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How rational is Steven Pinker’s world? The psychologist and writer is fighting an increasingly lonely battle against fanaticism

A rational man. Credit: Lawrence Sumulong/Getty


September 27, 2021   6 mins

For thirty years, the eminent linguist Steven Pinker has been writing a series of popular science books that alternate, title by title, between deep dives into abstruse aspects of cognition and broader ruminations on matters of grand social importance. 1999’s Words and Rules: The Ingredients of Language, is in the former category, while 2002’s The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature is in the latter. Where Words and Rules had tightly-written chapters on irregular verbs, The Blank Slate reflected languidly upon broad matters of public policy, informed by a substrate of evolutionary psychology.

Now, in Rationality: What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters, Pinker synthesises both aspects of his oeuvre. On the one hand, Rationality briskly introduces you to essential concepts like Bayesian reasoning and technical terms like modus ponens. But the technical, learned aspects of the book are accompanied by a polemical drive. Rationality matters — every day, everywhere. Especially at present, in a world that many think has gone mad, whipsawed irrationally by social media mobs and online conspiracy theories. Pinker argues that methods of rationality represent not an esoteric corner of cognitive science or philosophy, but an essential set of tools for individual human flourishing, maintaining our sanity and perpetuating civilisation as a collective whole. To reason and think clearly is to be modern, and even requisite in order to be moral.

In the wake of the financial crisis of 2008, the rational actor and “homo economicus” seemed to have failed us. Nature abhors a vacuum, so there was a vogue for the field of behavioural economics, a discipline that operates in the gray zone of economic frictions and psychological irrationalities powered by faulty intuition. A crop of authors harvested these ideas: Dan Ariely, Rom Brafman, Ori Brafman, Cass Sunstein, and Richard Thaler among them. More broadly, Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky’s heuristics and biases research program, to which all these authors owe a debt, entered the mainstream — Kahneman also contributed a bestseller, Thinking, Fast and Slow in 2011. Barack Obama’s administration tried to ‘nudge’ America through policy. David Cameron’s government, and the British civil service, embraced nudging too.

Rationality is part of a tacit backlash against these authors, their books, and the atmosphere they generated in public policy circles in the 2010s.

Today, Dan Ariely faces accusations of fraud at worst and scientific malpractice at best. More broadly, behavioural economics has been hit by the replication crisis. Humans respond to incentives, and for scientists, sexy and vivid results are rewarded, while negative findings can stall a career. The scientific culture of the aughts was defined at its peril by “publish or perish,” as well as sloppy experimental practices, a mechanically unthinking application of statistics, and cognitive biases in the very fields dedicated to understanding how rationality fails us. Kahneman himself began having doubts in 2012, justifiably, about some of the results reported in his 2011 book.

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Pinker’s good news in Rationality is that with deliberate effort, humans can think clearly and move beyond their biases. Where much of cognitive psychology focuses on illusions and mental misfires, Rationality instead argues that our faculties are up to the task, and that this is all a natural consequence of our evolution. Evolutionary psychology leans heavily on the idea that humans are only equipped with “stone-age minds” in a technologically advanced present. Pinker seems a bit chagrined at this angle being so overplayed, and in Rationality he attempts to redress the balance, making the case that humans are naturally equipped to reason and that reason is not a dark art or the province of philosophers and mathematicians alone.

If you are a consumer of anthropology and ethnography or even have simply watched The Gods Must Be Crazy, you are aware of the preternatural skills of the San hunters of the Kalahari desert. Pinker shows this is not due to inborn traits, but the ability of the San to take in the information around them, the time of the year, the season, the species of antelope, and make inferences in alignment with their overall goals. The San, like all humans, engage in a rough and ready form of syllogistic reasoning. They start with axioms, premises informed by their experiences, and deduce logical consequences from their assumptions. Things don’t just “happen” in the Kalahari, there is a rhythm and rhyme the hunters exploit, a pattern and sense of the world that allows them to survive and flourish. Steenbok antelope are hunted during the rainy season while eland are stalked during the dry season. You might think this is due to custom and tradition, but the San are aware that steenbok has stiff joints during the rainy season while eland hooves are ill-equipped to navigate sandy soil. They hunt animals in the season that loads the dice for a success hunt. The alternative, simply, is a higher risk of starvation. The San have goals, and they naturally use the tools of rationality to achieve them.

But what if the San did not rationally know the reasons for their actions?

One of the essential points in Rationality is that reasoning and understanding the world are collective enterprises. We know that socially-generated knowledge and rationality can be embedded enduringly through rules and taboos. Yes, those executing a cultural script may not be aware of the ultimate reasons, but a deeper investigation by anthropologists can reveal that mindless traditions actually serve functional purposes.

Joe Henrich in 2015’s The Secret of Our Success: How Culture Is Driving Human Evolution, Domesticating Our Species, and Making Us Smarter reports how traditional societies across the world have a system of preparing cassava that prevents them from getting cyanide poisoning. Those following the methods do not know what cyanide is, nor do they even know that consuming unprepared cassava will lead to death, but their culture comes preloaded with the fruits of adaptive learning that are highly rational.

The deepest insight then is that our ability to reason through complex problems depends on our willingness to stand on the shoulders of giants. Though we can all reason, Pinker does not shy away from conventional pitfalls of human analysis such as the Monty Hall problem, the gambler’s fallacy and the base rate fallacy. He recounts that Paul Erdos, author of 1,500 mathematical papers, was as mystified by the Monty Hall problem as most people who encounter it. He refused to believe he was wrong, relying on his native intuitions, despite his prodigious ability to work through formal mathematics.

The point is that the most brilliant individual mind can fail at reasoning unless it approaches the enterprise with humility and the willingness to update beliefs and understanding. The scholarship reviewed in Rationality, from Aristotle to machine learning, is not just the product of singularly brilliant minds, but the collective efforts of whole scientific traditions. The replication crisis shows that groups of scholars can blunder into traps and dead ends en masse. But advances in fields like statistical decision theory would be impossible without the collective efforts of disparate research groups across numerous domains. Pinker’s treatment of deep learning neural networks also makes it clear that some of these tools for rationality are approaching the dark edge of Arthur C. Clarke’s formulation that “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” And, like magic, they often fail without the guiding hand of human reasoning faculties.

Rationality, Pinker says, was partly in response to students at Harvard finding the world puzzling, especially with much of psychology focused on how human rationality fails. If Pinker makes the case for thinking clearly, with the most powerful tools we have, whether it be 21st-century computational methods in machine learning or sharper formal analysis that draws upon mid-20th-century economic game theory, he still remains fully aware that he lives in an empirical world of irrationality.

Pinker was not one of the ‘Four Horsemen’ of New Atheism: Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett and Sam Harris. But he is, and long has been, a fellow traveller of the group (he is also personally close to Dawkins). In the early 2000’s he took equal-opportunity aim at the Right’s attachment to traditional religion in The Blank Slate while taking the Left to task for its denial of human nature. Twenty years later, he made an extended call for a revival of the cult of rationality in Enlightenment Now. Pinker’s enthusiasm for applying rationality and empiricism to the world reflects the intellectual culture of the mid-2000’s when Dawkins was riding high with his critiques of evangelical Christianity and public intellectuals were gathering to celebrate the Enlightenment in conferences like Beyond Belief. The familiar flame of this hopeful past burns bright throughout Rationality.

But ours today is a world of cancel culture and QAnon. Ideological polarisation that has turned the pandemic into the object of a culture war in the United States. Pinker does address the reality that the world today is not the world he might have imagined it would be a generation ago, as irrationalities and superstitions spread like ideological pandemics on social media.

The vision of the aughts was one of a reason-ruled future, but Rationality was written in the wake of Donald Trump, whose rise and popularity as an emotive demagogue triggered a reactionary flare-up of identity politics on the cultural Left. This is the world where David Hume observed that “Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions”. To a great extent, the project of making Bayesian reasoning, game theory and machine learning accessible and palatable to the public seems born of the disappointments of the past generation. If you are a deep reader of Scott Alexander’s Slate Star Codex, Rationality may not offer you much new food for thought. But if you are terrified by the insanities of the present, and wish to replenish your intellectual armoury in the fight for progress and reason in the 21st century, then Rationality is what you will want to bring to the battlefield.


Razib Khan is a geneticist. He has written for The New York Times, India Today and Quillette, and runs two weblogs, Gene Expression and Brown Pundits. His newsletter is Razib Khan’s Unsupervised Learning


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Jon Redman
Jon Redman
2 years ago

The alarming thing is that it now starts to look like the Enlightenment was the aberration, and the violent assertion of irrational dogma the norm. Asserting that a man can become a woman by saying he’s a woman is infinitely crazier than anything the most gormless ancients believed.
There was a mesoAmerican “civilisation” – and I use the word in the strict sense of “having civic structures”, not in the sense of being morally competent – that worshipped a god that required tributes of children’s tears. To provide these, the priests tore toddlers’ fingernails out and gathered the tears from their faces.
If you were to interrogate one of these priests now, the conversation would presumably be:
Q. Why are you being so cruel to these children?
A. The gods demand it.
Q. Why do the gods demand it?
A. Dunno. They’re gods.
In other words, they at least had the get-out of an appeal to authority. f you asked a latter-day Twitter bully why they attempt to destroy the lives of people who suggest that women do not have a Y chromosome, the appeal would to the authority of other Twitter bullies.
It’s hard to avoid the feeling that in terms of moral and intellectual competence there is a strand of thinking today that is actually more backward than those mesoAmericans.

chris sullivan
chris sullivan
2 years ago
Reply to  Jon Redman

Pinker appears to be thoroughly in denial and actually NOT being rational about the human situation ??

Ralph Hanke
Ralph Hanke
2 years ago
Reply to  chris sullivan

Hi,
there is a great interview with Pinker by Reason magazine where, I think, he both acknowledges and addresses your point. I see him being painfully aware of the perspicacity of your point and hopeful about human’s ability to overcome the dilemma.
I should imagine we will see the same when he chats with Freddie on Friday.
Hells bells Freddie, that should be a regular show. “Freddie on Friday”: mend your week with UnHerd ideas. I bet it can be seriously monetized on social media.
Peace be with us all.

Norman Powers
Norman Powers
2 years ago
Reply to  Jon Redman

It’s easy to believe that the follies of our time are exceptional, but a tour through the history books shows that whatever our problems currently are, people in the past had ideas every bit as crazy as the most lunatic fringe of the left today. Some random examples:

  • For all their achievements the Victorians had to contend with phrenology being a respected science, a widespread fashion for seancés with the dead, a belief that much of our air intake was through the skin (leading to people being afraid of wearing clothes at night in case they suffocated), and quack doctors who thought Coca-Cola was miracle cure.
  • WW1 was pretty much the pinnacle of human irrationality and stupidity. Not content with a massive war that had ambiguous and ill-defined goals beyond generic glory for empires, it also pioneered forcing men to march straight into the line of machine gun fire on a massive scale because the generals couldn’t think of anything else to do.
  • The Middle Ages was overrun with totally irrational behaviour even apart from religious fanaticism, like the “dancing mania” in which people literally danced for weeks on end in large groups, sometimes dancing themselves to death, or the flagellants who travelled around whipping themselves.
  • The French Revolution was of course a purified form of delusional ideological fanaticism, quite apart from religion. Nothing as bad as that is happening these days thank god, and most of the concern about “wokeism” is actually concern about a projection of where it might be going vs genuine fear about the antics of some dumb “intellectuals” and corporate CEOs.
Alan Thorpe
Alan Thorpe
2 years ago
Reply to  Norman Powers

You could say that a time of better education, more advanced knowledge and greater wealth, we are now crazier than ever.

Peter Branagan
Peter Branagan
2 years ago
Reply to  Alan Thorpe

Perfectly put. It is an EXTRAORDINARY fact that despite mass education – even up to 3rd level – we are as profoundly irrational and subject to unfounded beliefs and biases as our forebears who couldn’t even read or write.

David Morley
David Morley
2 years ago

Donald Trump, whose rise and popularity as an emotive demagogue triggered a reactionary flare-up of identity politics on the cultural Left.

This is becoming a common idea,but I think it is false. It was developments on the left which predated Trump. I think this was clear to many of us living through the time – but I’ve also read evidence in support of this based on word frequency on the internet (sorry I don’t have a reference).

Norman Powers
Norman Powers
2 years ago
Reply to  David Morley

Identity politics started taking off in 2010, so yes it predates Trump by a lot. You’re probably thinking of these graphs of word counts in the New York Times which show it clearly.

Matthew Baker
Matthew Baker
2 years ago

I haven’t read the book but from the synopsis in this article it sounds like the same straw man arguments employed by Pinker in the past (and which are a favorite of the new atheists).

They typically define logic and rationality in a broad manner (establish axioms, develop prepositions from those axioms, test the prepositions against competing arguments) and then argue or strongly imply this logical method was developed during the Enlightenment, allowing them to align their pet causes with the idea of rationality itself. A cursory glance through Greek/Roman philosophy, Jewish Talmudic study, the Christian Scholastic tradition etc. shows formal logic and the rational method is far older than the Enlightenment.

So if the argument is that rationality applied in the public sphere derives from the Enlightenment, it’s wrong. If the argument is simply “rationality is good, don’t be irrational” then it’s such a vacuous argument there’s no reason to give it more than five minutes thought.

Like his friend Dawkins, Pinker has accomplished a lot in his field but his forays into the vexing problems of philosophy, theology, etc. leave a lot to be desired.

Last edited 2 years ago by Matthew Baker
Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
2 years ago
Reply to  Matthew Baker

You obviously know little of Pinker’s work if you think he indulges in straw men arguments, he is one of the few public intellectuals today who puts evidence rather than dogma or wishful thinking centre stage.

Historically, whatever the merits of those – very limited – essays into rational thinking you cite, they had very little wider cultural power. This of course is why extremely irrational dogma was imposed, by extreme force if necessary, in Western and Orthodox Christianity, for many hundreds of years. The Enlightenment stands as being an at least very unusual if not unique revolution in thought which led, eventually, to a wholescale change in Western ideas. Certainly nothing similar happened in the Islamic world or China say.

A Spetzari
A Spetzari
2 years ago
Reply to  Matthew Baker

 “rationality is good, don’t be irrational”

Don’t mean to pick on you but you can’t accuse Pinker of straw manning then straw man him back. Nobody sensible has ever said the above and meant it in absolute terms.
Rationality is not binary. It doesn’t have to be either or. The argument is that by applying rationality you can get as close as possible to the truth. That doesn’t mean that there can’t be flaws in the application of rationality. It’s not a faith – a good and honest use of rationality can still result in error, but that is likely because there is an error somewhere along the way, perhaps known or unknown.
If we’re keeping score, enlightened (rational) thinking has allowed us to progress and understand the world in exceptional ways, unlike any other previous type of thinking. It has had many failures on the way, even created more problems, but we now know so much more than before. No other thought process has come close, whether we like that fact or not. To say otherwise is literally denying reality.
We will never ever know everything, but we will get a damn sight closer to it with rational thought than without it.

Last edited 2 years ago by A Spetzari
Matthew Baker
DB
Matthew Baker
2 years ago
Reply to  A Spetzari

Fair enough, it was a trite way to end the comment. I’m in agreement overall on your last few paragraphs, with one twist. I never attacked rational thought, I’m saying one still must still ground ultimate reasoned arguments in axioms. Many axioms can be rigorously tested but not all, and not some of the most important.

To use an example, Pinker’s argument in The Blank Slate is well argued and presents a good critique of the tabula rasa idea and shows how biology plays a huge role in differences in intellect, behavioral preferences etc. He also argues the tabula rasa idea leads to social engineering and usually tyranny, which is a compelling argument. He then argues a strong commitment to the rights of the individual can safeguard against the inequality of biological largesse.

This is all largely true, I would say, but the problem is establishing (rationally) the link between the innate biological differences between humans and the human rights which will protect the individual. In other books, such as Enlightenment Now, Pinker employs several rhetorical tricks (the straw man arguments I referenced) to imply individual dignity was developed during the 1700s by thinkers such as Kant. But Kant largely derived his ideas of innate human rights based on the idea of tabula rasa.

The ideals of human rights and individual identity largely arose in the West because of axioms which predate the Enlightenment. Human right are largely based on theological and metaphysical statements arising thousands of years ago, developed by legal scholars of Latin Christendom, and given new impetus to be universally implemented during the last medieval appeal to “reform.”

So, as I said in my original comment, rational thinking is not the sole invention of the Enlightenment thinkers. Their contribution (and it is no small one) was to turn the process against more and more of the assumed axioms of the day. My problem with Pinker in his prior arguments is he ignores the historical development of ideas such as human rights in the West so as to present them as axioms which can be assumed.

chris sullivan
chris sullivan
2 years ago
Reply to  Matthew Baker

If one reads Seneca on the subject of reason, or Socrates, 2000 and 2500bp one realizes that objective reason has been striven for for a very long time. And for a very long time that reason has been mostly swamped by the unreasoned chaos that most humans seem to live in. This is merely the status quo. As Jesus said (paraphrased) ‘the gormless will be with you always”. A bit naive to hope that much has or will change – unless i am missing something in the contemporary situation ??

AC Harper
AC Harper
2 years ago
Reply to  Matthew Baker

So if the argument is that rationality applied in the public sphere derives from the Enlightenment, it’s wrong. “
That’s not anything like the whole the argument. From Wikipedia:

The Enlightenment included a range of ideas centered on the pursuit of happiness, sovereignty of reason, and the evidence of the senses as the primary sources of knowledge and advanced ideals such as libertyprogresstolerationfraternity, constitutional government, and separation of church and state.

If you must boil the argument down to a straw man then at least acknowledge that it was the sovereignty of reason that was key to the Enlightenment.

Peter LR
Peter LR
2 years ago

Rationality seems a most peculiar way to make every choice in life. Do you fall in love rationally? Does it determine the wine you choose to drink, or the film you watch? How do you manage to complete your shopping in the supermarket before dying of starvation when there is so much choice and you are required to rationally select each item? I think it’s easier being human.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
2 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

No, but you probably buy your house or car with a strong rational component!

A Spetzari
A Spetzari
2 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

No, but that’s the point. To use your shopping analogy:
You rationally decide that you cannot (or don’t want to) spend an entire evening in the supermarket choosing the perfect shop. You balance out taking time picking, against what time you want to spend on it.
Whether you like it or not you apply some rational logic to what you purchase. A toddler with a tenner is going to come back with very different things in a supermarket to that of an adult.
Just because you cannot apply rationality 100% of the time to all things, doesn’t therefore mean rationality is therefore bunk

Jon Redman
HJ
Jon Redman
2 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

What an excellent point. I don’t know the answer but the one that occurs to me is that some of the choices you outline are at bottom trivial – the Barolo or the Amarone? – so it doesn’t matter if you get them “wrong”; wrong is still quite good. Other choices have an embedded economic component (the Amarone or the Bull’s Blood?), so rationality does help you choose; others are not really choices at all (falling in love).
I do confess to buying quite a lot of things at random though. If I want to spend £12 on a bottle of wine it’s a pretty random decision which to buy.

Martin Smith
MS
Martin Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

Horses for courses.

Norman Powers
Norman Powers
2 years ago
Reply to  Peter LR

For love? No. For everything else yes, because a part of rationality is Bayesian reasoning of the form “I liked this before, so the chances of me liking it again is high”. Our brains can evaluate this sort of probability very fast. The belief that logic/rationality requires ignoring subjective prior experience is not really quite true. It only requires that the conclusions of an argument are derived logically from their premises. If one of the premises is “I drank this wine/a wine from this region before and it tasted good” then “and therefore I should buy it again” is a logical argument, even if it may not be 100% comprehensive.

Saul D
Saul D
2 years ago

A better analogy is that we’re like ants trying to find our way to food in a maze. As we search the successful outcomes lead to trails that are explored more often and become the everyday heuristics since they were pathways to success. Those that fail are discarded. Rationality adds a bit to this in that as humans we can think ahead a bit, but real rational thinking (maths, quantum physics) is hard work plus trial and error, and most of us are just happy with a few simpler heuristic rules.
Up to the internet, the ‘lead ants’ were leff to experts because only they had maps and tools. Now anyone can explore, which of course creates chaos initially as all the old rejected paths are re-explored, but eventually more searchers will lead to better and deeper paths by pure weight of numbers. Human rationality is mostly just exploration over time.

Laura Creighton
LC
Laura Creighton
2 years ago

There are some people — who sometimes become great artists — whose rational decisions are substantially inferior to the ones they make entirely irrationally, based only on their feelings. These people are rare. Some of them seem to have a diminished capacity for reason — cognitive disability? simple disuse? But many do not — they just don’t reason much. The rest of us get better results when we use our reason, if only to verify ‘is that thing that feels like a good idea, really a good idea?’.

LCarey Rowland
LR
LCarey Rowland
2 years ago

Thank you for your report on the current state of supposed rationality.
The Faith is dead; long live the Faith!

Martin Johnson
MJ
Martin Johnson
2 years ago

Our children will know in the fullness of time, but it seems likely that we are in the midst of a rather complete reordering of how society understands itself, comparable to the Protestant Reformation or the Enlightenment or the Industrial and Scientific Revolutions.
Writing personally, I will regret what we lose, but these things happen as an intellectual regime ages and encounters (even, creates) problems it cannot resolve. What bothers me the most about it is that the people driving it are ignoramuses and the movement has no intellectual value–which I suppose gets at what Pinker tries to say. Those past intellectual regime changes were driven by people like Luther, Hobbes, Locke, Diderot, Voltaire, Faraday… Now we have Kendi and Coates and DiAngelo and a whole bunch of people who cannot even write a bad book but are only grifters.
That does not bode well for the “Successor Regime” (as Wesley Yang has dubbed it) doing anything worthwhile as it destroys the old and replaces it with sh*t. (And if you don’t recognize it, I allude to John McWhorter describing wokeism as a new, “sh*tty religion.”)
Meanwhile, serious countries (esp. China), prepare for a real future.

Neven Curlin
Neven Curlin
2 years ago

Rationality has become a religion.

Edward De Beukelaer
Edward De Beukelaer
2 years ago

The comments here are very interesting: just a few question: can we ever be really rational only? Is truth not always the results of a convention: we set the parameters within which we can settle for a truth? Is it possible to capture (our) life on earth though rationality only?
Worth reading: https://channelmcgilchrist.com/steven-pinkers-essay/ with McGilchrist’s reply..