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The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature [Anglais] [Relié]

Steven Pinker
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Description de l'ouvrage

septembre 2002
In The Blank Slate, Steven Pinker, one of the world's leading experts on language and the mind, explores the idea of human nature and its moral, emotional, and political colorings. With characteristic wit, lucidity, and insight, Pinker argues that the dogma that the mind has no innate traits-a doctrine held by many intellectuals during the past century-denies our common humanity and our individual preferences, replaces objective analyses of social problems with feel-good slogans, and distorts our understanding of politics, violence, parenting, and the arts. Injecting calm and rationality into debates that are notorious for ax-grinding and mud-slinging, Pinker shows the importance of an honest acknowledgment of human nature based on science and common sense.

--Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Broché .


Descriptions du produit

Extrait

Everyone has a theory of human nature. Everyone has to anticipate the behavior of others, and that means we all need theories about what makes people tick. A tacit theory of human nature—that behavior is caused by thoughts and feelings—is embedded in the very way we think about people. We fill out this theory by introspecting on our own minds and assuming that our fellows are like ourselves, and by watching people's behavior and filing away generalizations. We absorb still other ideas from our intellectual climate: from the expertise of authorities and the conventional wisdom of the day.

Our theory of human nature is the wellspring of much in our lives. We consult it when we want to persuade or threaten, inform or deceive. It advises us on how to nurture our marriages, bring up our children, and control our own behavior. Its assumptions about learning drive our educational policy; its assumptions about motivation drive our policies on economics, law, and crime. And because it delineates what people can achieve easily, what they can achieve only with sacrifice or pain, and what they cannot achieve at all, it affects our values: what we believe we can reasonably strive for as individuals and as a society. Rival theories of human nature are entwined in different ways of life and different political systems, and have been a source of much conflict over the course of history.

For millennia, the major theories of human nature have come from religion. The Judeo-Christian tradition, for example, offers explanations for much of the subject matter now studied by biology and psychology. Humans are made in the image of God and are unrelated to animals.  Women are derivative of men and destined to be ruled by them.  The mind is an immaterial substance: it has powers possessed by no purely physical structure, and can continue to exist when the body dies.  The mind is made up of several components, including a moral sense, an ability to love, a capacity for reason that recognizes whether an act conforms to ideals of goodness, and a decision faculty that chooses how to behave. Although the decision faculty is not bound by the laws of cause and effect, it has an innate tendency to choose sin. Our cognitive and perceptual faculties work accurately because God implanted ideals in them that correspond to reality and because he coordinates their functioning with the outside world. Mental health comes from recognizing God's purpose, choosing good and repenting sin, and loving God and one's fellow humans for God's sake.

The Judeo-Christian theory is based on events narrated in the Bible. We know that the human mind has nothing in common with the minds of animals because the Bible says that humans were created separately. We know that the design of women is based on the design of men because in the second telling of the creation of women Eve was fashioned from the rib of Adam. Human decisions cannot be the inevitable effects of some cause, we may surmise, because God held Adam and Eve responsible for eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge, implying that they could have chosen otherwise. Women are dominated by men as punishment for Eve's disobedience, and men and women inherit the sinfulness of the first couple.

The Judeo-Christian conception is still the most popular theory of human nature in the United States. According to recent polls, 76 percent of Americans believe in the biblical account of creation, 79 percent believe that the miracles in the Bible actually took place, 76 percent believe in angels, the devil, and other immaterial souls, 67 percent believe they will exist in some form after their death, and only 15 percent believe that Darwin's theory of evolution is the best explanation for the origin of human life on Earth. Politicians on the right embrace the religious theory explicitly, and no mainstream politician would dare contradict it in public. But the modern sciences of cosmology, geology, biology, and archaeology have made it impossible for a scientifically literate person to believe that the biblical story of creation actually took place. As a result, the Judeo-Christian theory of human nature is no longer explicitly avowed by most academics, journalists, social analysts, and other intellectually engaged people.


Nonetheless, every society must operate with a theory of human nature, and our intellectual mainstream is committed to another one. The theory is seldom articulated or overtly embraced, but it lies at the heart of a vast number of beliefs and policies. Bertrand Russell wrote, "Every man, wherever he goes, is encompassed by a cloud of comforting convictions, which move with him like flies on a summer day." For intellectuals today, many of those convictions are about psychology and social relations. I will refer to those convictions as the Blank Slate: the idea that the human mind has no inherent structure and can be inscribed at will by society or ourselves.

That theory of human nature—namely, that it barely exists—is the topic of this book. Just as religions contain a theory of human nature, so theories of human nature take on some of the functions of religion, and the Blank Slate has become the secular religion of modern intellectual life. It is seen as a source of values, so the fact that it is based on a miracle—a complex mind arising out of nothing—is not held against it. Challenges to the doctrine from skeptics and scientists have plunged some believers into a crisis of faith and have led others to mount the kinds of bitter attacks ordinarily aimed at heretics and infidels. And just as many religious traditions eventually reconciled themselves to apparent threats from science (such as the revolutions of Copernicus and Darwin), so, I argue, will our values survive the demise of the Blank Slate.

The chapters in this part of the book (Part I) are about the ascendance of the Blank Slate in modern intellectual life, and about the new view of human nature and culture that is beginning to challenge it. In succeeding parts we will witness the anxiety evoked by this challenge (Part II) and see how the anxiety may be assuaged (Part III). Then I will show how a richer conception of human nature can provide insight into language, thought, social life, and morality (Part IV) and how it can clarify controversies on politics, violence, gender, childrearing, and the arts (Part V). Finally I will show how the passing of the Blank Slate is less disquieting, and in some ways less revolutionary, than it first appears (Part VI).

Chapter 1

The Official Theory

"Blank slate" is a loose translation of the medieval Latin term tabula rasa—literally, "scraped tablet." It is commonly attributed to the philosopher John Locke (1632-1704), though in fact he used a different metaphor. Here is the famous passage from An Essay Concerning Human Understanding:

Let us then suppose the mind to be, as we say, white paper void of all characters, without any ideas. How comes it to be furnished? Whence comes it by that vast store which the busy and boundless fancy of man has painted on it with an almost endless variety? Whence has it all the materials of reason and knowledge? To this I answer, in one word, from experience.

Locke was taking aim at theories of innate ideas in which people were thought to be born with mathematical ideals, eternal truths, and a notion of God. His alternative theory, empiricism, was intended both as a theory of psychology—how the mind works—and as a theory of epistemology—how we come to know the truth. Both goals helped motivate his political philosophy, often honored as the foundation of liberal democracy. Locke opposed dogmatic justifications for the political status quo, such as the authority of the church and the divine right of kings, which had been touted as self-evident truths. He argued that social arrangements should be reasoned out from scratch and agreed upon by mutual consent, based on knowledge that any person could acquire. Since ideas are grounded in experience, which varies from person to person, differences of opinion arise not because one mind is equipped to grasp the truth and another is defective, but because the two minds have had different histories. Those differences therefore ought to be tolerated rather than suppressed. Locke's notion of a blank slate also undermined a hereditary royalty and aristocracy, whose members could claim no innate wisdom or merit if their minds had started out as blank as everyone else's. It also spoke against the institution of slavery, because slaves could no longer be thought of as innately inferior or subservient.

During the past century the doctrine of the Blank Slate has set the agenda for much of the social sciences and humanities. As we shall see, psychology has sought to explain all thought, feeling, and behavior with a few simple mechanisms of learning. The social sciences have sought to explain all customs and social arrangements as a product of the socialization of children by the surrounding culture: a system of words, images, stereotypes, role models, and contingencies of reward and punishment. A long and growing list of concepts that would seem natural to the human way of thinking (emotions, kinship, the sexes, illness, nature, the world) are now said to have been "invented" or "socially constructed."


The Blank Slate has also served as a sacred scripture for political and ethical beliefs. According to the doctrine, any differences we see among races, ethnic groups, sexes, and individuals come not from differences in their innate constitution but from differences in their experiences. Change the experiences—by reforming parenting, education, the media, and social rewards—and you can change the person. Underachievement, poverty, and antisocial behavior can be ameliorated; indeed, it is irresponsible not to do so. And discrimination on the basis of purportedly inborn traits of a sex or ethnic group is simply irrational.

The Blank Slat...

--Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Broché .

Revue de presse

"Steven Pinker has written an extremely good book-clear, well argued, fair, learned, tough, witty, humane, stimulating." (The Washington Post)

"Sweeping, erudite, sharply argued, and fun to read. It's also highly persuasive." (Time)

--Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Broché .

Détails sur le produit

  • Relié: 528 pages
  • Editeur : Penguin Putnam (septembre 2002)
  • Langue : Anglais
  • ISBN-10: 0670031518
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670031511
  • Dimensions du produit: 23,1 x 16 x 4,3 cm
  • Moyenne des commentaires client : 4.6 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (5 commentaires client)
  • Classement des meilleures ventes d'Amazon: 310.242 en Livres anglais et étrangers (Voir les 100 premiers en Livres anglais et étrangers)
  • Table des matières complète
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12 internautes sur 12 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
4.0 étoiles sur 5 Un livre majeur 17 janvier 2005
Par ethean
Format:Relié
Pinker est un professeur de psychologie de renommée mondiale, auteur de plusieurs bestsellers de vulgarisation scientifique (dont The Language Instinct sur le langage et How The mind works sur le cerveau). Dans ce nouveau livre, il démonte de façon implacable l'idée, encore très répandue, selon laquelle l'être humain est presque uniquement un produit de l'environnement familial ou social. Cette conception, fondée généralement sur des croyances politiques ou religieuses, est contredite par les découvertes scientifiques récentes sur la nature humaine. Celles-ci montrent l'importance de la génétique dans la constitution mentale de l'être humain, et dressent un tableau de la psyché inscrit dans les lois de l'évolution naturelle. Pinker fait un état de l'art magistral de ces recherches essentielles, qui permettent enfin de sortir des débats philosophiques stériles et commencent pour la première fois dans l'histoire à apporter des réponses convaincantes aux questions les plus profondes et les plus importantes : d'où vient la violence et comment on peut espérer la réduire, en quoi le cerveau des hommes est différent de celui des femmes, d'où vient l'altruisme et quelles conditions sociales le favorisent, pourquoi l'éducation des enfants est moins importante qu'on ne croit... Certaines de ces réponses peuvent inquiéter, choquer ou attrister, mais Pinker s'emploie à expliquer qu'elles ne contredisent pas les valeurs humanistes centrales et qu'une meilleure connaissance de nos mécanismes fondamentaux permettrait d'améliorer le fonctionnement de la société, des couples et nous réconcilier avec notre condition humaine. Même si certaines discussions peuvent parfois paraître insuffisantes, comme sur la peur du nihilisme, l'ensemble du livre est si puissamment argumenté (et cimenté par plusieurs centaines de références à des travaux scientifiques) que l'on voit mal comment les innombrables opposants à ces idées pourront se relever. Ce livre passionnant, pour l'essentiel très lisible, est un monument intellectuel majeur sur les sujets parmi les plus brûlants qui soient, et devrait déjà être traduit depuis longtemps.
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3 internautes sur 3 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 livre majeur 15 décembre 2003
Par ethean
Format:Broché
Pinker est un professeur de psychologie de renommée mondiale, auteur de plusieurs bestsellers de vulgarisation scientifique (dont The Language Instinct sur le langage et How The mind works sur le cerveau). Dans ce nouveau livre, il démonte de façon implacable l'idée, encore très répandue, selon laquelle l'être humain est presque uniquement un produit de l'environnement familial ou social. Cette conception, fondée généralement sur des croyances politiques ou religieuses, est contredite par les découvertes scientifiques récentes sur la nature humaine. Celles-ci montrent l'importance de la génétique dans la constitution mentale de l'être humain, et dressent un tableau de la psyché inscrit dans les lois de l'évolution naturelle. Pinker fait un état de l'art magistral de ces recherches essentielles, qui permettent enfin de sortir des débats philosophiques stériles et commencent pour la première fois dans l'histoire à apporter des réponses convaincantes aux questions les plus profondes et les plus importantes : d'où vient la violence et comment on peut espérer la réduire, en quoi le cerveau des hommes est différent de celui des femmes, d'où vient l'altruisme et quelles conditions sociales le favorisent, pourquoi l'éducation des enfants est moins importante qu'on ne croit... Certaines de ces réponses peuvent inquiéter, choquer ou attrister, mais Pinker s'emploie à expliquer qu'elles ne contredisent pas les valeurs humanistes centrales et qu'une meilleure connaissance de nos mécanismes fondamentaux permettrait d'améliorer le fonctionnement de la société, des couples et nous réconcilier avec notre condition humaine. Même si certaines discussions peuvent parfois paraître insuffisantes, comme sur la peur du nihilisme, l'ensemble du livre est si puissamment argumenté (et cimenté par plusieurs centaines de références à des travaux scientifiques) que l'on voit mal comment les innombrables opposants à ces idées pourront se relever. Ce livre passionnant, pour l'essentiel très lisible, est un monument intellectuel majeur sur les sujets parmi les plus brûlants qui soient, et devrait déjà être traduit depuis longtemps.
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2 internautes sur 2 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
Format:Broché
How refreshing that Mr. Pinker abundantly refers to the vast trove of literary works, picking out gems of insight into human nature, in his elegant scientific analysis! Perhaps no surprise from a cognitive psychologist so implicated in the study of linguistics and language acquisition, but welcome all the same.
Far from rendering his propos less scientific, his quotes from literary sources (throughout the book, not limited to the chapter on the Arts) give depth and relevance to his arguments, which are anything but "warm and fuzzy." And the opening chapters in Part 1, while perhaps too drawn out for many readers (including myself) provide a very coherent framework for the reasoning (The Blank State, The Ghost in the Machine, and The Noble Savage) behind the denial of human naure by many well-intentioned scientists and politicians.

Unfortunately, Mr. Pinker has obliged himself to take great pains to explain, again and again throughout the book, that understanding some of the more unpleasant aspects of human nature(selfishness, violence...)does not mean that one condones the behaviour. I would think that most readers already grasp this point without needing to be continually reminded of it, but I suppose he addresses himself to his detractors (and potential deniers).

I especially enjoyed chapters 8, "The Fear of Inequality" and 11 "The Fear of Nihilism", which are not only convincingly written, but full of humour as well. Ditto for the chapter on children. Any parent who has managed to raise children despite the continuous onslaught of conflicting childrearing advice by the "experts" can attest to Pinker's observations.

Well-written, meticulously documented, and insightful; a good place to begin reading within the currents of evolutionary psychology and sociobiology.
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