about an innately organized psyche. Pinker shows that the new sciences of mind, brain, genes, and evolution, far from being dangerous, are complementing observations about the human condition made by millennia of artists and philosophers. All this is done in the style that earned his previous books many prizes and worldwide acclaim: irreverent wit, lucid exposition, and startling insight on matters great and small.

    Publishers Weekly

    In his last outing, How the Mind Works, the author of the well-received The Language Instinct made a case for evolutionary psychology or the view that human beings have a hard-wired nature that evolved over time. This book returns to that still-controversial territory in order to shore it up in the public sphere. Drawing on decades of research in the "sciences of human nature," Pinker, a chaired professor of psychology at MIT, attacks the notion that an infant's mind is a blank slate, arguing instead that human beings have an inherited universal structure shaped by the demands made upon the species for survival, albeit with plenty of room for cultural and individual variation. For those who have been following the sciences in question including cognitive science, neuroscience, behavioral genetics and evolutionary psychology much of the evidence will be familiar, yet Pinker's clear and witty presentation, complete with comic strips and allusions to writers from Woody Allen to Emily Dickinson, keeps the material fresh. What might amaze is the persistent, often vitriolic resistance to these findings Pinker presents and systematically takes apart, decrying the hold of the "blank slate" and other orthodoxies on intellectual life. He goes on to tour what science currently claims to know about human nature, including its cognitive, intuitive and emotional faculties, and shows what light this research can shed on such thorny topics as gender inequality, child-rearing and modern art. Pinker's synthesizing of many fields is impressive but uneven, especially when he ventures into moral philosophy and religion; examples like "Even Hitler thought he was carrying out the will of God" violate Pinker's own principle that one should not exploit Nazism "for rhetorical clout." For the most part, however, the book is persuasive and illuminating; extensive review coverage and a 10-city author tour should bring it into E.O. Wilson and Stephen Jay Gould territory in terms of sales. (Sept. 30) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Besides challenging conventional wisdom about how we think, cognitive scientist Steven Pinker has a talent for conveying his findings about the brain, language and perception with a clarity and cleverness that has brought him a following outside his field.

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    Customer Reviews

    Blank Slate: The Denial of Human Nature and Modern Intellectual Lifeby Anonymous

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    August 24, 2003: I can't say I can read Pinker but only study him. I felt punch-drunk after ingesting The Blank Slate. It was like taking an intellectual super roller coaster ride hanging upside down. Wonderful. What has Pinker brought most flak with this book is his attack on modernism in art. Pinker thinks the declining number of 'compelling' works in music and painting can be traced to 'movements denying that there was any such thing as human taste or pleasure in art.' Art, he maintains, 'is in our nature, in the blood and in the bone,' and 'artists are sexy.' The English philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) came up with the idea of the mind being a 'blank slate' at birth, i.e. that all ideas were placed in the mind by experience. The blank slate idea was based on the intention of making racism, sexism and class prejudice 'factually untenable' and over the years it grew into an 'official theory,' enforced by hook and by crook. I personally have never believed in the blank slate philosophy, not before I became a mother and most certainly not after I became a mother. Any parent knows that their babies have notable personalities the minute they arrive on this earth and that, over the years, these personalities can only be nurtured and directed, but never be completely altered. John Locke wouldn't have come up with the blank slate idea if he had been a parent and closely observed his kids. I thought of Pinker's remarks about modernism in art when I visited Florence for a week this summer. Yes, we haven't heard about, or seen, any modern artists who can hold a candle to the magnificent painters and sculptors of Florence, or to composers like Beethoven, Mozart, Tschaikovsky. . . They have disappeared as if they had been miracles never to be repeated on this earth. Instead we have modern art. But do modern artists deny human nature? I don't know. Leave it to Pinker! Gisela Gasper Fitzgerald, author of ADOPTION: An Open, Semi-Open or Closed Practice?

    Blank Slate: The Denial of Human Nature and Modern Intellectual Lifeby Anonymous

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    February 14, 2003: I found reading this both edifying and troubling. The science covered in the book is very useful. The exploration of the blank slate and the ghost in the machine and how it has seeped into our political systems and social morality creating a dead lock between what Pinker describes as a genetically determined juxtaposition between a Tragic Vision and Utopian Vision are well explored. I had trouble with many of the conclusions of the book. There is a deterioration to a theory of evolutionary 'design' which seems to be a panacea for the numerous areas of inquiry that might reveal areas where our slow evolution may not be up to the changes in environment represented by technology. In my opinion his focus logically misses the possibility of the dialectic as an evolutionary characteristic of our species. His argument takes a leap in support of 'the tragic vision' which is not well supported. I found it still, well worth the read. Interestingly I found the chapters under hot buttons to be some of the most useful, even though I disagreed with some of his conclusions. For me, the exploration revealed points where one could discern strategies that might work more constructively using the background of the science explored to conclude other than the author has. I found myself going... 'yes, that makes sense', 'yes that makes sense', 'wait a minute, how did you get there from where you were?' and then most usefully 'what about here'?. I believe the book is dangerous in that the weakness of the extrapolations are tempting the the political right. Because the book actually includes references to Sept 11 and some current political possibilities, the tempation would be strong to just use this book as a support for doing things that to my thinking are not based on science but based on a twisting science to fit a political position.


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