Review of The New Brain Sciences:
Perils and Prospects.
Edited by Dai Rees and Steven Rose
Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-521-53714-2
Times Higher Education Supplement, March 2005, Books Focus
p 26
Note this is the unedited version. The review was
slightly edited for publication.
Neuroscience is now a billion pound business, so
maybe it is time to steal up on what Steven Rose calls “that final
terra incognita, the nature of consciousness itself”. In his fiery
introduction to The New Brain Sciences: Perils and Prospects, Rose
claims that developments in neurology, molecular biology and other
neurosciences have been isolated from their socio-economic context and
dominated by the search for genetic and pharmacological quick fixes.
This, he claims, celebrates and reinforces “the simplistic
reductionist agendas of neuroscience and neurotechnology.”
Although he warns that “you will find no
gung-ho overoptimistic forecasts of the wondrous cornucopia of
benefits that neuroscience might bring here”, the book is not as
depressing as this implies, and there is only the odd hint of
postmodernist ranting.
The book is based on two meetings that explored
neuroscience and neuroethics. The first of three main sections is
called “Freedom to change”, and explores the effects of
neuroscience on our concepts of human agency, responsibility and free
will. Philosopher, Mary Midgley, asks “Do we ever really act?”.
For, if the true cause of our action is always a physical event, we
might not really be active agents at all but like people hypnotised or
possessed by an alien force. She takes Colin Blakemore to task for
claiming that “The human brain is a machine that alone accounts for
all our actions”. She admits that the brain is necessary but objects
to the word “alone” (although I doubt that Blakemore really meant
that the brain acts alone, without a world to act in). Others discuss
the limits of neurobiology, and the goals and values of the
neurosciences, and Peter Lipton gives a wonderfully clear exposition
of the problem of free will. He argues that, as traditionally
conceived, free will is impossible, so any knowledge we may gain about
genetics or innate dispositions poses no special threat to free will.
The second section takes these issues as they
affect the (mainly English) law. Knowing little about this topic I
found these chapters both interesting and informative. Patrick Bateson
rejects the idea that “all shreds of human agency succumb in the
face of advances in the understanding of evolutionary process,
genetics and brain function”. He explores the notion of diminished
responsibility, and urges us to assume intentionality and
responsibility until we have very good reason not to. I specially
enjoyed his explanation of what Dawkins meant by his selfish gene
theory, and how badly people have misinterpreted this metaphor of
selfishness.
Alexander McCall Smith goes deeper into the
concept of responsibility, voluntary action and blame. Describing
voluntary acts as those that we take ourselves to be doing, he argues
that responsibility may remain intact even when we understand the
causes of actions. He describes the compromises the law has to make
when intervening in personal life – compromises explored further by
Stephen Sedley in the context of homicide and manslaughter; the law
has to draw lines between them even though science recognises the
multiple, interacting, and complex causes of violent action.
Men are the main perpetrators of violence, and
Lorraine Radford gives some fascinating figures. For example, in
England and Wales 70% of homicide victims are men. Women kill less
often and are far more likely to be killed by a partner. Evolutionary
psychology has explanations for this, for example, that women might
choose dominant and violent men as partners because they may make
better providers and protectors, and men may attack a partner who
threatens to leave as a way of ensuring ownership. This does not,
Radford points out, account for large differences between cultures but
neither does she dismiss such explanations as deterministic
positivism.
The last section concerns the stewardship of the
new brain sciences – who should protect society against errors,
oversimplifications, false optimism, and even political manipulation?
Yadin Dudai describes the case of the “smart mouse”, produced
using gene therapy. People expected wonderful enhancements of human
intelligence to follow until this gene change was found to increase
sensitivity to pain. Dudai warns against the “lobotomy attitude”
that once led surgeons to make irreversible changes to patients’
brains with no idea of the consequences.
Angus Clarke tackles the ever-controversial topic
of the genetic basis of intelligence, using doubts over definitions
and fears of the social implications, to conclude that it is
inappropriate to pursue research into it. He says he wouldn’t ban
such research – so what could “inappropriate” mean? I agree that
claims of racial differences are highly problematic, and sometimes
politically motivated, but people are fascinated by intelligence and
will not stop researching because someone deems it
“inappropriate”.
The first of two chapters on stem cell research
provides a useful overview of what stem cells are, what can be done
with them, and the risks entailed in using them to repair brain
degeneration. The second explores ethical problems such as the moral
status of embryos, the ethics of cloning, and the slippery slope which
some fear will lead to human cloning. Once more, the difficult issue
is raised of who decides which research should or should not be done.
Turning to drugs we read of a fascinating
multiple-murder involving the anti-depressant Prozac, which
illustrates the clash between biology and the market place in the
selling of drugs for anxiety and depression. Some scary changes are
going on, from increases in depression and consequent prescribing of
mind-altering drugs, to ghost-writing of scientific articles which
undermines scientific integrity and raises fears about the power of
pharmaceutical companies. David Healy argues that the same process is
leading to a medicalisation of childhood distress, as seen with the
spread of Ritalin to control attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder.
Paul Cooper notes that between 2% and 2.5% of children are
prescribed medication for hyperactivity in the USA – though less
than 1% in the UK. He provides some chilling comments from children
– such as a 15 year old girl who likes Ritalin at school because it
helps her work but doesn’t like it at home because it stops her
wanting to go out and play with her friends. He gives an image of
young people, throughout the world, being increasingly stressed and
isolated, while society uses drugs to make them conform to the demands
of educational achievement.
These issues are serious, and this book will be
of interest to everyone who worries about them but, in the end, it
never gets to grips with those tricky issues of consciousness and free
will that underlie all the arguments. Although the book starts with
the search for that “final terra incognita”, and with Hilary Rose
calling consciousness “a sparkling jewel irresistible to the
neurotheorists” no real light is shed on it. Midgley stresses
“that conscious thought has a legitimate and essential place among
the causal factors that work in the world” without any appreciation
of the philosophical difficulties involved in saying that subjective
experience is causal.
In his otherwise useful summary of his three
stage theory of human evolution, Merlin Donald suggests that the
flexibility of human nature “is due largely to the overdevelopment
of conscious processing, and those parts of the brain that support
it”, and talks about things being processed “in consciousness”,
as though this were a special place in the brain. Hilary Rose is the
only contributor to reject this simplistic assumption, but she does
not consider the implications for neuroscience in her discussion of
fiction, feminist consciousness-raising, and the Black Consciousness
movement.
Finally, in their concluding chapter, Dai Rees
and Barbro Westerholm claim that although the philosophical case
against free will might seem watertight, it makes such a nonsense of
human experience that they “are driven to accept that there must be
limitations in a philosophical method which has somehow arrived at the
denial of this quality that we value so much.” In other words they
will stick with their intuitions regardless of arguments against them.
It is precisely this kind of clash which creates the need for a book
like this.
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