De La Mettrie’s Ghost: The Story of Decisions
by Chris Nunn
MacMillan 228 pp, index, £16.95/$24.95 hardback, ISBN
14-3994951
Reviewed by Susan Blackmore for Focus
August 2005
(This is the version submitted. It may have been
edited before publication.)
Are we free to choose what we want, and to make –
or fail to make - moral decisions? Or are we just complicated
machines whose actions are entirely determined? This question of
“free will” is said to the most discussed in all of philosophy, and
has worried people for millennia. And no wonder – for we all feel
as though we are a conscious entity in charge of our lives, even
though our bodies and brains look very much like clever machines.
Now, in this accessible and well-written book, psychiatrist Chris
Nunn reviews the arguments and presents a novel solution to the
problem.
Nunn’s starting point is Julien de la Mettrie’s
infamous 1748 book “Man a machine” which scandalised religious
eighteenth century France and caused him to flee into exile. Nunn
traces the history of mechanistic thought and provides a helpful
overview of recent attempts to find a role for consciousness in the
workings of the physical brain. As in de la Mettrie’s time, but with
far more knowledge of biology and the brain, we keep hitting up
against a horrible dilemma; that the brain does not seem to need us,
and yet we think of ourselves, treat each other, and build our legal
and medical systems on the idea that there is someone – some ghost,
or soul, or spirit, or inner self – who is in charge.
For me, the only viable solution is to accept
the soul-less science, dismantle the false sense of self, and learn
to live without the illusion of free will. But this is not Nunn’s
preferred option. Instead he develops the idea that we are more like
stories or films than machines. Free will and responsibility are
properties of the tale, not of the apparatus with which it is told,
and memories are crucial to consciousness and the sense of self,
especially because of how they are edited and re-edited.
Consciousness, then, is actually some
memory-related aspect of brain function. Yet, claims Nunn,
consciousness has some degree of autonomy, or freedom from neural
determinism; it can influence its own future and the actions of its
brain. But isn’t this just sneaking in a separate, powerful, self
again? Nunn’s self is certainly not a ghost in the machine; it is a
story, or a lot of stories, that each of us builds up over a
lifetime. Yet the stories themselves must be built and edited by the
changing machinery of the brain mustn’t they? Nunn claims that his
is a scientific account of free will, and that memory frees us from
the de la Mettrie machine. I am not convinced. But I urge you to
read this book and decide on these critical issues for yourself.
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