How Mind Works-Steven Pinker
****/***** Science
How Mind Works
Steven Pinker
Human
mind, as distinct from brain but ineluctably linked to it (like digestion with
gut, respiration with lungs), defines and distinguishes our species. We not
only reproduce, eat, defecate but think of past and fret over future. We
speculate on imaginary situations and how these could have affected our past
and might change our future. We think of beauty, we enjoy and create art and
literature, we deeply value moral rectitude and philosophise on value and
meaning of life. On questioning, an overwhelming majority of people would say
that human beings have evolved or were created solely for these functions and
these were the goal that directed our evolution. But this is just not true in
the light of modern theory of evolution by natural selection as discovered by
Charles Darwin. Nature has no preference for creatures that can compose
Mozart’s symphonies, write Shakespeare’s verse or meditate on its species’
ethics and behaviour like David Hume. Nature, blindly and without foresight,
selects those genes from the present pool which spread most prolifically. Yet this
same deceptively simple rule of nature is incontrovertibly responsible for
evolution of the unfathomably intricate human mind. Steven Pinker endeavours in
this book to explain the origin of human mind in light of evolution and
postulate on its working. Evolution only favoured those traits which helped its
possessor to survive and reproduce better than its contemporaries. All else,
the vast repertoire of human behaviour, skills and characteristics grew from
those basic traits and mostly as side effects offering no survival value to the
body that exhibited these. If there is a more interesting and awe-inspiring
story about the origin of humans, I am yet to hear of it. Attributing the creation
of this marvellous mind of man to an omniscient God robs it of every shred of
its rightful grandeur.
Steven
Pinker in this mammoth book, both in size and scope, displays unmatched writing
skill, wit, astute understanding of the subject matter and an enviable depth of
erudition, as he tackles seemingly inexplicable aspects of human mind and makes
them accessible to a layman.
In
the first chapter he describes the enormity and complexity of human mind.
Citing working of robots, he illustrates intricate complexity of apparently
simple and benign tasks like seeing, moving a limb, and common sense, which
mind executes ceaselessly every moment of day. He hints about the complex
situations that mind has to deal with and illustrates this with the emotion of
love, ‘…when it (mind) turns to love, there must be intricate calculations that
carry out the peculiar logic of attraction, infatuation, courtship, coyness,
surrender, commitment, malaise, philandering, jealousy, desertion and heart
break.’
He
devotes one chapter to explaining how the computational model of mind actually
works. Emphasis of the book is on evolution of human mind and in a chapter
Pinker discusses how evolution endowed humans with a mind. In later chapters he
talks about some of the specific attributes of human mind: vision, higher
pursuits of mind like science and mathematics, emotions, relationship among
kith and kin, parents and children, man and woman and finally love and sex. In
the last chapter he discusses evolution of arts, entertainment, humour and
religion. His arguments are persuasive, well researched and cogent, his
language beautiful and simple and prose lucid and enthralling. He frequently
quotes eminent litterateurs, renowned thinkers, humourists and popular fiction
and poetry, thus making the discussion lively.
Occasionally
the attempt to explain all the myriad facets of human mind through the path of
evolution seems theoretical but evolution is the only tool to understand how we
came to acquire the lives that we possess and thus inhabit our tiny patch of
universe. This is a thrilling journey of discovery of self, a deeply satisfying
endeavour. I say endeavour because the book demands serious attention and
application of average reasoning and intellect. It is a must read for all who
have ever wondered about the working of this most exquisite organ of human
body, The Mind.
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