Is Science Killing The Soul
Is Science Killing The Soul
Is Science Killing The Soul
reality, but of course it's only our brain that tells us this. We
have people here who can explain this much better than I can.
What's going on? Well, we have reached a curious situation in
science in which it's possible for people to propose that
science might be able to provide all the answers. Neither of
the two guests tonight actually make these claims, but there
are scientists who do claim such things. And one of the pieces
of machinery that they use is sometimes known as Darwinism,
or the theory of evolution, or just the action of natural
selection upon random mutation. It doesn't really matter,
because we're just going to call it tonight, Darwinism. At least
I am. Professor Dawkins will actually have a better
explanation if you ask him.
Is it important to us? Yes it is important. Natural selection is
the environment. We started altering our environment back at
the beginning of the 19th century. We have now
comprehensively changed it, so we run the world for our
benefit, and every now and then it gets a bit fragile at the
edges, we have to start worrying about the ozone layer, or the
carbon dioxide crisis -- but we have changed the environment.
More alarmingly, we have begun to understand how we could
change ourselves; we could take charge of our own genes. We
aren't doing it yet. You hear talk about designer babies; there
are no such things, but we have reached the stage where we
have to ask ourselves whether we want some of our babies.
We can now see what kind of baby we might be about to have,
and people are suddenly thrust into the position of having to
ask themselves, what is a gene, what does it do, and how will
it all turn out? So these are very important questions, and they
do actually concern us. These questions are not academic.
Nor are they new. There's a wonderful passage in the Book of
Job, Chapter 38, I think, in which the poet who composed Job
speaks as if God, and asks Job a series of questions which
begin, Hath the rain a Father? Who hath begot the drops of
dew? out of whose womb came the ice? and the hoary frost of
Heaven, who hath engendered it? the waters are hid as with
stone, and the face of the deep is frozen. Canst thou bind the
sweet influence of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion??
Now that of course is great poetry, and one of the issues that
we are discussing here is whether science is killing the soul in
the sense of poetry. All I point out to you is that that is a series
of questions about the hydrological cycle, you cannot say that
it's just poetry, they are also real questions which demand real
answers, which people are supplying, scientists among them.
We have with us tonight two extraordinarily gifted writers.
One of them is Richard Dawkins, Charles Simonyi Professor
of Public Understanding of Science at the University of
Oxford, and he's the man who more than two decades ago
introduced the notion of the selfish gene, upsetting a lot of
people, creating a debate that hasn't stopped yet. He followed
this up with a series of dazzling books, of which the latest is
called Unweaving the Rainbow, which is not just about
Darwinism, but about science itself, and about our
understanding of the planet we live on. The other is Steven
Pinker, who is a professor of psychology at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. And he leapt onto the best-seller list
about three years ago with a wonderful book called The
Language Instinct, which was just about this remarkable
ability that 3-year-olds have to learn any grammar that
happens to be lying around, with the implication that either
babies are born knowing, in principle, all the languages that
have ever been invented, or yet to be invented, -- or that there
is a universal grammar and it's already composed in their own
brains. If so, what a remarkable thing the brain is. I'll let them
talk about that. The subject tonight is "Is Science Killing the
Soul?" You will not find this a straight-forward head-to-head
debate in which one man says yes and the other says no. It all
god, and I want him to stay that way.' A religion, old or new,
that stressed the magnificence of the Universe as revealed by
modern science might be able to draw forth reserves of
reverence and awe hardly tapped by the conventional faiths."
Well it's common enough for people to agree that religions
have got the facts all wrong, but "Nevertheless," they go on to
say, "you have to admit that religions do provide something
that people need. We crave a deeper meaning to life, a deeper,
more imaginative understanding of the mystery of existence."
Well, in the passage I've just quoted, Sagan seems to be
criticizing religions not just for getting it wrong, which many
people would accept, but for their deficiencies precisely in the
sphere in which they are supposed to retain some residual
virtue. Religions are not imaginative, not poetic, not soulful.
On the contrary, they are parochial, small-minded, niggardly
with the human imagination, precisely where science is
generous.
Now, there are, of course many unsolved problems, and
scientists are the first to admit this. There are aspects of human
subjective consciousness that are deeply mysterious. Neither
Steve Pinker nor I can explain human subjective
consciousness -- what philosophers call qualia. In How the
Mind Works Steve elegantly sets out the problem of subjective
consciousness, and asks where it comes from and what's the
explanation. Then he's honest enough to say, "Beats the heck
out of me." That is an honest thing to say, and I echo it. We
don't know. We don't understand it.
There's a cheap debating trick which implies that if, say,
science can't explain something, this must mean that some
other discipline can. If scientists suspect that all aspects of the
mind have a scientific explanation but they can't actually say
what that explanation is yet, then of course it's open to you to
doubt whether the explanation ever will be forthcoming. That's
the future they can be simply typed back into a machine and
the original gene reconstituted. It could be put back into a
living creature where it will work exactly the way it originally
did. In the context of the gene, the understanding, the
explanation is more or less total. And it was completely
unexpected only a few decades ago.
My suspicion, my hunch, my hope, is that the same thing is
going to be done for the conscious mind. Probably within the
next century. Soul One will finally be killed, and good
riddance. But in the process, Soul Two, far from being
destroyed, will still be finding new worlds to conquer.
I'm going to end my prepared remarks by saying a little bit
about Darwinism, because Darwinism is something which
obviously Steve Pinker and I have in common in our approach
to science. This, I think, may be the one place where possibly
some slight disagreement may emerge. For me, Darwinism is
not actually, surprisingly enough, the theory of the selfish
gene. It's the theory of the selfish replicator. Darwinism is a
much more general idea than the particular version of
Darwinism which happens to explain life on this planet.
Darwinism in this more general universal sense refers to the
differential survival of any kind of self-replicating coded
information which has some sort of power or influence over
its probability of being replicated. DNA is the main kind of
replicating entity that we know on this planet that has that
property. When we look at living things on this planet,
overwhelmingly the kind of explanation we should be seeking,
if we ask what the functional significance is an explanation in
terms of the good of the genes. Any adaptation is for the good
of the genes which made that adaptation.
STEVEN PINKER: I'm going to discuss an idea that elicits
wildly opposite reactions. Some people find it a shocking
claim with radical implications for morals and every value that
we hold dear. Other people think that it's a claim that was
established a hundred years ago, that the excitement is only in
how we work out the details, and that it has few if any
implications for our values and ethics. That is the idea that the
mind is the physiological activity of the brain, in particular the
information processing activity of the brain; that the brain, like
other organs, is shaped by the genes; and that in turn, the
genome was shaped by natural selection and other
evolutionary processes. I am among those who think that this
should no longer be a shocking claim, and that the excitement
is in fleshing out the details, and showing exactly how our
perception, decision-making, and emotions can be tied to the
activity of the brain.
Three new sciences are now vividly rooting our mental
processes in our biology. Cognitive neuroscience, the attempt
to relate thought, perception and emotion to the functioning of
the brain, has pretty much killed Soul One, in Richard's sense.
It should now be clear to any scientifically literate person that
we don't have any need for a ghost in the machine, as Gilbert
Ryle memorably put it. Many kinds of evidence show that the
mind is an entity in the physical world, part of a causal chain
of physical events. If you send an electric current through the
brain, you cause the person to have a vivid experience. If a
part of the brain dies because of a blood clot or a burst artery
or a bullet wound, a part of the person is gone -- the person
may lose an ability to see, think, or feel in a certain way, and
the entire personality may change. The same thing happens
gradually when the brain accumulates a protein called betaamyloid in the tragic disease known as Alzheimer's. The
person -- the soul, if you want -- gradually disappears as the
brain decays from this physical process.
We know that every form of mental activity -- every emotion,
every thought, every percept -- gives off electrical, magnetic,
or metabolic signals that can be recorded with increasing
the fact that their fates all depend on the survival of the body
forces them to cooperate. In the case of the different parts of
the brain, the fact that the brain ultimately controls a body that
has to be in one place at one time may impose the need for
some kind of circuit, presumably in the frontal lobes, that
coordinates the different agendas of the different parts of the
brain to ensure that the whole body goes in one direction. In
How the Mind Works I alluded to a scene in the comedy movie
All of Me in which Lily Tomlin's soul inhabits the left half of
Steve Martin's body and he takes a few steps in one direction
under his own control and then lurches in another direction
with his pinkie extended while under the control of Lily
Tomlin's spirit. That is what would happen if you had nothing
but completely autonomous modules of the brain, each with its
own goal. Since the body has to be in one place at one time,
there might be a circuit that suppresses the conflicting
motives. And in cases of neurological disease or brain damage,
and even perhaps in psychiatric conditions, we may be seeing
a relaxation or an imbalance or a defect in some of the
mechanisms that coordinate different parts of the brain.
Perhaps in an obsessive-compulsive disorder, motives that we
all have, such as checking to make sure that the stove is off
and washing our hands, ordinarily might be repressed by some
other part of the brain that says "yes, it's good to do that, but
not too much; there are other things to do as well." Obsessivecompulsive disorder may come from an imbalance among
these different mechanisms.
QUESTION: I just wanted to bring up the very obvious point
of biological reductionism which I think is raised by some of
the speakers here -- in that while I agree about there being no
ghosts in the machine I'm a little bit worried about what it's
getting replaced with is seemingly a rather simplistic way of
looking at the world as being the outpourings of the human
genome project. And in that, I'm worried that I don't hear for
yourself pounded out into the air from giant bells. You would
feel the dark beating of your imperfect harmonies like tingles
in your toes. Then, with the death of an Emperor, you would
fall into a deep sleep, only to awaken centuries later pulsing
out of the fingertips and into the ears of a frenetic, sober,
workaholic named Bach. You would then feel your body
opened up in new ways by a prying cosmic chiropractor- this
is how the successive generations of harmonic innovators
would feel to you. You would eventually flow out of the
Beatles' space age chrome guitar pickups and through the
distorting diminutive speakers of pastel plastic Japanese
radios.
Since neither Dennett nor anyone else identified with the
meme movement is unambiguous about what they are
claiming, I'll answer Dennett's lecture in a similarly
schizophrenic fashion. First, I'll assume memes are poetry,
then I'll assume they are theory.
If memes are poetry, then they are the poetry of a flight from
Meaning. What is communicated in Dennett's account of the
origin of music is primarily that it means nothing. Imagine for
a moment that instead of music, Dennett had chosen to
provide a "just so" story to explain the origin and development
of mathematics.
Dennett could have started in the same way, with an early
hominid or some other ancestor beating a stick for the hell of
it, only in this case he or she would have done so for a certain
number of times. The "integers" meme was thus born. Dennett
could have created a scenario in which that beating is copied
and elaborated and gains its own momentum. This could
develop in the course of millennia into an elaborate culture of
counting, including strange kinds of numbers, like the
imaginaries. It would also explain the often noted concurrence
of musical and mathematical talent.