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The Political Implications of the Scientific Defeat of Our Being Born "Blank Slates"

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
Folks today are accustomed to having traditional and time-honored views of the world undermined (or threatened to be undermined) by the sciences. Everything from folk remedies for colds to the existence of a deity or deities have been subject to scientifically grounded challenges. Perhaps as a consequence, a surprising number of people have retreated into intellectual nihilism, claiming that, "All truth is relative to the individual", or "All truth is personal". But such nihilism is so poorly grounded in reason and evidence that it scarcely rises above the level of a superstition.

To me, one of the most significant notions the sciences have undermined is the notion that humans are a tabula rassa at birth, a "blank slate". This has been done relatively recently, but in my opinion, it's been done conclusively. As recently as the 1960s, the predominant opinion in the sciences dealing with human nature was that all humans were born with little or no built-in mental content. Some fields of study, perhaps most notably women's studies, still cling as much as they can to the notion, but even in those fields, I think the handwriting is on the wall.

But why is the notion that humans are born blank slates important?

Simply put, the notion is a crucial justification for nearly any kind of democracy. Beyond that, it is a crucial justification for the equal treatment of all under the law (including, of course, the notion that no one -- not even the most powerful elite -- is above the law). And in a larger sense, it undermines the very notions of "fairness" and "justice" themselves. In short, it is foundational to any political, social, and economic system that would seek to optimize human freedoms and liberties -- especially on the basis that all humans have an equal ability to use those freedoms and liberties in order to achieve well-being, self-fulfillment, or self-flourishing.

To be sure, there are ways to ground those ideals in something besides the notion we are all born blank slates. For example, the Christian notion that "all souls are equal before God" does just as well as the secular notion we are all born blank slates, and some might argue it does even better, to ground democracy, rule of law, fairness, justice, human freedoms and liberties, etc. But I would argue that even the Christian notion is at least seriously qualified by the same science that undermines the notion of our being blank slates.

Perhaps the best way to see how important the notion of our being blank slates is to providing a basis for asserting the validity of our common ideals is to consider the question in a negative light. If it could be demonstrated that humans were not only born with various inheritable traits, but that there were significant differences between people in which traits they were born with, then wouldn't that pose a challenge to any notion humans ought to be treated equitably?

In the simplest example, if you are born with grossly more intelligence than I am born with, then doesn't that suggest -- all else being equal -- that we'd both be generally better off if you were to lead us, rather than me? Or at least suggest that I have less right to lead you than you have to lead me, and thus call into question democracy?

Moreover, if our traits are truly hereditary, doesn't that advocate for an hereditary aristocracy of some sort -- perhaps even one lead by an hereditary monarch?

If thinking of the world as divided between aristocrats and commoners seems too old fashioned to you, then think of the world as divided between "makers" and "takers", or "producers" and "parasites" -- for those things are sometimes defined in ways that seem to depend on seeing people as having grossly different traits from birth. See, for example, Ayn Rand's hero, Francisco d'Anconia, in her novel Atlas Shrugged, who she implausibly describes as a child prodigy at almost everything, and the "climax of the d'Anconia line".

But it goes further than that, much further. Why should you and I be considered equals under the law if it could be demonstrated that you are born my better in any number of ways? Suppose I were born with a predisposition to criminal behavior while you were not. Should the courts sentence us the same for the same crime, knowing that I'm more likely to repeat the crime than are you? On what basis can it be said the courts have treated us fairly or justly if they do not fully take into account the significance of such a difference? And we might even ask, if it could be known that I have some sort of inborn predisposition to criminal behavior, on what grounds could we oppose limiting my freedoms and liberties from birth more than yours are limited?

Please note: The point here is not that the blank slate notion's destruction by the sciences will inevitably lead to a world in which our current ideals are trashed, but only that its destruction amounts to the removal of one key support for those ideals, and therefore brings us that much closer to such a world becoming the reality.

As I see it, the notion we are born blank slates has been conclusively defeated by the sciences. That defeat has weakened the philosophical justification for democracy -- and so much else besides. But is there anything that can replace it?

I think one bright ray of sunlight here is John Rawls' Theory of Justice. Writing in the early 1970s, Rawls proposed that certain general principles of justice and legal organization could be grounded on the decisions people would be most likely to make if, in a hypothetical scenario, they were asked to chose the rules for a society that they would afterwards be forced to live in. But with this key provision: At the time they chose the rules, they would not know what position they were to have in that society. In other words, they would not know whether they would be rich or poor, a member of the majority or of a minority, etc. Rawls hypothesized that people would, if ignorant of their fate, pick rules that were more or less just for all.

Last, we might wonder why thinking about such abstract subjects as the philosophical underpinnings of democracy, the rule of law, fairness, justice, human freedoms and liberties, and even the right to happiness should be of much concern to us? Why be bothered at all if the sciences have undermined a philosophical foundation for them?

I think the vast majority of us live cheerfully enough without giving such things a second thought. However, the vast majority of us aren't the world's movers and shakers. The movers and shakers are a minority among us -- and for them, the philosophical grounds for our ideals are typically of more than idle interest. They are typically motivating. Sometimes that motivation is obvious, as it was with the American revolutionaries. But sometimes, it is less than obvious, as it is with the current leaders of China. Their vision of human nature and their ideals for humanity are dramatically at odds with the American revolutionaries, and much less publicly sung than the revolutionaries views and values, but nonetheless implicit in the society they are building.

Questions? Comments?



__________________________
For a very different take on the consequences of science's defeat of the blank slate notion, see Stephen Pinker's book, The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature. Pinker and I agree that the Blank Slate has been defeated. Pinker, however, argues that that is a good thing on several grounds. And he's probably right since I am by nature always wrong.
 

james blunt

Well-Known Member
A great post indeed sir with some deep questions. Lt us start with the blank disk, a cd that is unwritten except a single master boot inlay that tells the cd it needs to feed.
However the cd cannot not function and feed at such an early age so it needs help to develop before it will write a few lines of data on the cd to start to function.
We always start with a blank disk .

I will comment more when i have thought some more.
 

lewisnotmiller

Grand Hat
Staff member
Premium Member
Folks today are accustomed to having traditional and time-honored views of the world undermined (or threatened to be undermined) by the sciences. Everything from folk remedies for colds to the existence of a deity or deities have been subject to scientifically grounded challenges. Perhaps as a consequence, a surprising number of people have retreated into intellectual nihilism, claiming that, "All truth is relative to the individual", or "All truth is personal". But such nihilism is so poorly grounded in reason and evidence that it scarcely rises above the level of a superstition.

To me, one of the most significant notions the sciences have undermined is the notion that humans are a tabula rassa at birth, a "blank slate". This has been done relatively recently, but in my opinion, it's been done conclusively. As recently as the 1960s, the predominant opinion in the sciences dealing with human nature was that all humans were born with little or no built-in mental content. Some fields of study, perhaps most notably women's studies, still cling as much as they can to the notion, but even in those fields, I think the handwriting is on the wall.

But why is the notion that humans are born blank slates important?

Simply put, the notion is a crucial justification for nearly any kind of democracy. Beyond that, it is a crucial justification for the equal treatment of all under the law (including, of course, the notion that no one -- not even the most powerful elite -- is above the law). And in a larger sense, it undermines the very notions of "fairness" and "justice" themselves. In short, it is foundational to any political, social, and economic system that would seek to optimize human freedoms and liberties -- especially on the basis that all humans have an equal ability to use those freedoms and liberties in order to achieve well-being, self-fulfillment, or self-flourishing.

To be sure, there are ways to ground those ideals in something besides the notion we are all born blank slates. For example, the Christian notion that "all souls are equal before God" does just as well as the secular notion we are all born blank slates, and some might argue it does even better, to ground democracy, rule of law, fairness, justice, human freedoms and liberties, etc. But I would argue that even the Christian notion is at least seriously qualified by the same science that undermines the notion of our being blank slates.

Perhaps the best way to see how important the notion of our being blank slates is to providing a basis for asserting the validity of our common ideals is to consider the question in a negative light. If it could be demonstrated that humans were not only born with various inheritable traits, but that there were significant differences between people in which traits they were born with, then wouldn't that pose a challenge to any notion humans ought to be treated equitably?

In the simplest example, if you are born with grossly more intelligence than I am born with, then doesn't that suggest -- all else being equal -- that we'd both be generally better off if you were to lead us, rather than me? Or at least suggest that I have less right to lead you than you have to lead me, and thus call into question democracy?

Moreover, if our traits are truly hereditary, doesn't that advocate for an hereditary aristocracy of some sort -- perhaps even one lead by an hereditary monarch?

If thinking of the world as divided between aristocrats and commoners seems too old fashioned to you, then think of the world as divided between "makers" and "takers", or "producers" and "parasites" -- for those things are sometimes defined in ways that seem to depend on seeing people as having grossly different traits from birth. See, for example, Ayn Rand's hero, Francisco d'Anconia, in her novel Atlas Shrugged, who she implausibly describes as a child prodigy at almost everything, and the "climax of the d'Anconia line".

But it goes further than that, much further. Why should you and I be considered equals under the law if it could be demonstrated that you are born my better in any number of ways? Suppose I were born with a predisposition to criminal behavior while you were not. Should the courts sentence us the same for the same crime, knowing that I'm more likely to repeat the crime than are you? On what basis can it be said the courts have treated us fairly or justly if they do not fully take into account the significance of such a difference? And we might even ask, if it could be known that I have some sort of inborn predisposition to criminal behavior, on what grounds could we oppose limiting my freedoms and liberties from birth more than yours are limited?

Please note: The point here is not that the blank slate notion's destruction by the sciences will inevitably lead to a world in which our current ideals are trashed, but only that its destruction amounts to the removal of one key support for those ideals, and therefore brings us that much closer to such a world becoming the reality.

As I see it, the notion we are born blank slates has been conclusively defeated by the sciences. That defeat has weakened the philosophical justification for democracy -- and so much else besides. But is there anything that can replace it?

I think one bright ray of sunlight here is John Rawls' Theory of Justice. Writing in the early 1970s, Rawls proposed that certain general principles of justice and legal organization could be grounded on the decisions people would be most likely to make if, in a hypothetical scenario, they were asked to chose the rules for a society that they would afterwards be forced to live in. But with this key provision: At the time they chose the rules, they would not know what position they were to have in that society. In other words, they would not know whether they would be rich or poor, a member of the majority or of a minority, etc. Rawls hypothesized that people would, if ignorant of their fate, pick rules that were more or less just for all.

Last, we might wonder why thinking about such abstract subjects as the philosophical underpinnings of democracy, the rule of law, fairness, justice, human freedoms and liberties, and even the right to happiness should be of much concern to us? Why be bothered at all if the sciences have undermined a philosophical foundation for them?

I think the vast majority of us live cheerfully enough without giving such things a second thought. However, the vast majority of us aren't the world's movers and shakers. The movers and shakers are a minority among us -- and for them, the philosophical grounds for our ideals are typically of more than idle interest. They are typically motivating. Sometimes that motivation is obvious, as it was with the American revolutionaries. But sometimes, it is less than obvious, as it is with the current leaders of China. Their vision of human nature and their ideals for humanity are dramatically at odds with the American revolutionaries, and much less publicly sung than the revolutionaries views and values, but nonetheless implicit in the society they are building.

Questions? Comments?



__________________________
For a very different take on the consequences of science's defeat of the blank slate notion, see Stephen Pinker's book, The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature. Pinker and I agree that the Blank Slate has been defeated. Pinker, however, argues that that is a good thing on several grounds. And he's probably right since I am by nature always wrong.

Hmm...while I agree we're not blank slates, I would never have drawn the same inference from it that you have. It's interesting.

So, honest truth...I don't treat people as equal because they are. I treat them as equal due to the Golden Rule.
Unless science moves from identifying possible traits, or increased likelihoods, and fully moves to being able to not only eliminate the concept of free will, but accurately identify determined actions, I think I'll continue to.

I 'believe' in free will despite being somewhat ignorant of the evidence as I think this position holds utility. The other path...meh...maybe in this case ignorance is bliss in a literal sense.
 

fantome profane

Anti-Woke = Anti-Justice
Premium Member
I think the rise of “neural plasticity” more than makes up for the defeat of “tabula rasa”. Or at least it has the potential to.
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
Hmm...while I agree we're not blank slates, I would never have drawn the same inference from it that you have. It's interesting.

You might find it even more interesting that John Locke relied on the notion of a blank slate (his term was a "white paper") to justify his notion humans have an innate right to "author their own soul". In turn, that idea is in part the cornerstone of his theory that life, liberty, and the pursuit of property are natural rights. And, as you know, Locke's notion of natural rights had some influence on the American Founders.
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
I think the rise of “neural plasticity” more than makes up for the defeat of “tabula rasa”. Or at least it has the potential to.

I would like to think so, but I'd hesitate to draw that conclusion just yet. It seems that some behaviors are too ingrained in us to be easily defeated even by great learning. For instance, tribalism. Even those of us who get beyond tribalism in some ways, usually don't get beyond it in all ways. We might come to see all of humanity as one humanity without nationalities or borders, but still, say, divide the world into us versus them in other ways. I submit that as an easy to see example, but I think a lot of our talents are just as inborn as our tribalism. Some folks seem naturally predisposed to learning mathematics, athletics, or people skills, for example. Others can also learn those skills, but so far as I can see, not nearly as easily nor as quite as likely to excel at them.
 

siti

Well-Known Member
Hmmm! I dunno - does the fact that we are not born with a blank slate mean that the political tabula rasa (aka NFI) that determines the outcome of an election somehow has to be reacquired on demand whenever a Presidential election or Brexit referendum (for example) is in the offing? Apart from blaming Facebook and the Russians, I have NFI!
 

David T

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
The problem is projection. We can say look blank slate is false therefore x y or Z.. Their is a huge magic jump from blank slate is false to therefore...... I am totally anti magic!!!! Therefore is a magical thinking problem.

Now I have a degree in magical therefore, it's called theology. So if someone wants to argue magical therefore, as being valid i am well trained!!!! It's normal but oh sooooooooooo average. Very craftsman really.
 

lewisnotmiller

Grand Hat
Staff member
Premium Member
You might find it even more interesting that John Locke relied on the notion of a blank slate (his term was a "white paper") to justify his notion humans have an innate right to "author their own soul". In turn, that idea is in part the cornerstone of his theory that life, liberty, and the pursuit of property are natural rights. And, as you know, Locke's notion of natural rights had some influence on the American Founders.

I've read Locke, at least to my own simplistic understanding.
I just don't really agree with the concept of 'natural rights' as being important. Honestly, it seems a scary basis for morality.
 

Orbit

I'm a planet
Tabula rasa is an old idea that has long been superseded by the idea that what we become is partly "nature" (biologically determined) and part "nurture" (socialization). In anthropology at least, the "newer" idea has long traction.
 

sun rise

The world is on fire
Premium Member
Simply put, the notion is a crucial justification for nearly any kind of democracy. Beyond that, it is a crucial justification for the equal treatment of all under the law (including, of course, the notion that no one -- not even the most powerful elite -- is above the law). And in a larger sense, it undermines the very notions of "fairness" and "justice" themselves. In short, it is foundational to any political, social, and economic system that would seek to optimize human freedoms and liberties -

Not in my view. You are postulating something which is a cousin to "equal result" rather than "equal opportunity". I was never going to be an athlete which was obvious from a very young age. I was never going to be a Nobel prize winner. What to me is "fair" is that all doors are open to me and I can choose which one I try to enter without any bars due to my inferior physical skills and other lacks. Some people overcome lack in native ability with super hard work.

In the simplest example, if you are born with grossly more intelligence than I am born with, then doesn't that suggest -- all else being equal -- that we'd both be generally better off if you were to lead us, rather than me? Or at least suggest that I have less right to lead you than you have to lead me, and thus call into question democracy?

That is only true if intelligence is determinant for leadership success. It's not in my view. Wisdom, judgment and humility are to me ideal qualities of a leader. Now if there's someone who is born with more than her share of those qualities in potential and he develops them to a high level during childhood, then I'd say that person deserves to lead us.
 

Shadow Wolf

Certified People sTabber & Business Owner
I think Rawl's "veil of ignorance" would be a good starting point to envision of more equitable and just society when we are not blank slates. We aren't blank slates, but his thought experiment gives us a point to consider what society would look like.
 

Nakosis

Non-Binary Physicalist
Premium Member
Questions? Comments?

I think democracy needs to be replaced by a better system of government.

Democracy really hasn't worked out so well. Maybe because it assumed a blank slate at birth scenario.

I accept there are people who will always be smarter than myself. However I have a lot of experience doing what I do, so just because someone else is smarter, it doesn't mean they could do what I do.

I read somewhere that if your IQ is 120 or more you're as capable as anyone else at solving a problem. May just take you a little longer.

People get to are should be able to do what they like to do, and they can get good at it without intelligence being a big factor. Not everyone wants to do the same job, plenty of jobs to go around regardless of one's inherent abilities IMO.

So you have a few people running things already, why? Probably because they are smarter than the rest in some sense.

Democracy does not put the smartest people in control. They put the most popular people in control. That's why the politicians never seem able to come up with workable solutions.
 
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Vouthon

Dominus Deus tuus ignis consumens est
Premium Member
The first thing I would say is that @fantome profane is somewhat correct and has beat me to the punch (why don't I write shorter posts!). Science not only taketh away but also giveth.

In his treatise De Memoria et Reminiscentia, Aristotle compared human memory to a wax tablet. At birth, the wax is hot and pliable, but as it cools it becomes tough and brittle. Tabula rasa. It was Aristotle who first coined the term.

While science has conclusively demonstrated that we are not genetic blank-slates (which I reckon would be quite a boring thing, anyway), it has also dispelled the presumption that our "slate" is incapable of being re-moulded courtesy of epigenetics and neural plasticity. The brain is always able to produce new neurons, even into old age. So Aristotle was wrong not just about the idea that the newborn mind is a blank-slate but also in his assertion that it quickly becomes fixed and impermeable, according to eternal laws of nature that predispose some people to be natural slaves (with no hope of change) and others as being natural overlords.

Just consider the case of Aleksander Hemon. Originally from Sarajevo, he found himself exiled in the US on the outbreak of the Bosnian war in 1992 – despite having little command of English. “I had this horrible, pressing need to write because things were happening. I needed to do it the same way I needed to eat, but I just had no language to write in,” he later told the New York Times. Within three years, he had published his first piece in an American journal, a journey that eventually led to three critically acclaimed novels, two short story collections, a book of autobiographical essays, and a MacArthur Genius Award.

He shouldn't, based upon a pessimistic understanding of his "slate" at birth (i.e. foreign language fluency declines with age) have been able to become such a master of the English language in his late twenties - early thirties, but he defied the odds through sheer perseverance and the survival instinct. As a result, he managed to surpass the abilities of most native speakers.

Since the time when Francis Crick first examined the structure of DNA, there has been a scientific consensus to the effect that "genes load the gun, but environment pulls the trigger." In other words, genetic data isn't a deterministic or fatalistic encoding of individualized traits; rather it only encodes tedious lines of instructions for generating various biological structures if - and only if - given circumstances arise. Which is to say, we aren't just blind automatons driven by and at the mercy of our desires and inherited traits. If we were, then "epigenetics" and "neuroplasticity" would not be such burgeoning fields of scientific inquiry right now. In short, Kempermann says, "Experience matters. Genes are clearly critically important - but even given identical genes and an identical environment, different experiences lead to different personalities, and to the individualization of the brain."

Studies have shown that when illiterate adults in the developing world are taught to read for the first time, their neural circuitry is radically re-wired. Priscilla Sitienei, a midwife from Ndalat in rural Kenya, was one of the test subjects. She was 90 years old and had never received primary education.It's amazing to look at the brain scans and allowing oneself to be overawed by the incredible fertility of the human mind and will. The adult brain proves to be astonishingly flexible. See:


Amazingly flexible: Learning to read in your 30s profoundly transforms the brain


The Max Planck researchers together with Indian scientists from the Centre of Bio-Medical Research (CBMR) Lucknow and the University of Hyderabad have now discovered what changes occur in the adult brain when completely illiterate people learn to read and write. In contrast to previous assumptions, the learning process leads to a reorganisation that extends to deep brain structures in the thalamus and the brainstem

But while this is so, it still doesn't overcome the fact that we have inherent differences in levels of aptitude and in predispositions, when all is said and done.

I could never ever hope to one day run as fast as Usain Bolt or solve complex mathematical equations like Albert Einstein. The modification of gene expression is not the same thing as actually changing the genetic code itself. Short of ingesting performance enhancing drugs, undergoing artificial genetic tampering in a lab or checking myself in for a lobotomy, there are still inherent limitations set by my genetic code.

So we return to the truism that humans are not born "equal" in terms of talents and inherited traits.

But this doesn't automatically entail that just because we are not born with the equal talents and traits, that we shouldn't be treated equally, given the same equality of opportunity or even given a leg-up by the state to help even the odds. Arguments following this line of thought commit the "naturalistic fallacy".

The natural order is intrinsically amoral and purposeless. When we look at inherited traits or behaviors, we are describing what is in the objective, scientific sense of the term. What we do not do, is derive any prescriptive value judgement therefrom. This is because what we should do morally speaking, cannot in any ultimate sense be derived from that kind of premise.

Thus, just because some people are naturally smarter or stronger or more competitive, does not automatically mean that our value system or politico-economic structures should enable people with these traits to have supremacy over those who don't. After all, John Rawls explicitly rejected the idea of meritocracy on the basis that orienting society around the unequal distribution of natural talents was as inequitable as doing so with regards to the fortune of a good birth, writing,


"the ordering of institutions is always defective because the distribution of natural talents and the contingencies of social circumstance are [both] unjust.

It is incorrect that individuals with greater natural endowments and the superior character that has made their development possible have a right to a cooperative scheme that enables them to obtain even further benefits in ways that do not contribute to the advantages of others. We do not deserve our place in the distribution of native endowments, any more than we deserve our initial starting place in society...

The appropriate principles of justice will not lead to a meritocratic society. This form of social order … uses equality of opportunity as a way of releasing men’s energies in the pursuit of economic prosperity and political dominion. … The culture of the poorer strata is impoverished while that of the governing and technocratic elite is securely based on the service of the national ends of power and wealth. Equality of opportunity means an equal chance to leave the less fortunate behind in the personal quest for influence and social position."


- John Rawls (b. 1921, d. 2002) was an American political philosopher in the liberal tradition


The logic at play in the Randian viewpoint errs - to my mind - in its assumption that natural talent should be viewed as a merit rather than a gift, as Pope Francis once noted:


Pastoral visit of the Holy Father Francis to the Archdiocese of Genoa (27 May 2017) – Meeting with the world of work at the Ilva Factory


The new capitalism, through meritocracy, gives a moral appearance to inequality because it interprets the talents of people not as a gift: talent is not a gift according to this interpretation: it is a merit, determining a system of cumulative advantages and disadvantages.

Thus, if two children are born differently in terms of talent or social and economic opportunities, the economic world will interpret the different talents as merits and will pay them otherwise. And so, when those two children retire, the inequality between them will be multiplied...

This is the old logic of Job’s friends, who wanted to convince him that he was guilty of his misfortune. But this is not the logic of the Gospel, it is not the logic of life

Both Rawls and Christian morality avoid the pitfall of the naturalistic fallacy. If your biology makes you intelligent, handsome, healthy or humorous, you don't necessarily deserve to be above those people whom nature hasn't seen fit to make quite so smart, beautiful, healthy or socially gregarious. And if you are less intelligent, or not as good looking, or sickly, you don't deserve to have no-one should help you, just because its biology baby!

That's a value judgement (an "ought") that the mere fact of intelligence or good birth or health (the "is") does not automatically give you.

I have more to say on this later, other points to raise.
 
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Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
Tabula rasa is an old idea that has long been superseded by the idea that what we become is partly "nature" (biologically determined) and part "nurture" (socialization). In anthropology at least, the "newer" idea has long traction.

You're right, of course, but you're calling tabula rasa "an old idea" makes me feel positively ancient! :D I grew up in the sixties and seventies when you could not pick up many a textbook in the sciences dealing with human nature that didn't start with a prominent description of human nature as a blank slate.
 

sayak83

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Folks today are accustomed to having traditional and time-honored views of the world undermined (or threatened to be undermined) by the sciences. Everything from folk remedies for colds to the existence of a deity or deities have been subject to scientifically grounded challenges. Perhaps as a consequence, a surprising number of people have retreated into intellectual nihilism, claiming that, "All truth is relative to the individual", or "All truth is personal". But such nihilism is so poorly grounded in reason and evidence that it scarcely rises above the level of a superstition.

To me, one of the most significant notions the sciences have undermined is the notion that humans are a tabula rassa at birth, a "blank slate". This has been done relatively recently, but in my opinion, it's been done conclusively. As recently as the 1960s, the predominant opinion in the sciences dealing with human nature was that all humans were born with little or no built-in mental content. Some fields of study, perhaps most notably women's studies, still cling as much as they can to the notion, but even in those fields, I think the handwriting is on the wall.

But why is the notion that humans are born blank slates important?

Simply put, the notion is a crucial justification for nearly any kind of democracy. Beyond that, it is a crucial justification for the equal treatment of all under the law (including, of course, the notion that no one -- not even the most powerful elite -- is above the law). And in a larger sense, it undermines the very notions of "fairness" and "justice" themselves. In short, it is foundational to any political, social, and economic system that would seek to optimize human freedoms and liberties -- especially on the basis that all humans have an equal ability to use those freedoms and liberties in order to achieve well-being, self-fulfillment, or self-flourishing.

To be sure, there are ways to ground those ideals in something besides the notion we are all born blank slates. For example, the Christian notion that "all souls are equal before God" does just as well as the secular notion we are all born blank slates, and some might argue it does even better, to ground democracy, rule of law, fairness, justice, human freedoms and liberties, etc. But I would argue that even the Christian notion is at least seriously qualified by the same science that undermines the notion of our being blank slates.

Perhaps the best way to see how important the notion of our being blank slates is to providing a basis for asserting the validity of our common ideals is to consider the question in a negative light. If it could be demonstrated that humans were not only born with various inheritable traits, but that there were significant differences between people in which traits they were born with, then wouldn't that pose a challenge to any notion humans ought to be treated equitably?

In the simplest example, if you are born with grossly more intelligence than I am born with, then doesn't that suggest -- all else being equal -- that we'd both be generally better off if you were to lead us, rather than me? Or at least suggest that I have less right to lead you than you have to lead me, and thus call into question democracy?

Moreover, if our traits are truly hereditary, doesn't that advocate for an hereditary aristocracy of some sort -- perhaps even one lead by an hereditary monarch?

If thinking of the world as divided between aristocrats and commoners seems too old fashioned to you, then think of the world as divided between "makers" and "takers", or "producers" and "parasites" -- for those things are sometimes defined in ways that seem to depend on seeing people as having grossly different traits from birth. See, for example, Ayn Rand's hero, Francisco d'Anconia, in her novel Atlas Shrugged, who she implausibly describes as a child prodigy at almost everything, and the "climax of the d'Anconia line".

But it goes further than that, much further. Why should you and I be considered equals under the law if it could be demonstrated that you are born my better in any number of ways? Suppose I were born with a predisposition to criminal behavior while you were not. Should the courts sentence us the same for the same crime, knowing that I'm more likely to repeat the crime than are you? On what basis can it be said the courts have treated us fairly or justly if they do not fully take into account the significance of such a difference? And we might even ask, if it could be known that I have some sort of inborn predisposition to criminal behavior, on what grounds could we oppose limiting my freedoms and liberties from birth more than yours are limited?

Please note: The point here is not that the blank slate notion's destruction by the sciences will inevitably lead to a world in which our current ideals are trashed, but only that its destruction amounts to the removal of one key support for those ideals, and therefore brings us that much closer to such a world becoming the reality.

As I see it, the notion we are born blank slates has been conclusively defeated by the sciences. That defeat has weakened the philosophical justification for democracy -- and so much else besides. But is there anything that can replace it?

I think one bright ray of sunlight here is John Rawls' Theory of Justice. Writing in the early 1970s, Rawls proposed that certain general principles of justice and legal organization could be grounded on the decisions people would be most likely to make if, in a hypothetical scenario, they were asked to chose the rules for a society that they would afterwards be forced to live in. But with this key provision: At the time they chose the rules, they would not know what position they were to have in that society. In other words, they would not know whether they would be rich or poor, a member of the majority or of a minority, etc. Rawls hypothesized that people would, if ignorant of their fate, pick rules that were more or less just for all.

Last, we might wonder why thinking about such abstract subjects as the philosophical underpinnings of democracy, the rule of law, fairness, justice, human freedoms and liberties, and even the right to happiness should be of much concern to us? Why be bothered at all if the sciences have undermined a philosophical foundation for them?

I think the vast majority of us live cheerfully enough without giving such things a second thought. However, the vast majority of us aren't the world's movers and shakers. The movers and shakers are a minority among us -- and for them, the philosophical grounds for our ideals are typically of more than idle interest. They are typically motivating. Sometimes that motivation is obvious, as it was with the American revolutionaries. But sometimes, it is less than obvious, as it is with the current leaders of China. Their vision of human nature and their ideals for humanity are dramatically at odds with the American revolutionaries, and much less publicly sung than the revolutionaries views and values, but nonetheless implicit in the society they are building.

Questions? Comments?



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For a very different take on the consequences of science's defeat of the blank slate notion, see Stephen Pinker's book, The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature. Pinker and I agree that the Blank Slate has been defeated. Pinker, however, argues that that is a good thing on several grounds. And he's probably right since I am by nature always wrong.
Have you noticed how the new model is functionally equivalent to the Indic idea that we are born with inherent traits, tendencies, habits and capabilities due to past Karma.... and how the Rawls original position is functionally equivalent to us getting reborn at various places in society through time in ways we don't quite control?
So, perhaps Indian ideas of equivalency among beings in terms of all being capable of self consciousness (Hinduism) and capable of experiencing suffering (Buddhism) may prove a better grounding for democratic principles?
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
Democracy does not put the smartest people in control. They put the most popular people in control. That's why the politicians never seem able to come up with workable solutions.

I don't recall much evidence that other systems of government do much better than democracies in that regard. However, I do grant that they hide from their own people the foolish decisions of their leaders much more effectively than democracies. And hide the truth from more than just their own people! Mussolini's big lie that he "got the trains to run on time" is even to this day cited by people around the world as evidence that dictatorships are more effective and efficient at getting things done than democracies. But it was discovered decades ago that the notion was not just a lie, but a Big Lie. That is, the trains actually ran more often behind schedule under Mussolini than they had before him.
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
Have you noticed how the new model is functionally equivalent to the Indic idea that we are born with inherent traits, tendencies, habits and capabilities due to past Karma.... and how the Rawls original position is functionally equivalent to us getting reborn at various places in society through time in ways we don't quite control?

I confess those thoughts have occurred to me. One of the few times any respectable thoughts have occurred to me.

So, perhaps Indian ideas of equivalency among beings in terms of all being capable of self consciousness (Hinduism) and capable of experiencing suffering (Buddhism) may prove a better grounding for democratic principles?

That's a fascinating train of thought.
 

Vouthon

Dominus Deus tuus ignis consumens est
Premium Member
But I would argue that even the Christian notion is at least seriously qualified by the same science that undermines the notion of our being blank slates.


It's a matter of perspective.

When his disciples were arguing about which of them was the "greatest" and should therefore be entitled to sit at Jesus's right or left hand, he suddenly threw an F-bomb in their midst and torpedoed their assumed value system by sitting a little child on his lap, saying, “Whoever receives this child in my name receives me, and whoever receives me receives him who sent me. For he who is least among you all is the one who is great." (Luke 9:48) and elsewhere "For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted.” (Luke 14:11)

This decimated the premise upon which they had been debating "greatness".

A titanic reversal and inversion of commonsense values was at play here.

If the least naturally or socially well-endowed members of society should view themselves as being "the great" who deserve to be lifted up rather than feel ashamed; while the most naturally or socially-endowed members of society should view themselves as the "least" who deserve to be brought down (unless they humbly serve those less-well-off and treat their talent/power/social standing as a gift rather than an inherent merit), then doesn't that provide a basis upon which to treat everyone as equal?

That's the Christian ethics that Nietzsche despised, of course, describing it thus:


Only those who suffer are good, only the poor, the powerless, the lowly are good; the suffering, the deprived, the sick, the ugly, are the only pious people, the only ones saved, salvation is for them alone, whereas you rich, the noble and powerful, you eternally wicked cruel, lustful, insatiate, godless, you will be eternally wretched, cursed and damned. (OGM 1:7)


Christianity, by affirming the equality of souls (that is, the capacity of humans for self-awareness, mind, consciousness or intellect because we are autonomous beings created in God's image) as paramount, and treating differences in natural talent or inherited privilege as secondary manifestations of individuality that God intended ultimately to be used as gifts for the benefit not only of oneself but other people (rather than merits), simply annuls the problem for me.

I don't see a problem when looking at it through the lens of Christian theology TBH because our basis for equality rests on a different foundation and also fundamentally subverts any value system that would seek to apportion or weigh human worth based upon differences in natural talents, by rendering it sinful to consider oneself inherently better or fit to rule simply because of them i.e. "Blessed are the poor, the meek shall inherit the earth, if you want to be the greatest then become a servant, last of all and least of all" etc.
 
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Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
But this doesn't automatically entail that just because we are not born with the equal talents and traits, that we shouldn't be treated equally, given the same equality of opportunity or even given a leg-up by the state to help even the odds. Arguments following this line of thought commit the "naturalistic fallacy".

I agree that we should avoid the naturalistic fallacy but I believe that every political, social, and economic ideology (to say nothing of religious ideologies) is based on an implicit or explicit notion of human nature. Moreover, it seems all but a logical necessity that those ideologies be based on a plausible notion as well. I suppose you could base a notion of what is the best political system for humans on the psychology of ducks, but I doubt you'd get many followers apart from Americans, who are famous for believing anything -- even that humans can naturally and neatly be divided into mutually exclusive "producers and parasites".

Put differently, an ideology should be grounded in a plausible view of human nature, and the more accurate the better, but it should not commit the naturalistic fallacy by asserting that it absolutely must be adopted because of its view of human nature.

In the OP, I was trying to be clear that I thought the notion we are born blank slates was a key support of certain ideals, without however, demanding the adoption of those ideals. Re-reading the OP, however, I am alarmed to discover I failed to make that point near clearly enough. Naturally, I'm still reeling from the implications I could possibly fail at something. Mom just never prepared me for such an event.
 
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