Is Steven Pinker Right?

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People feel morally ambivalent because the history of incest is tied up in abuse or subjugation of women (see also: polygamy in western culture).

So when you suddenly present the act in this other-reality scenario where relationships don't have a power component and everyone's walking away without damage - sure, people are going to be stumped about their response.

But it's not a meaningful result, because the question completely ignores the context of why humans decided incest is RONG.

milo z, Sunday, 13 January 2008 21:18 (sixteen years ago) link

I.e. people feeling morally ambivalent about something without being able to rationalize it shocker.

Umm Jeb, see what I was saying above about how it's a giant leap to call this some kind of intuitive/emotional response, rather than a kind of categorical reasoning.

nabisco, Sunday, 13 January 2008 21:24 (sixteen years ago) link

three months pass...

he is terrible

latebloomer, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:07 (fifteen years ago) link

I'm reading "How The Mind Works" at the moment, on the recommendation of a friend. I like a lot of his ideas: how he defines intelligence, why people believe in god, how humans assess risks...

I think is the first book purely about psychology I've ever read, is it a good place to start, or am I barking up the wrong tree?

Bodrick III, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:15 (fifteen years ago) link

he is terrible

-- latebloomer, Tuesday, 29 April 2008

OK, why?

Bodrick III, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:15 (fifteen years ago) link

I like him well enough

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:20 (fifteen years ago) link

I don't really have anything to compare him to. Maybe I should have started with some sort of general primer on psychology first, but this seems like an accessible enough read.

Bodrick III, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:31 (fifteen years ago) link

Celebrity scientists are mostly horrible. Maybe we need to have an S/D thread for them

Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:37 (fifteen years ago) link

But wasn't "How The Mind Works" the book that made him a celebrity in the first place? It's better if some chump like me has a basic grasp of these ideas than none at all.

Bodrick III, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:44 (fifteen years ago) link

classic for making a case against sapir-whorf

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:44 (fifteen years ago) link

one of many, i should note

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 28 April 2008 23:46 (fifteen years ago) link

The original story is not only implausible and nonsensical, as many have pointed out, but the very telling of the story contradicts the premise that no one knows about it and it therefore cannot offend the community. Am I supposed to pretend I didn't hear the story and then pass a moral judgment on it?

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 01:25 (fifteen years ago) link

But wasn't "How The Mind Works" the book that made him a celebrity in the first place?

Nope, it was the very worthwhile "The Language Instinct."

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 29 April 2008 04:30 (fifteen years ago) link

Celebrity scientists are mostly horrible.

^

also evolutionary psychology in general=dud

latebloomer, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 05:02 (fifteen years ago) link

i really shouldn't have said "terrible", though. more like...irritating, for several reasons that have little to do with science or psycology or whatever.

latebloomer, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 05:22 (fifteen years ago) link

But wasn't "How The Mind Works" the book that made him a celebrity in the first place? It's better if some chump like me has a basic grasp of these ideas than none at all.

-- Bodrick III, Monday, April 28, 2008 4:44 PM (5 hours ago) Bookmark Link

the problem is when chumps treat pinker's "basic ideas" as though they were widely-accepted and agreed-upon, which to the best of my knowledge they arent

max, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 05:28 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah pinker and chomsky both are two guys that had decent enough ideas but instead of treating them like levi-strauss people treat them like darwin which is fucking braindead and pathetic

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 05:54 (fifteen years ago) link

#1 problem with cognitive scientists is that they fuck up observation with hypothesis and vice versa at least half the time. cart before horse (but oh wait semantic determinism do u see) shut the fuck up

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 05:56 (fifteen years ago) link

whoa I kinda went luriqua there (is shaniqua there? hell no)

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 06:00 (fifteen years ago) link

#1 problem with cognitive scientists is that they are a bunch of losers

max, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 06:00 (fifteen years ago) link

aren't you all up into some post structuralist semiology shit though? pot kettle black on black crime

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 06:54 (fifteen years ago) link

nah dude my new thing is gardening

max, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 06:55 (fifteen years ago) link

also english lit chicks are seventeen times hotter than cog sci chicks, ipso facto ergo sum

max, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 06:56 (fifteen years ago) link

sum vagina better than eo ipso vagina tho amiritus

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 07:00 (fifteen years ago) link

i dunno man i just garden now

max, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 07:03 (fifteen years ago) link

zen prick

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 07:03 (fifteen years ago) link

anyway I am going to check this one out soon enough
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51lq2c-a2aL._SL500_AA240_.jpg
which seems at least rooted enough in observation and the physiology of the brain enough that it might have a few good points, but we'll see

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 07:08 (fifteen years ago) link

http://z.about.com/d/gardening/1/0/R/9/OverviewSonny.JPG

max, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 07:14 (fifteen years ago) link

one month passes...

Am on How the Mind Works now, and quite enjoying it. I like the way he points out that explaining questions on traits etc by "culture" isn't explaining them, but putting them away in a drawer to pretend they aren't there -- ie the question still remains of why culture has come to engender those traits.

anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 06:58 (fifteen years ago) link

It's not putting them away in a drawer to pretend they aren't there, it's just admitting that your field doesn't give you the tools to explain it! Sociology & anthropology don't work the same way as cog sci, and they're not "scientific," but that doesn't mean they're irrelevant. Maybe their approach toward some questions is more helpful than trying to be scientific about them.

The role of evolutionary psychology is not to explain EVERYTHING ABOUT HUMANS.

Maria, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 10:46 (fifteen years ago) link

(Sorry, "science must explain this strange behavior!" is a pet peeve. That rant was not set off by you.)

Maria, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 10:47 (fifteen years ago) link

That rant was not set off by you.

Oh it might just as well have been, no need to be sorry! :) ie I think I disagree with you here.

it's just admitting that your field doesn't give you the tools to explain it!

Doesn't give the tools now, or is doomed to be forever incapable of giving the tools? If the latter, OK point taken, but then I feel a bout of metaphysics coming on; if the former ...

The role of evolutionary psychology is not to explain EVERYTHING ABOUT HUMANS.

Sez you? Why not? OK not necessarily evolutionary psychology per se, but why cannot that be a role of science? I don't buy humans being such a special case.

Sociology & anthropology don't work the same way as cog sci, and they're not "scientific," but that doesn't mean they're irrelevant.

Agreed, of course it doesn't. Relevance depends on the goals of the enquiry, I suppose. Even if I feel that explanations from "scientific" science may seem more likely than from the fields you mention, they also seem less useful.

anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 11:09 (fifteen years ago) link

Has Steven Pinker's lovely hair been mentioned yet?

The Real Dirty Vicar, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 11:50 (fifteen years ago) link

I think the triple photo of 28 April covers the basics. But by all means elaborate!

anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 11:54 (fifteen years ago) link

but why cannot that be a role of science? I don't buy humans being such a special case.

because there's science, and then there's history. read stephen jay gould on contingency. some stuff just happens. there's no "explaining" why the mountains are where they are, or why the meteor hit at that point in the cretaceous, or why arthropods lived and trilobites died.

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:00 (fifteen years ago) link

read stephen jay gould on contingency.

OK! Do you happen to have a specific reference handy?

anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:13 (fifteen years ago) link

well its sort of a central theme of his work. one classic is "wonderful life," his book on the burgess shale (long story short: when you look at what survived what he calls the "permian debacle" (the 96% die-off of post-cambrian marine species, happened about 250 mil years ago) you see that a lot of it is based on luck rather than evolutonary fitness. among a lot of quite fit competitors ... certain stuff died and certain other stuff didn't. quite randomly. even allowing for darwinian mechanisms. some stuff just makes it, some stuff just doesn't,.

you can say there's "reasons", but you can't explain in that the sense that inverse-square gravity "explains" elliptical orbits. there's simply no way to have a square or triangular orbit with gravity the way it is. every orbit around a mass is going to be a conic section, no matter what. but replay the evolution tape (or the geology tape or whatever) enough times and you could end up with quite different species and quite different humans and quite different societies. there's parts of science that work like the former, and are quite good at explaining in the sense of describing and providing a motor and saying why it's this way and not another way. and yet there's other parts of science that are equally as "good" as the others that work like the latter, and are equally good at explaining in the sense of describing and providing a motor, but very bad at saying "why like this" and "why not like that".

so i think you have to be very careful when you talk about "science" not to conflate the two parts, and realize that the part dealing with describing very complex systems is going to fall into the latter set (and SJG has done a really good job of explaining - in a way that anybody off the street or on ILX can grasp - why evolution in particular and evolutionary psychology, too, is part of that second set)

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:17 (fifteen years ago) link

^^ this is a very badly edited post, but i hope you take my meaning. here's a quote from "wonderful life":

I am not speaking of randomness, but of the central principle of all history—contingency. A historical explanation does not rest on direct deductions from laws of nature, but on an unpredictable sequence of antecedent states, where any major change in any step of the sequence would have altered the final result. This final result is therefore dependent, or contingent, upon everything that came before—the unerasable and determining signature of history.

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:22 (fifteen years ago) link

Assuming evolutionary psychology can explain all behavior really amounts to assuming genetics can explain all human behavior AND assuming that we can intuit all the correct explanations without proving the genetic element.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:24 (fifteen years ago) link

Besides, evolutionary traits have only two purposes - to help us survive and to help us mate. But life is pretty long and complex and we only spend a small portion of it evading danger or mating.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:26 (fifteen years ago) link

Complex systems are complex!

Kerm, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:28 (fifteen years ago) link

moonship:

Good summary (well it seems so to me at least), thanks. Off-the-cuff I think I sense a conflation of the power to predict the future and the power to explain the present somewhere deep in there, but I'll have to have a think about it.

anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:30 (fifteen years ago) link

Re the quote: yes exactly, picks up same dichotomy

anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:30 (fifteen years ago) link

well ... a physical scientist wouldn't see any difference between those two things!

i can predict the future: if i drop this egg, it will fall.
i can explain the present: i dropped the egg, it fell

i cannot predict the future: no idea when this sand piling up in the bottom of the hourglass will shift
i cannot *explain* the present: not really sure "why" the sand collapsed when it did ... "because it reached an unstable configuration" <-- ho ho whiff of tautology

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:33 (fifteen years ago) link

er, "it will fall, and hit the ground in exactly (square root of (2/9.8 * height in meters) seconds ..."

and i could explain yesterday's egg drop results in exactly the same way

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:34 (fifteen years ago) link

Aren't you just saying science is better at modeling simplified ideal scenarios than inherently complex ones?

Kerm, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:40 (fifteen years ago) link

re hourglass:

Hmm what I don't quite accept there is that because I cannot explain why the sand collapsed when it did, I should be resigned to never understanding the mechanics of sand collapse!

Or is the point that the observable states preceding *that particular* sand collapse are lost forever and that particular present cannot be explained?

anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:42 (fifteen years ago) link

ie I can't wait for the next evolution of man (or given other organism), I've only got this data point?

anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:44 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah exactly ... especially since evolutionary psychology is very concerned about deducing organizing principles from a very, very, very particular present (whereas the broader field of evolutionary biology is working with, you know, the whole fossil record)

here's another gould classic (From wikipedia, sorry, i'm damn lazy)

In both the giant panda[1] and the red panda[2], the radial sesamoid has evolved to be larger than the same bone in counterparts such as bears. It is primarily a bony support for the pad above it, allowing the panda's other digits to grasp bamboo while eating it. The panda's thumb is often cited as a classical example of exaptation, where a trait evolved for one purpose is commandeered for another[3].

a very common critique of evolutionary psychology is that given how tenuous the link is between human culture and human brain (we use only what, 5% of the damn thing?!? most days my brain works about as well as a panda thumb ...) it's not impossible that all culture is just an exaptation

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:45 (fifteen years ago) link

been thinking about this all morning, starting to think maybe here's what it boils down (apologies for restating other people's ideas, obnoxious habit, but i think maybe these words need to be part of this conversation, so i'll try to do it quick)

now tom used this word but i think he used it in a different sense (or i don't fully get the argument behind the sense in which he used it): determinism

the question boils down to: how much can science explain without falling into determinism? as we attribute more explaining power, are we always creeping toward determinism?

i think there's a tradeoff at work. conway morris and gang are willing to do it because they're still in the field, and it benefits them to push for capital-s science.

stephen jay gould (and pinker and chomsky and dennett and others too) have sort of pushed their way out of their field and into mainstream thinking and mainstream social concern. and so gould as a strong humanist is always going to be turning away from determinism (and that's my bias preference also) ... and pinker and dennett are going to push back on that (and not because i think they're anti-humanist but maybe because doing so lends more wholeness to their own particular research interest)

now i am in a field (education) where "the mismeasure of man" ideas (iq tests, bell curves, and all that) still loom very big (and engaged in daily active struggle against) and so i tilt towards the anti-determinist end

is this a useful distinction, at this point?

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 19:35 (fifteen years ago) link

It's one I was actually trying to avoid upthread (because it is a bias, and gets metaphysical in a way i don't think i can argue very well), but yeah, that's important.

Maria, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 19:38 (fifteen years ago) link

and kerm's line of argument invoking irreducible complexity to get us out of the determinism (sorry to clown upthread) isn't *that* comforting to me mainly because it seems sorta tautological

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 19:38 (fifteen years ago) link

more gould gems: its only bias if it leads you to evaluate data non-objectively. a scientist is perfectly within his rights to state his preference!

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 19:39 (fifteen years ago) link

The only Pinker I've read is The Blank Slate, which I think suffered a bit from overreach and too many strawman arguments (a point that Louis Menand makes in his mostly skeptical New Yorker review). Perhaps his earlier books that stuck more closely to his area of expertise might be better.

o. nate, Wednesday, 11 June 2008 20:10 (fifteen years ago) link

that review sums up everything i find irritating about pinker's outlook.

latebloomer, Thursday, 12 June 2008 00:34 (fifteen years ago) link

more gould gems: its only bias if it leads you to evaluate data non-objectively. a scientist is perfectly within his rights to state his preference!

yeah exactly; the problem is when these guys jump out into full-fledged speculation in areas where science as we know it today is incapable of performing any experiments to falsify their wacky ideas, then bias becomes the whole story and, well, mismeasure-of-man shit and bad public policy decisions wind up following just the same. but I think that's a story for another time and I really don't need to be getting into this thread

(and yes of course physicists are always delving into stuff that can't currently be falsified, Einstein did it a LOT, but they have the sense (generally) to put THEORETICAL in front of their title when they do)

El Tomboto, Thursday, 12 June 2008 00:58 (fifteen years ago) link

once at my school i saw a lecture given by the chair of the psych department where she argued that the fact that bonobo groups, which are led by female bonobos, are far more peaceful than chimpanzee groups gave us insight into why so many peace organizations are run by or founded by women

max, Thursday, 12 June 2008 01:08 (fifteen years ago) link

did you thump your chest and hurl vegetation until she presented her rump?

moonship journey to baja, Thursday, 12 June 2008 02:13 (fifteen years ago) link

hurlin' vegetation baybehh

El Tomboto, Thursday, 12 June 2008 02:14 (fifteen years ago) link

thanks for the new yorker article. i watched the "gender" debate between pinker and elizabeth spelke for a class a few months ago (http://edge.org/3rd_culture/debate05/debate05_index.html). spelke kind of pwned pinker imo.

strgn, Thursday, 12 June 2008 02:28 (fifteen years ago) link

as an only child, i don't really have any problem with julie and mark's forbidden lust

mookieproof, Thursday, 12 June 2008 02:31 (fifteen years ago) link

plus his hair:

http://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer/2005/0805/images/pinker1.jpg

strgn, Thursday, 12 June 2008 02:37 (fifteen years ago) link

Short postscript to moonship & Maria's posts yesterday: yeah I was on/off whether to bring up determinism too -- I'm pretty much pro, but (similar to what Maria said) then I'm then veering into metaphysics and I can't argue it well.

anatol_merklich, Thursday, 12 June 2008 10:49 (fifteen years ago) link

in my mind, 'mismeasure-of-man' (not 'determinism') is the key word moonship brings up in relation to evolutionary bio and everything mentioned in this thread so far that i can make heads or tails of. and not just 'mismeasure,' but the practices of science, beyond 'mis'.. i'm just diving into sts at this point (bruno latour etc), but it's helping me dig on the idea of the practice of science in sociological (where it all begins amirite) systems. (disclaimer: liberal arts major speaking).

strgn, Thursday, 12 June 2008 11:32 (fifteen years ago) link

full disclosure of bias: i majored in anthropology & sociology, and am applying to grad schools in archaeology. so i'm not an expert but i am opinionated! (and irritated by the "it's either science or bullshit" point of view.)

that's kind of amazing hair, by the way. i would probably want to believe someone who looked like that if i saw him talk. i've only read the blank slate, thought it was interesting. (my father actually found it comforting. he said it meant his parenting could only screw us up so far, and he was glad to be not totally responsible for how we turned out. thanks, dad!)

Maria, Thursday, 12 June 2008 11:46 (fifteen years ago) link

three months pass...

Haha, reading The Stuff of Thoughts yesterday, I saw something that made me wonder if he's an ilxor lurker: talking about datives etc, he used the example sentence (something like)

Norm was given the pashmina

-- which struck me as an unlikely name/object combination to occur in two places independently... :)

anatol_merklich, Friday, 19 September 2008 11:05 (fifteen years ago) link

ten years pass...

peven stinker

mark s, Saturday, 9 February 2019 16:15 (five years ago) link

Me (dumb guy): They wrote "exposes Pecker." Heh, heh.
You (smart guy): Thanks to my graduate degree in psycholoinguistics and studies with Noam Chomsky, I notice they wrote "exposes Pecker." Heh, heh. https://t.co/e5yE5ovYVG

— Jeet Heer (@HeerJeet) February 10, 2019

j., Sunday, 10 February 2019 15:26 (five years ago) link

I thought this book review did a good job of summarizing his strengths and weaknesses as a writer (see the second half):

https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2019/02/07/pinker-rosling-progress-accentuate-positive/

o. nate, Monday, 11 February 2019 21:28 (five years ago) link

four years pass...

lol pic.twitter.com/BeAzo1FLoM

— Michael Hobbes (@RottenInDenmark) August 6, 2023

mookieproof, Sunday, 6 August 2023 21:39 (eight months ago) link

Peven Stinker strikes again

papal hotwife (milo z), Sunday, 6 August 2023 21:59 (eight months ago) link

would love to see this dude meet a horrific violent end

brimstead, Sunday, 6 August 2023 22:01 (eight months ago) link


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