| ABOUT US | ARCHIVES | LINKS | RSS FEED | MONDAYS | |

3quarksdaily

An Eclectic Digest of Science, Art and Literature

« Facebook experiment boosts US voter turnout | Main | Thursday Poem »

September 13, 2012

Your brain on pseudoscience: the rise of popular neurobollocks

Steven Poole in New Statesman:

ScienceAn intellectual pestilence is upon us. Shop shelves groan with books purporting to explain, through snazzy brain-imaging studies, not only how thoughts and emotions function, but how politics and religion work, and what the correct answers are to age-old philosophical controversies. The dazzling real achievements of brain research are routinely pressed into service for questions they were never designed to answer. This is the plague of neuroscientism – aka neurobabble, neurobollocks, or neurotrash – and it’s everywhere.

In my book-strewn lodgings, one literally trips over volumes promising that “the deepest mysteries of what makes us who we are are gradually being unravelled” by neuroscience and cognitive psychology. (Even practising scientists sometimes make such grandiose claims for a general audience, perhaps urged on by their editors: that quotation is from the psychologist Elaine Fox’s interesting book on “the new science of optimism”, Rainy Brain, Sunny Brain, published this summer.) In general, the “neural” explanation has become a gold standard of non-fiction exegesis, adding its own brand of computer-assisted lab-coat bling to a whole new industry of intellectual quackery that affects to elucidate even complex sociocultural phenomena. Chris Mooney’s The Republican Brain: the Science of Why They Deny Science – and Reality disavows “reductionism” yet encourages readers to treat people with whom they disagree more as pathological specimens of brain biology than as rational interlocutors.

The New Atheist polemicist Sam Harris, in The Moral Landscape, interprets brain and other research as showing that there are objective moral truths, enthusiastically inferring – almost as though this were the point all along – that science proves “conservative Islam” is bad.

More here.

Posted by Azra Raza at 06:47 AM | Permalink

Comments

Yes, Raymond Tallis has discussed this topic in several books, including his latest, Aping Mankind: Neuromania, Darwinitis and the Misrepresentation of Humanity (2011). But see too M.R. Bennett and P.M.S. Hacker, Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience (2003), Maxwell Bennett, Daniel Dennett, Peter Hacker, John Searle, and Daniel Robinson, Neuroscience and Philosophy: Brain, Mind and Language (2007) (Bennett and Hacker v. Dennett and Searle, with Robinson moderating, although he's closer to the former than the latter), Steven Horst, Beyond Reduction: Philosophy of Mind and Post-Reductionist Philosophy of Science (2007), several books by Daniel D. Hutto, several articles by Michael S. Pardo and Dennis Patterson (available online at SSRN), and Daniel N. Robinson's Consciousness and Mental Life (2008).

Posted by: Patrick S. O'Donnell | Sep 13, 2012 8:13:57 AM

It is always better to stick with peer reviewed scientific journals that have not replaced critical thinking with wishful thinking.

Books can easily depart from peer criticism before publication.

Posted by: Dredd | Sep 13, 2012 11:55:36 AM

Books like the above frequently cite, discuss, and summarize material found in peer-reviewed science and philosophy journals (and all of these authors have published in same).

Feel free to cite evidence of wishful thinking in any of the aforementioned publications.

Publishers (and not just academic presses) prefer to have reviewers, readers, and editors with the requisite expertise examine manuscripts prior to publication (which generally works unless the field is fairly rarefied or there is ongoing or intractable controversies about criteria and standards from within a particular field of inquiry.) Much that is published in journals is a waste of one's time, so it's nice to have authors engage in the requisite winnowing....

Posted by: Patrick S. O'Donnell | Sep 13, 2012 1:12:59 PM

I don't usually have much patience for accusations of 'scientism', often not even aimed at evolutionary psychology. But I buy it aimed at neuroscience, at least as its practitioners intrude it into law, ethics, politics, economics, well actually all of the social sciences really. And 99% of what they say amounts to 'OMG, when people are doing X, parts of the brain light up!' No shit.

Posted by: prasad | Sep 13, 2012 3:01:54 PM

Patrick S. O'Donnell,

The author writes:

"In general, the “neural” explanation has become a gold standard of non-fiction exegesis, adding its own brand of computer-assisted lab-coat bling to a whole new industry of intellectual quackery that affects to elucidate even complex sociocultural phenomena." - S. Poole, above

That "computer-assisted lab-coat bling" in "a whole new industry of intellectual quackery" is one of the many blah blah's which the peer reviewed scientific journals reject if they want a reputation of being a good professional journal.

S. Poole, the author of the piece above, informs us that this is obviously not so with the book industry, since his critique is directed to book lore that the author claims is excessively filled with it.

Even this author has no peer reviewed scientific papers published, but does have book reviews in his resume, indicating that there is a difference between the two.

Now, do the professional courtesy of citing an example of "computer-assisted lab-coat bling" in "a whole new industry of intellectual quackery" within any reputable professional journal's published papers and you have made a useful point.

Posted by: Dredd | Sep 13, 2012 6:29:26 PM

Read this piece to see how the fate of a doctrine that explaining it all failed to explain itself...
http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/article.aspx?Volume=110&page=324&journalID=13

Posted by: Félix E. F. Larocca, MD | Sep 13, 2012 8:24:28 PM

Here is an example of real intellectual quackery by Obama's DOJ attorney in his effort to continue the secrecy surrounding the annointed one:
http://www.clarkedailynews.com/doj-seeks-to-dismiss-berryville-residents-foia-request/35054
Why all the efforts at secrecy by our elected "leader"? What could he fear from disclosure?
He couldn't be lying about his past could he?
The real obscenity here is the use of the full military force and power of government to keep these secrets.
All we learned from Nazi, Germany and the former Soviet Union is how to copy them.

Posted by: w.j.abbe | Sep 14, 2012 12:50:43 AM

Here is another one:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/13/obama-birther-kansas_n_1880957.html
Secrecy is the enemy of the truth. Why all the secrecy surrounding him? Why is he using the full military force and power of government to hide these secrets? What does he fear from open disclosure?
Evidently many Americans, although they are permitted to vote by the Supreme Court, have not learned to read the U.S. Constitution which demands that a candidate for President must not be just a "citizen", but a natural born citizen. Most Americans seem to think the two are the same. Why then did the Founders not simply say "citizen" rather than "natural born citizen"? Were they that careless?
Too bad our gutless Supreme Court won't rule on the issue today.

Posted by: w.j.abbe | Sep 14, 2012 1:01:45 AM

Oh dear. No-one here seems to have understood what neuroscience is, not even the neuroscientists or Steven Poole. Neuroscience is a reductionism, not an explanation. It reduces experience to physical structure. No new knowledge of experience or what it is to be human can come from it. There is no relationship between elements in a reduction only associations: no new knowledge can arise. Why have we missed this?

This is why there are no neurological explanations or knowledge of experience. Reports of experience identify neurological structures, construct brain imagery, etc. These neurological structures reflect no more than the content of these reports and any contemporary cultural prejudices in which they cast. As such, there is necessarily no possibility of neuroscience offering any explanation of, or even commenting upon, human experience.

Another consequence of the failure to acknowledge the identifying condition for a neurological structure is the confusion among neuroscientists between creation and affection. If neurological objects "create" experience, they are in no position to "affect" it.

The brain sciences that comment upon experience cannot advance. No matter how far their technical manipulations develop, these sciences can never offer any more knowledge of experience than is reflected in our reports of that same experience. Any claim made on top of that reflects our animistic posturing, our very own, fashionable, modern mumbo-jumbo. For more see http://johnivorjones.blogspot.co.uk/2010/04/are-brain-sciences-trashing-human.html

Posted by: John Jones | Sep 15, 2012 10:32:32 AM

Post a comment






Subscribe to this blog's feed  

PayAnywhere with iphone credit card swiper

Android Tablet

Bluetooth Headset

2013 New Style Dresses

Compare Car Rental Prices

DHgate.com Wholesale

3QD on Facebook

3QD on Kindle

3QD by Daily Email

Receive all blogposts at the same time every day.

Enter your Email:


Preview 3QD Email

3QD on Twitter

Miscellany

Lijit Search

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Add to Google

Recent Comments

seth edenbaum on The First New Atheist? Kierkegaard

waqnis on Mortify Our Wolves

nogodrod on KFC smugglers bring buckets of chicken through Gaza tunnels

waqnis on Here’s how to change the world

Fernando on Mortify Our Wolves

seth edenbaum on The case against empathy

Dredd on Mortify Our Wolves

Max on Here’s how to change the world

Rohana on Mortify Our Wolves

Raza Husain on If Only We Had A Leader Like Chavez, Who Solved Real Problems -- Instead Of Debating Fake Ones Like The Deficit

mirel on If Only We Had A Leader Like Chavez, Who Solved Real Problems -- Instead Of Debating Fake Ones Like The Deficit

araldo on Here’s how to change the world

Elatia Harris on Here’s how to change the world

Sundar on Here’s how to change the world

araldo on Here’s how to change the world

prasad on Here’s how to change the world

araldo on Thursday Poem

Raza Husain on Here’s how to change the world

prasad on Here’s how to change the world

Raza Husain on Here’s how to change the world

prasad on Here’s how to change the world

Jim Sanders on the hudson review

Ian Kaplan on Stephen Wolfram: Dropping In on Gottfried Leibniz

Sundar on Here’s how to change the world

sjg on The First New Atheist? Kierkegaard

Acclaim For 3QD


"I couldn't tear myself away from 3 Quarks Daily, to the point of neglecting my work. Congratulations on this superb site."—Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University.

"I have placed 3 Quarks Daily at the head of my list of web bookmarks."—Richard Dawkins, Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.

"Just wanted you to know I’m one of many who reads and enjoys 3 Quarks....almost daily."—David Byrne, musician, former lead-singer of the Talking Heads, artist, intellectual.

Read more here.

The 3QD Prizes

Subscribe to this blog's feed