Sorry, but your soul just died By Tom Wolfe
Being a bit behind the curve, I had only
just heard of the digital revolution last
February when Louis Rossetto, cofounder of
Wired magazine, wearing a shirt with no collar
and his hair as long as Felix Mendelssohn's,
looking every inch the young California visionary,
gave a speech before the Cato Institute announcing
the dawn of the twenty-first century's digital
civilization. As his text, he chose the maverick
Jesuit scientist and philosopher Pierre Teilhard
de Chardin, who fifty years ago prophesied
that radio, television, and computers would
create a "noösphere", an electronic
membrane covering the earth and wiring all
humanity together in a single nervous system.
Geographic locations, national boundaries,
the old notions of markets and political
processes--all would become irrelevant. With
the Internet spreading over the globe at
an astonishing pace, said Rossetto, that
marvelous modem-driven moment is almost at
hand.
Could be. But something tells me that within
ten years, by 2006, the entire digital universe
is going to seem like pretty mundane stuff
compared to a new technology that right now
is but a mere glow radiating from a tiny
number of American and Cuban (yes, Cuban)
hospitals and laboratories. It is called
brain imaging, and anyone who cares to get
up early and catch a truly blinding twenty-first-century
dawn will want to keep an eye on it.
Brain imaging refers to techniques for watching
the human brain as it functions, in real
time. The most advanced forms currently are
three-dimensional electroencephalography
using mathematical models; the more familiar
PET scan (positron-emission tomography);
the new fMRI (functional magnetic resonance
imaging), which shows brain blood-flow patterns,
and MRS (magnetic resonance spectroscopy),
which measures biochemical changes in the
brain; and the even newer PET reporter gene/PET
reporter probe, which is, in fact, so new
that it still has that length of heavy lumber
for a name. Used so far only in animals and
a few desperately sick children, the PET
reporter gene/PET reporter probe pinpoints
and follows the activity of specific genes.
On a scanner screen you can actually see
the genes light up inside the brain.
By 1996 standards, these are sophisticated
devices. Ten years from now, however, they
may seem primitive compared to the stunning
new windows into the brain that will have
been developed.
Brain imaging was invented for medical diagnosis.
But its far greater importance is that it
may very well confirm, in ways too precise
to be disputed, certain theories about "the
mind," "the self," "the
soul," and "free will" that
are already devoutly believed in by scholars
in what is now the hottest field in the academic
world, neuroscience. Granted, all those skeptical
quotation marks are enough to put anybody
on the qui vive right away, but Ultimate
Skepticism is part of the brilliance of the
dawn I have promised.
Neuroscience, the science of the brain and
the central nervous system, is on the threshold
of a unified theory that will have an impact
as powerful as that of Darwinism a hundred
years ago. Already there is a new Darwin,
or perhaps I should say an updated Darwin,
since no one ever believed more religiously
in Darwin I than he does. His name is Edward
O. Wilson. He teaches zoology at Harvard,
and he is the author of two books of extraordinary
influence, The Insect Societies and Sociobiology:
The New Synthesis. Not A new synthesis but
The new synthesis; in terms of his stature
in neuroscience, it is not a mere boast.
Wilson has created and named the new field
of sociobiology, and he has compressed its
underlying premise into a single sentence.
Every human brain, he says, is born not as
a blank tablet (a tabula rasa) waiting to
be filled in by experience but as "an
exposed negative waiting to be slipped into
developer fluid." You can develop the
negative well or you can develop it poorly,
but either way you are going to get precious
little that is not already imprinted on the
film. The print is the individual's genetic
history, over thousands of years of evolution,
and there is not much anybody can do about
it. Furthermore, says Wilson, genetics determine
not only things such as temperament, role
preferences, emotional responses, and levels
of aggression, but also many of our most
revered moral choices, which are not choices
at all in any free-will sense but tendencies
imprinted in the hypothalamus and limbic
regions of the brain, a concept expanded
upon in 1993 in a much-talked-about book,
The Moral Sense , by James Q. Wilson (no
kin to Edward O.).
The Neuroscientific view of life
This, the neuroscientific view of life, has
become the strategic high ground in the academic
world, and the battle for it has already
spread well beyond the scientific disciplines
and, for that matter, out into the general
public. Both liberals and conservatives without
a scientific bone in their bodies are busy
trying to seize the terrain. The gay rights
movement, for example, has fastened onto
a study published in July of 1993 by the
highly respected Dean Hamer of the National
Institutes of Health, announcing the discovery
of "the gay gene." Obviously, if
homosexuality is a genetically determined
trait, like left-handedness or hazel eyes,
then laws and sanctions against it are attempts
to legislate against Nature. Conservatives,
meantime, have fastened upon studies indicating
that men's and women's brains are wired so
differently, thanks to the long haul of evolution,
that feminist attempts to open up traditionally
male roles to women are the same thing: a
doomed violation of Nature.
Wilson himself has wound up in deep water
on this score; or cold water, if one need
edit. In his personal life Wilson is a conventional
liberal, PC, as the saying goes--he is ,
after all, a member of the Harvard faculty--concerned
about environmental issues and all the usual
things. But he has said that "forcing
similar role identities" on both men
and women "flies in the face of thousands
of years in which mammals demonstrated a
strong tendency for sexual division of labor.
Since this division of labor is persistent
from hunter-gatherer through agricultural
and industrial societies, it suggests a genetic
origin. We do not know when this trait evolved
in human evolution or how resistant it is
to the continuing and justified pressures
for human rights."
"Resistant" was Darwin II, the
neuroscientist, speaking. "Justified"
was the PC Harvard liberal. He was not PC
or liberal enough. Feminist protesters invaded
a conference where Wilson was appearing,
dumped a pitcher of ice water, cubes and
all, over his head, and began chanting, "You're
all wet! You're all wet!" The most prominent
feminist in America, Gloria Steinem, went
on television and, in an interview with John
Stossel of ABC, insisted that studies of
genetic differences between male and female
nervous systems should cease forthwith.
But that turned out to be mild stuff in the
current political panic over neuroscience.
In February of 1992, Frederick K. Goodwin,
a renowned psychiatrist, head of the federal
Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration,
and a certified yokel in the field of public
relations, made the mistake of describing,
at a public meeting in Washington, the National
Institute of Mental Health's ten-year-old
Violence Initiative. This was an experimental
program whose hypothesis was that, as among
monkeys in the jungle--Goodwin was noted
for his monkey studies--much of the criminal
mayhem in the United States was caused by
a relatively few young males who were genetically
predisposed to it; who were hardwired for
violent crime, in short. Out in the jungle,
among mankind's closest animal relatives,
the chimpanzees, it seemed that a handful
of genetically twisted young males were the
ones who committed practically all of the
wanton murders of other males and the physical
abuse of females. What if the same were true
among human beings? What if, in any given
community, it turned out to be a handful
of young males with toxic DNA who were pushing
statistics for violent crime up to such high
levels? The Violence Initiative envisioned
identifying these individuals in childhood,
somehow, some way, someday, and treating
them therapeutically with drugs. The notion
that crime-ridden urban America was a "jungle,"
said Goodwin, was perhaps more than just
a tired old metaphor.
That did it. That may have been the stupidest
single word uttered by an American public
official in the year 1992. The outcry was
immediate. Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts
and Representative John Dingell of Michigan
(who, it became obvious later, suffered from
hydrophobia when it came to science projects)
not only condemned Goodwin's remarks as racist
but also delivered their scientific verdict:
Research among primates "is a preposterous
basis" for analyzing anything as complex
as "the crime and violence that plagues
our country today." (This came as surprising
news to NASA scientists who had first trained
and sent a chimpanzee called Ham up on top
of a Redstone rocket into suborbital space
flight and then trained and sent another
one, called Enos, which is Greek for "man,"
up on an Atlas rocket and around the earth
in orbital space flight and had thereby accurately
and completely predicted the physical, psychological,
and task-motor responses of the human astronauts,
Alan Shepard and John Glenn, who repeated
the chimpanzees' flights and tasks months
later.) The Violence Initiative was compared
to Nazi eugenic proposals for the extermination
of undesirables. Dingell's Michigan colleague,
Representative John Conyers, then chairman
of the Government Operations Committee and
senior member of the Congressional Black
Caucus, demanded Goodwin's resignation--and
got it two days later, whereupon the government,
with the Department of Health and Human Services
now doing the talking, denied that the Violence
Initiative had ever existed. It disappeared
down the memory hole, to use Orwell's term.
A conference of criminologists and other
academics interested in the neuroscientific
studies done so far for the Violence Initiative--a
conference underwritten in part by a grant
from the National Institutes of Health--had
been scheduled for May of 1993 at the University
of Maryland. Down went the conference, too;
the NIH drowned it like a kitten. Last year,
a University of Maryland legal scholar named
David Wasserman tried to reassemble the troops
on the QT, as it were, in a hall all but
hidden from human purview in a hamlet called
Queenstown in the foggy, boggy boondocks
of Queen Annes County on Maryland's Eastern
Shore. The NIH, proving it was a hard learner,
quietly provided $133,000 for the event but
only after Wasserman promised to fireproof
the proceedings by also inviting scholars
who rejected the notion of a possible genetic
genesis of crime and scheduling a cold-shower
session dwelling on the evils of the eugenics
movement of the early twentieth century.
No use, boys! An army of protesters found
the poor cringing devils anyway and stormed
into the auditorium chanting, "Maryland
conference, you can't hide--we know you're
pushing genocide!" It took two hours
for them to get bored enough to leave, and
the conference ended in a complete muddle
with the specially recruited fireproofing
PC faction issuing a statement that said:
"Scientists as well as historians and
sociologists must not allow themselves to
provide academic respectability for racist
pseudoscience." Today, at the NIH, the
term Violence Initiative is a synonym for
taboo . The present moment resembles that
moment in the Middle Ages when the Catholic
Church forbade the dissection of human bodies,
for fear that what was discovered inside
might cast doubt on the Christian doctrine
that God created man in his own image.
Even more radio-active is the matter of intelligence,
as measured by IQ tests. Privately--not many
care to speak out--the vast majority of neuroscientists
believe the genetic component of an individual's
intelligence is remarkably high. Your intelligence
can be improved upon, by skilled and devoted
mentors, or it can be held back by a poor
upbringing--i. e., the negative can be well
developed or poorly developed--but your genes
are what really make the difference. The
recent ruckus over Charles Murray and Richard
Herrnstein's The Bell Curve is probably just
the beginning of the bitterness the subject
is going to create.
Not long ago, according to two neuroscientists
I interviewed, a firm called Neurometrics
sought out investors and tried to market
an amazing but simple invention known as
the IQ Cap. The idea was to provide a way
of testing intelligence that would be free
of "cultural bias," one that would
not force anyone to deal with words or concepts
that might be familiar to people from one
culture but not to people from another. The
IQ Cap recorded only brain waves; and a computer,
not a potentially biased human test-giver,
analyzed the results. It was based on the
work of neuroscientists such as E. Roy John
1 , who is now one of the major pioneers
of electroencephalographic brain imaging;
Duilio Giannitrapani, author of The Electrophysiology
of Intellectual Functions ; and David Robinson,
author of The Wechsler Adult Intelligence
Scale and Personality Assessment: Toward
a Biologically Based Theory of Intelligence
and Cognition and many other monographs famous
among neuroscientists. I spoke to one researcher
who had devised an IQ Cap himself by replicating
an experiment described by Giannitrapani
in The Electrophysiology of Intellectual
Functions. It was not a complicated process.
You attached sixteen electrodes to the scalp
of the person you wanted to test. You had
to muss up his hair a little, but you didn't
have to cut it, much less shave it. Then
you had him stare at a marker on a blank
wall. This particular researcher used a raspberry-
red thumbtack. Then you pushed a toggle switch.
In sixteen seconds the Cap's computer box
gave you an accurate prediction (within one-half
of a standard deviation) of what the subject
would score on all eleven subtests of the
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale or, in
the case of children, the Wechsler Intelligence
Scale for Children--all from sixteen seconds'
worth of brain waves. There was nothing culturally
biased about the test whatsoever. What could
be cultural about staring at a thumbtack
on a wall? The savings in time and money
were breathtaking. The conventional IQ test
took two hours to complete; and the overhead,
in terms of paying test-givers, test-scorers,
test-preparers, and the rent, was $100 an
hour at the very least. The IQ Cap required
about fifteen minutes and sixteen seconds--it
took about fifteen minutes to put the electrodes
on the scalp--and about a tenth of a penny's
worth of electricity. Neurometrics's investors
were rubbing their hands and licking their
chops. They were about to make a killing.
In fact-- nobody wanted their damnable IQ
Cap!
It wasn't simply that no one believed you
could derive IQ scores from brainwaves--it
was that nobody wanted to believe it could
be done. Nobody wanted to believe that human
brainpower is... that hardwired . Nobody
wanted to learn in a flash that... the genetic
fix is in . Nobody wanted to learn that he
was... a hardwired genetic mediocrity ...
and that the best he could hope for in this
Trough of Mortal Error was to live out his
mediocre life as a stress-free dim bulb.
Barry Sterman of UCLA, chief scientist for
a firm called Cognitive Neurometrics, who
has devised his own brain-wave technology
for market research and focus groups, regards
brain-wave IQ testing as possible--but in
the current atmosphere you "wouldn't
have a Chinaman's chance of getting a grant"
to develop it.
Science is a Court from which there is no
Appeal
Here we begin to sense the chill that emanates
from the hottest field in the academic world.
The unspoken and largely unconscious premise
of the wrangling over neuroscience's strategic
high ground is: We now live in an age in
which science is a court from which there
is no appeal. And the issue this time around,
at the end of the twentieth century, is not
the evolution of the species, which can seem
a remote business, but the nature of our
own precious inner selves.
The elders of the field, such as Wilson,
are well aware of all this and are cautious,
or cautious compared to the new generation.
Wilson still holds out the possibility--I
think he doubts it, but he still holds out
the possibility--that at some point in evolutionary
history, culture began to influence the development
of the human brain in ways that cannot be
explained by strict Darwinian theory. But
the new generation of neuroscientists are
not cautious for a second. In private conversations,
the bull sessions, as it were, that create
the mental atmosphere of any hot new science--and
I love talking to these people--they express
an uncompromising determinism.
They start with the most famous statement
in all of modern philosophy, Descartes's
"Cogito ergo sum," "I think,
therefore I am," which they regard as
the essence of "dualism," the old-fashioned
notion that the mind is something distinct
from its mechanism, the brain and the body.
(I will get to the second most famous statement
in a moment.) This is also known as the "ghost
in the machine" fallacy, the quaint
belief that there is a ghostly "self"
somewhere inside the brain that interprets
and directs its operations. Neuroscientists
involved in three-dimensional electroencephalography
will tell you that there is not even any
one place in the brain where consciousness
or self-consciousness ( Cogito ergo sum )
is located. This is merely an illusion created
by a medley of neurological systems acting
in concert. The young generation takes this
yet one step further. Since consciousness
and thought are entirely physical products
of your brain and nervous system--and since
your brain arrived fully imprinted at birth--what
makes you think you have free will? Where
is it going to come from? What "ghost,"
what "mind," what "self,"
what "soul," what anything that
will not be immediately grabbed by those
scornful quotation marks, is going to bubble
up your brain stem to give it to you? I have
heard neuroscientists theorize that, given
computers of sufficient power and sophistication,
it would be possible to predict the course
of any human being's life moment by moment,
including the fact that the poor devil was
about to shake his head over the very idea.
I doubt that any Calvinist of the sixteenth
century ever believed so completely in predestination
as these, the hottest and most intensely
rational young scientists in the United States
at the end of the twentieth.
Since the late 1970s, in the Age of Wilson,
college students have been heading into neuroscience
in job lots. The Society for Neuroscience
was founded in 1970 with 1,100 members. Today,
one generation later, its membership exceeds
26,000. The Society's latest convention,
in San Diego, drew 23,052 souls, making it
one of the biggest professional conventions
in the country. In the venerable field of
academic philosophy, young faculty members
are jumping ship in embarrassing numbers
and shifting into neuroscience. They are
heading for the laboratories. Why wrestle
with Kant's God, Freedom, and Immortality
when it is only a matter of time before neuroscience,
probably through brain imaging, reveals the
actual physical mechanism that sends these
mental constructs, these illusions, synapsing
up into the Broca's and Wernicke's areas
of the brain?
Which brings us to the second most famous
statement in all of modern philosophy: Nietzsche's
"God is dead." The year was 1882.
(The book was Die Fröhliche Wissenschaft
[ The Gay Science ].) Nietzsche said this
was not a declaration of atheism, although
he was in fact an atheist, but simply the
news of an event. He called the death of
God a "tremendous event," the greatest
event of modern history. The news was that
educated people no longer believed in God,
as a result of the rise of rationalism and
scientific thought, including Darwinism,
over the preceding 250 years. But before
you atheists run up your flags of triumph,
he said, think of the implications. "The
story I have to tell," wrote Nietzsche,
"is the history of the next two centuries."
He predicted (in Ecce Homo ) that the twentieth
century would be a century of "wars
such as have never happened on earth,"
wars catastrophic beyond all imagining. And
why? Because human beings would no longer
have a god to turn to, to absolve them of
their guilt; but they would still be racked
by guilt, since guilt is an impulse instilled
in children when they are very young, before
the age of reason. As a result, people would
loathe not only one another but themselves.
The blind and reassuring faith they formerly
poured into their belief in God, said Nietzsche,
they would now pour into a belief in barbaric
nationalistic brotherhoods: "If the
doctrines... of the lack of any cardinal
distinction between man and animal, doctrines
I consider true but deadly"--he says
in an allusion to Darwinism in Untimely Meditations
--"are hurled into the people for another
generation... then nobody should be surprised
when... brotherhoods with the aim of the
robbery and exploitation of the non-brothers...
will appear in the arena of the future."
Nietzsche's view of guilt, incidentally,
is also that of neuro-scientists a century
later. They regard guilt as one of those
tendencies imprinted in the brain at birth.
In some people the genetic work is not complete,
and they engage in criminal behavior without
a twinge of remorse--thereby intriguing criminologists,
who then want to create Violence Initiatives
and hold conferences on the subject.
Nietzsche said that mankind would limp on
through the twentieth century "on the
mere pittance" of the old decaying God-based
moral codes. But then, in the twenty-first,
would come a period more dreadful than the
great wars, a time of "the total eclipse
of all values" (in The Will to Power
). This would also be a frantic period of
"revaluation," in which people
would try to find new systems of values to
replace the osteoporotic skeletons of the
old. But you will fail, he warned, because
you cannot believe in moral codes without
simultaneously believing in a god who points
at you with his fearsome forefinger and says
"Thou shalt" or "Thou shalt
not."
Why should we bother ourselves with a dire
prediction that seems so far-fetched as "the
total eclipse of all values"? Because
of man's track record, I should think. After
all, in Europe, in the peaceful decade of
the 1880s, it must have seemed even more
far-fetched to predict the world wars of
the twentieth century and the barbaric brotherhoods
of Nazism and Communism. Ecce vates! Ecce
vates! Behold the prophet! How much more
proof can one demand of a man's powers of
prediction?
A hundred years ago those who worried about
the death of God could console one another
with the fact that they still had their own
bright selves and their own inviolable souls
for moral ballast and the marvels of modern
science to chart the way. But what if, as
seems likely, the greatest marvel of modern
science turns out to be brain imaging? And
what if, ten years from now, brain imaging
has proved, beyond any doubt, that not only
Edward O. Wilson but also the young generation
are, in fact, correct?
The elders, such as Wilson himself and Daniel
C. Dennett, the author of Darwin's Dangerous
Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life
, and Richard Dawkins, author of The Selfish
Gene and The Blind Watchmaker , insist that
there is nothing to fear from the truth,
from the ultimate extension of Darwin's dangerous
idea. They present elegant arguments as to
why neuroscience should in no way diminish
the richness of life, the magic of art, or
the righteousness of political causes, including,
if one need edit, political correctness at
Harvard or Tufts, where Dennett is Director
of the Center for Cognitive Studies, or Oxford,
where Dawkins is something called Professor
of Public Understanding of Science. (Dennett
and Dawkins, every bit as much as Wilson,
are earnestly, feverishly, politically correct.)
Despite their best efforts, however, neuroscience
is not rippling out into the public on waves
of scholarly reassurance. But rippling out
it is, rapidly. The conclusion people out
beyond the laboratory walls are drawing is:
The fix is in! We're all hardwired! That,
and: Don't blame me! I'm wired wrong!
From Nurture to Nature
This sudden switch from a belief in Nurture,
in the form of social conditioning, to Nature,
in the form of genetics and brain physiology,
is the great intellectual event, to borrow
Nietzsche's term, of the late twentieth century.
Up to now the two most influential ideas
of the century have been Marxism and Freudianism.
Both were founded upon the premise that human
beings and their "ideals"--Marx
and Freud knew about quotation marks, too--are
completely molded by their environment. To
Marx, the crucial environment was one's social
class; "ideals" and "faiths"
were notions foisted by the upper orders
upon the lower as instruments of social control.
To Freud, the crucial environment was the
Oedipal drama, the unconscious sexual plot
that was played out in the family early in
a child's existence. The "ideals"
and "faiths" you prize so much
are merely the parlor furniture you feature
for receiving your guests, said Freud; I
will show you the cellar, the furnace, the
pipes, the sexual steam that actually runs
the house. By the mid-1950s even anti-Marxists
and anti-Freudians had come to assume the
centrality of class domination and Oedipally
conditioned sexual drives. On top of this
came Pavlov, with his "stimulus-response
bonds," and B. F. Skinner, with his
"operant conditioning," turning
the supremacy of conditioning into something
approaching a precise form of engineering.
So how did this brilliant intellectual fashion
come to so screeching and ignominious an
end?
The demise of Freudianism can be summed up
in a single word: lithium. In 1949 an Australian
psychiatrist, John Cade, gave five days of
lithium therapy--for entirely the wrong reasons--to
a fifty-one-year-old mental patient who was
so manic-depressive, so hyperactive, unintelligible,
and uncontrollable, he had been kept locked
up in asylums for twenty years. By the sixth
day, thanks to the lithium buildup in his
blood, he was a normal human being. Three
months later he was released and lived happily
ever after in his own home. This was a man
who had been locked up and subjected to two
decades of Freudian logorrhea to no avail
whatsoever. Over the next twenty years antidepressant
and tranquilizing drugs completely replaced
Freudian talk-talk as treatment for serious
mental disturbances. By the mid-1980s, neuroscientists
looked upon Freudian psychiatry as a quaint
relic based largely upon superstition (such
as dream analysis -- dream analysis!), like
phrenology or mesmerism. In fact, among neuroscientists,
phrenology now has a higher reputation than
Freudian psychiatry, since phrenology was
in a certain crude way a precursor of electroencephalography.
Freudian psychiatrists are now regarded as
old crocks with sham medical degrees, as
ears with wire hairs sprouting out of them
that people with more money than sense can
hire to talk into.
Marxism was finished off even more suddenly--in
a single year, 1973--with the smuggling out
of the Soviet Union and the publication in
France of the first of the three volumes
of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago
. Other writers, notably the British historian
Robert Conquest, had already exposed the
Soviet Union's vast network of concentration
camps, but their work was based largely on
the testimony of refugees, and refugees were
routinely discounted as biased and bitter
observers. Solzhenitsyn, on the other hand,
was a Soviet citizen, still living on Soviet
soil, a zek himself for eleven years, zek
being Russian slang for concentration camp
prisoner. His credibility had been vouched
for by none other than Nikita Khrushchev,
who in 1962 had permitted the publication
of Solzhenitsyn's novella of the gulag, One
Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich , as a
means of cutting down to size the daunting
shadow of his predecessor Stalin. "Yes,"
Khrushchev had said in effect, "what
this man Solzhenitsyn has to say is true.
Such were Stalin's crimes." Solzhenitsyn's
brief fictional description of the Soviet
slave labor system was damaging enough. But
The Gulag Archipelago , a two-thousand-page,
densely detailed, nonfiction account of the
Soviet Communist Party's systematic extermination
of its enemies, real and imagined, of its
own countrymen, by the tens of millions through
an enormous, methodical, bureaucratically
controlled "human sewage disposal system,"
as Solzhenitsyn called it-- The Gulag Archipelago
was devastating. After all, this was a century
in which there was no longer any possible
ideological detour around the concentration
camp. Among European intellectuals, even
French intellectuals, Marxism collapsed as
a spiritual force immediately. Ironically,
it survived longer in the United States before
suffering a final, merciful coup de gr ce
on November 9, 1989, with the breaching of
the Berlin Wall, which signaled in an unmistakable
fashion what a debacle the Soviets' seventy-two-year
field experiment in socialism had been. (Marxism
still hangs on, barely, acrobatically, in
American universities in a Mannerist form
known as Deconstruction, a literary doctrine
that depicts language itself as an insidious
tool used by The Powers That Be to deceive
the proles and peasants.)
Freudianism and Marxism--and with them, the
entire belief in social conditioning--were
demolished so swiftly, so suddenly, that
neuroscience has surged in, as if into an
intellectual vacuum. Nor do you have to be
a scientist to detect the rush.
Anyone with a child in school knows the signs
all too well. I have children in school,
and I am intrigued by the faith parents now
invest--the craze began about 1990--in psychologists
who diagnose their children as suffering
from a defect known as attention deficit
disorder, or ADD. Of course, I have no way
of knowing whether this "disorder"
is an actual, physical, neurological condition
or not, but neither does anybody else in
this early stage of neuroscience. The symptoms
of this supposed malady are always the same.
The child, or, rather, the boy--forty-nine
out of fifty cases are boys--fidgets around
in school, slides off his chair, doesn't
pay attention, distracts his classmates during
class, and performs poorly. In an earlier
era he would have been pressured to pay attention,
work harder, show some self-discipline. To
parents caught up in the new intellectual
climate of the 1990s, that approach seems
cruel, because my little boy's problem is...
he's wired wrong! The poor little tyke --the
fix has been in since birth! Invariably the
parents complain, "All he wants to do
is sit in front of the television set and
watch cartoons and play Sega Genesis."
For how long? "How long? For hours at
a time." Hours at a time; as even any
young neuroscientist will tell you, that
boy may have a problem, but it is not an
attention deficit.
Nevertheless, all across America we have
the spectacle of an entire generation of
little boys, by the tens of thousands, being
dosed up on ADD's magic bullet of choice,
Ritalin, the CIBA-Geneva Corporation's brand
name for the stimulant methylphenidate. I
first encountered Ritalin in 1966 when I
was in San Francisco doing research for a
book on the psychedelic or hippie movement.
A certain species of the genus hippie was
known as the Speed Freak, and a certain strain
of Speed Freak was known as the Ritalin Head.
The Ritalin Heads loved Ritalin. You'd see
them in the throes of absolute Ritalin raptures...
Not a wiggle, not a peep... They would sit
engrossed in anything at all... a manhole
cover, their own palm wrinkles... indefinitely...
through shoulda-been mealtime after mealtime...
through raging insomnias... Pure methyl-phenidate
nirvana... From 1990 to 1995, CIBA-Geneva's
sales of Ritalin rose 600 percent; and not
because of the appetites of subsets of the
species Speed Freak in San Francisco, either.
It was because an entire generation of American
boys, from the best private schools of the
Northeast to the worst sludge-trap public
schools of Los Angeles and San Diego, was
now strung out on methylphenidate, diligently
doled out to them every day by their connection,
the school nurse. America is a wonderful
country! I mean it! No honest writer would
challenge that statement! The human comedy
never runs out of material! It never lets
you down!
Meantime, the notion of a self--a self who
exercises self-discipline, postpones gratification,
curbs the sexual appetite, stops short of
aggression and criminal behavior--a self
who can become more intelligent and lift
itself to the very peaks of life by its own
bootstraps through study, practice, perseverance,
and refusal to give up in the face of great
odds--this old-fashioned notion (what's a
boot strap, for God's sake?) of success through
enterprise and true grit is already slipping
away, slipping away... slipping away... The
peculiarly American faith in the power of
the individual to transform himself from
a helpless cypher into a giant among men,
a faith that ran from Emerson ("Self-Reliance")
to Horatio Alger's Luck and Pluck stories
to Dale Carnegie's How to Win Friends and
Influence People to Norman Vincent Peale's
The Power of Positive Thinking to Og Mandino's
The Greatest Salesman in the World --that
faith is now as moribund as the god for whom
Nietzsche wrote an obituary in 1882. It lives
on today only in the decrepit form of the
"motivational talk," as lecture
agents refer to it, given by retired football
stars such as Fran Tarkenton to audiences
of businessmen, most of them woulda-been
athletes (like the author of this article),
about how life is like a football game. "It's
late in the fourth period and you're down
by thirteen points and the Cowboys got you
hemmed in on your own one-yard line and it's
third and twenty-three. Whaddaya do?..."
Sorry, Fran, but it's third and twenty-three
and the genetic fix is in, and the new message
is now being pumped out into the popular
press and onto television at a stupefying
rate. Who are the pumps? They are a new breed
who call themselves "evolutionary psychologists."
You can be sure that twenty years ago the
same people would have been calling themselves
Freudian; but today they are genetic determinists,
and the press has a voracious appetite for
whatever they come up with.
The most popular study currently--it is still
being featured on television news shows,
months later--is David Lykken and Auke Tellegen's
study at the University of Minnesota of two
thousand twins that shows, according to these
two evolutionary psychologists, that an individual's
happiness is largely genetic. Some people
are hardwired to be happy and some are not.
Success (or failure) in matters of love,
money, reputation, or power is transient
stuff; you soon settle back down (or up)
to the level of happiness you were born with
genetically. Three months ago Fortune devoted
a long takeout, elaborately illustrated,
of a study by evolutionary psychologists
at Britain's University of Saint Andrews
showing that you judge the facial beauty
or handsomeness of people you meet not by
any social standards of the age you live
in but by criteria hardwired in your brain
from the moment you were born. Or, to put
it another way, beauty is not in the eye
of the beholder but embedded in his genes.
In fact, today, in the year 1996, barely
three years before the end of the millennium,
if your appetite for newspapers, magazines,
and television is big enough, you will quickly
get the impression that there is nothing
in your life, including the fat content of
your body, that is not genetically predetermined.
If I may mention just a few things the evolutionary
psychologists have illuminated for me over
the past two months:
The male of the human species is genetically
hardwired to be polygamous, i. e., unfaithful
to his legal mate. Any magazine-reading male
gets the picture soon enough.
(Three million years of evolution made me
do it!) Women lust after male celebrities,
because they are genetically hardwired to
sense that alpha males will take better care
of their offspring. (I'm just a lifeguard
in the gene pool, honey.) Teenage girls are
genetically hardwired to be promiscuous and
are as helpless to stop themselves as dogs
in the park. (The school provides the condoms.)
Most murders are the result of genetically
hardwired compulsions. (Convicts can read,
too, and they report to the prison psychiatrist:
"Something came over me... and then
the knife went in." 2 )
Where does that leave self-control? Where,
indeed, if people believe this ghostly self
does not even exist, and brain imaging proves
it, once and for all?
So far, neuroscientific theory is based largely
on indirect evidence, from studies of animals
or of how a normal brain changes when it
is invaded (by accidents, disease, radical
surgery, or experimental needles). Darwin
II himself, Edward O. Wilson, has only limited
direct knowledge of the human brain. He is
a zoologist, not a neurologist, and his theories
are extrapolations from the exhaustive work
he has done in his specialty, the study of
insects. The French surgeon Paul Broca discovered
Broca's area, one of the two speech centers
of the left hemisphere of the brain, only
after one of his patients suffered a stroke.
Even the PET scan and the PET reporter gene/PET
reporter probe are technically medical invasions,
since they require the injection of chemicals
or viruses into the body. But they offer
glimpses of what the noninvasive imaging
of the future will probably look like. A
neuroradiologist can read a list of topics
out loud to a person being given a PET scan,
topics pertaining to sports, music, business,
history, whatever, and when he finally hits
one the person is interested in, a particular
area of the cerebral cortex actually lights
up on the screen. Eventually, as brain imaging
is refined, the picture may become as clear
and complete as those see-through exhibitions,
at auto shows, of the inner workings of the
internal combustion engine. At that point
it may become obvious to everyone that all
we are looking at is a piece of machinery,
an analog chemical computer, that processes
information from the environment. "All,"
since you can look and look and you will
not find any ghostly self inside, or any
mind, or any soul.
Thereupon, in the year 2006 or 2026, some
new Nietzsche will step forward to announce:
"The self is dead"--except that
being prone to the poetic, like Nietzsche
I, he will probably say: "The soul is
dead." He will say that he is merely
bringing the news, the news of the greatest
event of the millennium: "The soul,
that last refuge of values, is dead, because
educated people no longer believe it exists."
Unless the assurances of the Wilsons and
the Dennetts and the Dawkinses also start
rippling out, the lurid carnival that will
ensue may make the phrase "the total
eclipse of all values" seem tame.
The two most fascinating riddles of the 21st
century
If I were a college student today, I don't
think I could resist going into neuroscience.
Here we have the two most fascinating riddles
of the twenty-first century: the riddle of
the human mind and the riddle of what happens
to the human mind when it comes to know itself
absolutely. In any case, we live in an age
in which it is impossible and pointless to
avert your eyes from the truth.
Ironically, said Nietzsche, this unflinching
eye for truth, this zest for skepticism,
is the legacy of Christianity (for complicated
reasons that needn't detain us here). Then
he added one final and perhaps ultimate piece
of irony in a fragmentary passage in a notebook
shortly before he lost his mind (to the late-nineteenth-century's
great venereal scourge, syphilis). He predicted
that eventually modern science would turn
its juggernaut of skepticism upon itself,
question the validity of its own foundations,
tear them apart, and self-destruct. I thought
about that in the summer of 1994 when a group
of mathematicians and computer scientists
held a conference at the Santa Fe Institute
on "Limits to Scientific Knowledge."
The consensus was that since the human mind
is, after all, an entirely physical apparatus,
a form of computer, the product of a particular
genetic history, it is finite in its capabilities.
Being finite, hardwired, it will probably
never have the power to comprehend human
existence in any complete way. It would be
as if a group of dogs were to call a conference
to try to understand The Dog. They could
try as hard as they wanted, but they wouldn't
get very far. Dogs can communicate only about
forty notions, all of them primitive, and
they can't record anything. The project would
be doomed from the start. The human brain
is far superior to the dog's, but it is limited
nonetheless. So any hope of human beings
arriving at some final, complete, self-enclosed
theory of human existence is doomed, too.
This, science's Ultimate Skepticism, has
been spreading ever since then. Over the
past two years even Darwinism, a sacred tenet
among American scientists for the past seventy
years, has been beset by... doubts. Scientists--not
religiosi--notably the mathematician David
Berlinski ("The Deniable Darwin,"
Commentary , June 1996) and the biochemist
Michael Behe (Darwin's Black Box , 1996),
have begun attacking Darwinism as a mere
theory, not a scientific discovery, a theory
woefully unsupported by fossil evidence and
featuring, at the core of its logic, sheer
mush. (Dennett and Dawkins, for whom Darwin
is the Only Begotten, the Messiah, are already
screaming. They're beside themselves, utterly
apoplectic. Wilson, the giant, keeping his
cool, has remained above the battle.) By
1990 the physicist Petr Beckmann of the University
of Colorado had already begun going after
Einstein. He greatly admired Einstein for
his famous equation of matter and energy,
E=mc2 , but called his theory of relativity
mostly absurd and grotesquely untestable.
Beckmann died in 1993. His Fool Killer's
cudgel has been taken up by Howard Hayden
of the University of Connecticut, who has
many admirers among the upcoming generation
of Ultimately Skeptical young physicists.
The scorn the new breed heaps upon quantum
mechanics ("has no real-world applications"..."depends
entirely on fairies sprinkling goofball equations
in your eyes"), Unified Field Theory
("Nobel worm bait"), and the Big
Bang Theory ("creationism for nerds")
has become withering. If only Nietzsche were
alive! He would have relished every minute
of it!
Recently I happened to be talking to a prominent
California geologist, and she told me: "When
I first went into geology, we all thought
that in science you create a solid layer
of findings, through experiment and careful
investigation, and then you add a second
layer, like a second layer of bricks, all
very carefully, and so on. Occasionally some
adventurous scientist stacks the bricks up
in towers, and these towers turn out to be
insubstantial and they get torn down, and
you proceed again with the careful layers.
But we now realize that the very first layers
aren't even resting on solid ground. They
are balanced on bubbles, on concepts that
are full of air, and those bubbles are being
burst today, one after the other."
I suddenly had a picture of the entire astonishing
edifice collapsing and modern man plunging
headlong back into the primordial ooze. He's
floundering, sloshing about, gulping for
air, frantically treading ooze, when he feels
something huge and smooth swim beneath him
and boost him up, like some almighty dolphin.
He can't see it, but he's much impressed.
He names it God.