Steven Pinker: Human nature and the blank slate

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  • Опубліковано 6 жов 2008
  • www.ted.com Steven Pinker's book The Blank Slate argues that all humans are born with some innate traits. Here, Pinker talks about his thesis, and why some people found it incredibly upsetting.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 676

  • @jwh0122
    @jwh0122 3 роки тому +80

    0:33 Blank Slate
    1:27 Reasons to doubt blank slate
    5:46 Political appeal of blank slate
    11:27 Arts
    18:27 Parenting

  • @fifikusz
    @fifikusz Рік тому +9

    "Human beings are born with different capacities. If they are free, they are not equal. And if they are equal, they are not free." Alexandr Solzhenitsyn

  • @wakeupamerica2824
    @wakeupamerica2824 4 роки тому +116

    I was adopted and found out recently i have an older brother, him and i are very alike and have wives with similar personalities.

    • @alecwolf1443
      @alecwolf1443 3 роки тому +12

      I was adopted (I was 3.5 y.o.) too and all the time since my childhood I felt that I was different from my family....from the way I was perceiving my adopted family's "morals - behavior - ethical" norms and requirements. As a child I couldn't explain my difference the way I was looking at the world and the way it worked for me. But now I know....I got something "before" I came to this world which was leading and still leads me through my life in my own way.

    • @waedjradi
      @waedjradi 3 роки тому

      @@alecwolf1443 What do you mean? Because your comment is synonymous to the family I grew up in, as the last born.

  • @peymang
    @peymang 2 роки тому +6

    I am a therapist and incorporate evolutionary psychology in my work with people. In my field 90% of therapists treat the symptoms and will ask you "how do you feel about that.. but do we ever ask why are we predisposed to have severe emotional states like depression? What were the conditions of early humans which may have caused them depression and predisposed us? When people make these connections it can sometimes help them in their recovery. Evolutionary psychology should be mandatory in all psychology programs. Pinkert is my intellectual hero!!!!

    • @jameseldridge3445
      @jameseldridge3445 2 роки тому

      Definitely true, but this would lead to inequality by nature. Which is something most humans can't accept due to our emotions. Read the Apology by Socrates (Plato), emotions and ideologies will get you killed for speaking the truth, despite any and all evidence

  • @DrRobMD1
    @DrRobMD1 11 років тому +154

    Over the course of thirty years I have delivered about three thousand babies and cared for many of them and their families as a Family Doctor as they grew up. I have found that it was easy to assign one of five personality types to each one within a minute or two after delivery and that these persisted. The types were Calm and Curious, Comfort seeking (cuddly), Angry, Fearful or Suspicious. Enjoy your parenthood. You're pretty much stuck with what you start with.

    • @KingMinosxxvi
      @KingMinosxxvi 3 роки тому +4

      How bout some credentials to go along with this unsubstantiated lark?

    • @jakebarnett8837
      @jakebarnett8837 2 роки тому

      @@KingMinosxxvi well his name is 'Dr.RobMD' and he's saying he delivered babies, so I would assume is a medical doctor who specialized in Obstetrics and Gynecology by a residency and potentially a fellowship following. sometimes the context clues are right in front of ya dummy

    • @KingMinosxxvi
      @KingMinosxxvi 2 роки тому +1

      @@jakebarnett8837 Um ..................NO that's not a substantiation. Pretty much anyone could the name doctor ROB. Do you think I am King? Furthermore, even if it were true that this dingle hopper was actually a doctor there would be know what to substantiate his claim that he somehow instantly new their personality from the start. Did he mark it down and then continue to not said personality as they grew up. Are these things say mentioned in a journal somewhere? So please DUMMY STF up

    • @jonlyons1033
      @jonlyons1033 2 роки тому +2

      UPS here, you're hired!

  • @philipcrisp7161
    @philipcrisp7161 Рік тому +9

    Steven Pinker gives several reasons for the appeal of the 'blank slate' idea. I would add another (which I don't think he covered directly). The notion of the blank slate is very validating to those who work in the 'caring professions'. I include in that teachers, psychologists, welfare workers, 'social engineers', etc. - not to mention every mother (or primary parent) who ever lived. We all like to think that our interventions make a difference. But I suspect outcomes are more to do with nature - and less to do with nurture - than commonly thought. Perhaps parents of troubled youth could give themselves a break.

    • @jameseldridge3445
      @jameseldridge3445 Рік тому +3

      Robert Plomin has a debate explaining how parenting matters but it doesn’t make a difference

  • @comdrive3865
    @comdrive3865 Рік тому +4

    the moment he said "common sense" is the moment you know what kind of speech he's giving.

  • @Agnotio
    @Agnotio 12 років тому +8

    The research that's been done on family environment typically doesn't include extreme cases of abuse, neglect, etc. so the answer is we don't know what would happen to those babies (Pinker admits this in the Blank Slate). All psychologists have learned is that in the fairly normal range of family environments there appears to be only small effects on personality.

  • @RappingManualYT
    @RappingManualYT 6 років тому +37

    Funny how UA-cam suggested this 2008 presentation now, 10 years later. Thank you, it was interesting and still holds truth to this day.

    • @519djw6
      @519djw6 4 роки тому +1

      Actually, it's from *2003*, according to the title near the start of the video.

  • @fmapls
    @fmapls 4 роки тому +67

    My mother firmly believed in the blank slate for all of her children, including the adopted ones. What a f’ing nightmare.

    • @jabir5768
      @jabir5768 3 роки тому +3

      how does that turn into a nightmare ? Genuinely curious

    • @fmapls
      @fmapls 3 роки тому +41

      @@jabir5768 it means that she believed that a child was NOT born with a personality , and it was her job to instill one. If her child did not conform to her wishes, then the child must be defective
      If you believe that children are infinitely malleable, you’ll try to mold them into a shape that pleases you but does not fit them. That’s bad enough if your children somewhat resemble you, but if they’re adopted they’ll never be able to fit the mold and will suffer for that failure. Putting “tabula rasa” into the hands of a narcissist is giving them a tool of endless abuse.

    • @jabir5768
      @jabir5768 3 роки тому +3

      @@fmapls I see. Sorry you had to go trough that

    • @AndrewNiccol
      @AndrewNiccol 2 роки тому +6

      @@fmapls You mother is nothing compare to my father, he is the believer too: there is no such thing as "I don't understand text books and teachers."
      The father of The Blank Slate: Bad scores in school doesn't mean you lack intelligence, because everyone can be anything, bad scores just mean you are lazy at study.
      What a nightmare.

  • @lizgichora6472
    @lizgichora6472 11 місяців тому +2

    Blank slate: - Equal and Sameness. We are equal but not the same, we ought to judge each one as an individual not as a group.
    Inspired Topics : - Elite Arts, Criticisms and Parenting.
    Behavior: - Culture and Man's outcome. Thank you Stephen Pinker.

  • @dollaresque
    @dollaresque 15 років тому +12

    How funny is this? I can't fall asleep because I'm reading his book The Blank Slate... and just as I decide TO TAKE A BREAK from reading him, he shows up on TED with this talk!
    Fascinating material, enough to keep anyone up at night trying to make sense of it all.

  • @OverusedChewToy
    @OverusedChewToy 15 років тому +15

    "the arts are in decline" ROFL, man people never cease to amaze me with their lack of perspective. I like Steven Pinker, he's got academic balls; unafraid to actual tell it how it is, and, especially, how it isn't.

  • @blackknightjack3850
    @blackknightjack3850 6 років тому +146

    More important than ever with James Demore being fired for basically saying the same thing.

    • @synchronium24
      @synchronium24 4 роки тому +5

      Yup. And he even provided ideas on how Google could attract more women, despite not thinking it was necessary from an ideological point of view.

    • @mikewilliams4947
      @mikewilliams4947 4 роки тому

      More important than now?

    • @zarbins
      @zarbins 2 місяці тому

      I followed James Demore firing closely and found it rather abhorrent. Now, after seeing Gemini AI disastrous release, I am looking forward to the downfall of Google. Their issues are deep and systemic at that company.

  • @CyhAnide
    @CyhAnide 14 років тому +2

    I wish there were more of these talks available to us, on more topics. He discusses so many different things in his books--naming, for example, is fascinating.
    More from TED would be nice. The quality is surprisingly good in nearly all of their videos, and not just for Pinker.

  • @kev3d
    @kev3d 15 років тому +7

    I think Pinker is one of the smartest researchers working today and one of the most intellectually honest. I don't have the background to know if he is right or wrong, but his braveness in studying things like, say race or gender, and calling it how the data shows rather than adhering to dear (but possibly wrong) cultural ideas is refreshing. In this sense, there is no predetermined result, but listening only to the data which I think yields much better science.

  • @nonchalantd
    @nonchalantd 11 років тому +27

    One of the interesting things I took away from this is that, although he says that genetics is a major factor in determining personalities, the wiring in the brain can be affected by the conditions in the womb, which means that nurture influences nature. There's is also plenty of evidence showing that nurture turns genes on and off that also impact personalities and that people with certain personalities are predisposed to certain lifestyles I think you can never discount the impact of nurture

    • @magicbuns4868
      @magicbuns4868 6 років тому +4

      nonchalantd Think you can't deny either at all. That's what he's arguing against. The total reliance on nature. But good comment

    • @mariussielcken
      @mariussielcken Рік тому +5

      Nurture arises from nature more than vice versa

  • @blueskies5451
    @blueskies5451 7 років тому +8

    That sentence by Judith at 17:12 is a work of art in and of itself.
    The findings on twins is beyond interesting.

  • @DrBrainTickler
    @DrBrainTickler 6 років тому +3

    That information in regards to Book Sales it's something I'm a bit fascinated with. I was under the misconception that reading in general was on the decline.
    Thank you for that... That helps me make the decision I was toiling with for the past few years... I will indeed write a book, several perhaps.

  • @JazzyNiG
    @JazzyNiG 6 років тому +54

    This is really excellent. I love the sheer common sense and good humour of this intelligent man. I love his observations about the decline of art convergent with the non recognition of human nature. Brilliant!

  • @firesnakearies
    @firesnakearies 4 роки тому +19

    Everybody gangsta til the TED logo blows out their eardrums.

  • @yakultum
    @yakultum 3 роки тому +61

    I graduated in psychology and I have to say that at least where I studied we lack a lot of what steven pinker says. Really great presentation, this is closer to science over what social Science has been doing. All political and pettiness guiding everything.

    • @lukecockburn1140
      @lukecockburn1140 2 роки тому +3

      Could you elaborate on your experience studying psychology? I'm interested in how & what they teach
      & Do you not consider Social Science Science or just generally poorer in quality

    • @chochoproductions5720
      @chochoproductions5720 Рік тому

      still over reliant on indirect measures, still lacking experimental design,

    • @philj9594
      @philj9594 Рік тому +1

      Sounds like you had a crappy program. Unfortunately that is common. I studied psychology at the University of Minnesota which is one of the best institutions for psychology research in the world, and outside of Psych 101, everything I learned more or less matches up with this video. Granted I did focus on cognitive psychology which dives much more in depth into nature vs nurture than a lot of other psychology subdomains.

    • @jonathanpozos
      @jonathanpozos Рік тому

      @@philj9594 what jobs or what can you work as if you have a degree in psychology?

  • @rileybrown342
    @rileybrown342 8 років тому +55

    Mr. Pinker's argument makes sense to me. My brother and I were born 19 months apart and raised in the same home yet we are now different people as adults. If we were blank slates we should have turned out more similar.
    I have recently been reading The Sense of Style for a technical writing course, and I am impressed by Mr. Pinker's writing skill. He is an excellent speaker as well. Thank you, TED, for hosting this video.

    • @johnmiller7453
      @johnmiller7453 6 років тому +11

      A lot can happen in 19 months and parents usually parent differently with each child and sometimes things aren't in the same place between the parents and then there are the life events for each of you that you don't even know about and,what happens at school etc. In other words don't be too sure.

    • @moladiver6817
      @moladiver6817 6 років тому +12

      I find the evidence against a blank slate to be very compelling. Siblings often are quite different in terms of personality, habits, hobbies and such despite their very similar upbringing. As opposed to separated identical twins who are raised separately but end up being very similar adults. The conclusion here is that nature definitely seems to prevail over nurture.
      Of course parents can direct their kids into certain paths of development but I think it's not much more than slight course adjustments. Parents often believe they imprint their personal values onto their kids but it seems much more likely that those values simply arise mostly from genetic inheritance. And that should actually be a relief to most people because it actually removes a lot of the pressure we often feel when raising our kids to be good citizens. They probably already are if you are. :)
      If genetics is the deciding factor then choosing the right partner in life is probably the best way to also later raise the kind of children that you want.

    • @Danskadreng
      @Danskadreng 6 років тому +5

      Everything humans does is essentially a part of their nature. You can't just cherry pick a certain aspect of their behavior and call that "natural" or "nature". It's all of it, both good and bad. Then you can argue that there are some bad traits to that "nature" or there are some good traits, and point them out, but essentially every little single thing we do is a part of our "nature". This is how we are designed, and it's very complex, it's something we won't understand anytime soon.

    • @shellamadre935
      @shellamadre935 2 роки тому +1

      That means your experiences are different from your brother,have you been to all the places that he had been,have you talked to all the people that he talked?people and places influence us.

  • @latinaalma1947
    @latinaalma1947 2 роки тому +4

    We believed strongly in the blank slate as psychologists in the 70s onward...this is why we advised the Us government to poure billions of dollars into programs such as Headstart...we believed we could engineer IQ via such programs we soon found we couldnt. Social engineering has wasted huge amounts of money with almost no results. We meant well, we wanted all people to be equal ...they are not . Of course we knew people had varying IQs. But we wanted so much to buy into the ugly duckling theory ..that we could sprinkle education dust, self esteem affirmation training, everyone gets a prize cause no one special, certain children and adults are gifted due to reprehensabile "privilege"...fairy dust in front of children and they would blossom like flowers. Not so much. All those years I was a contrarian...speaming up about what I knew to be true re the measurement of IQ...guess what I was called? Classist, sexist (against my own gender), racist.....I retired early at 50 and never looked back...I had FREEDOM to speak my mind. I have grandchildren whomhave been told I am those things by their schools, teachers, amd scocoety...I must say THAT part of it was not fun. I have lost lifelong friends as wokeism has taken more and more hold of American society. I know what it must have felt ike to be Galileo. Sybil Francis PhD clinical.psychologist and professor

  • @Strange9952
    @Strange9952 2 роки тому +3

    The idea that humans can be a blank slate is one of the most absurd arguments of our current society

  • @syourke3
    @syourke3 9 років тому +133

    What Pinker says seems quite obvious to me. Is it really so controversial to say that people are born with certain innate abilities and dispositions? I do have reservations about his dismissal of the role of the parents in affecting the development of their children to this extent - that if parents are abusive to thier children, those children will probably be damaged in one way or another. They will have a greater tendency to suffer from depression, anxiety, and other psychological problems and will be more likely to engage in anti-social behavior than children who are not abused. Human nature is not just a matter of genetic programming. Genes play an active role in human behavior, they are not mere blueprints. Genes are activated and de-activated in response to environmental factors. Therefore, these environmental factors are very important in determining human behavior. I think it is misleading to talk about "human nature" as if it is something fixed and immutable when human behavior is so clearly dependent upon the interaction of genetic endowment and enviromental conditions.

    • @SquareNoggin
      @SquareNoggin 9 років тому +1

      Steven Yourke H

    • @MrLegoCorporation
      @MrLegoCorporation 8 років тому +1

      +Steven Yourke I agree, it's time to pull out the Astrology charts...

    • @Chibling
      @Chibling 8 років тому +12

      +Steven Yourke He would have to agree with you. Development is always a combination of genetics and environmental influences.

    • @jameslorman7589
      @jameslorman7589 7 років тому +4

      I don't know if u really got the jist of it....your saying the negative morals of the parents affect the kids " negatively"... well duh ! Maybe watch it again ... that's not the point of what he is saying

    • @fwalsh101
      @fwalsh101 6 років тому +5

      Pinker says the contrary,environment has no effect on personality or intellect.
      19:15 - 20:42
      He really should have give more detail this..
      I guess that's why he wrote a book.

  • @jameshanshaw516
    @jameshanshaw516 6 років тому +23

    Mankind can never move forward until we come to grips with not who we are but what we are.

    • @duster0066
      @duster0066 5 років тому

      Critters on a rock floating in an unimaginable nothingness as far as we are concerned. It's to damn far to go have any fun. We're stuck here on this rock looking at each other. And we don't like it.

    • @comdrive3865
      @comdrive3865 Рік тому

      @@duster0066 Overpopulation is the biggest problem facing humanity at present. Well said.

  • @kennywrites
    @kennywrites 15 років тому +6

    "Blank Slate" and "How the Mind Works" are two of my favorite books. "Stuff of Thought" was pretty good too. I tend to agree with Pinker's points.

  • @RhamosVhailejh
    @RhamosVhailejh 10 років тому +5

    That's exactly what Mr. Pinker is trying to say in this video. He suggests that we *inherit* much more from our birth parents which molds us into who we are, rather than the idea that we *learn* more from our parents/guardians which mold us into who we are, which is true to an extent, but we definitely inherit more personal traits than we learn.

  • @hughc023
    @hughc023 9 років тому +58

    Always interesting to hear Steven talk . . .

    • @EugeneFilleyFineArt
      @EugeneFilleyFineArt 9 років тому +1

      Hugh Fathers thank you so much for sharing this! Steven Pinker is, as you mention, always interesting. As an artist and psychologist, I particularly enjoyed his comments on art and parenting.

  • @MassZombicide
    @MassZombicide 15 років тому

    And by "departmental", I'm not postulating or relegating it to any specific function but the overall neurological connections.
    PS: I mentioned the twins because it's an example of the subdivision that you and I were talking about. Other than bias, I'm not sure what you were trying to dispute that for or what you meant by the disputation.
    The twin studies are the method used for methodically studying such heritability on the genetic level.

  • @orcodrilo
    @orcodrilo 10 років тому +16

    It is just obvious to me that we are born with some inbuilt individual talents and vices. The best we can do is to find as early of possible our individual strengths and weaknesses to see what endeavors goes "against our grain" and smoothing our natural rough edges. Comparatives with other people are almost always bound to be unfair.

    • @Danskadreng
      @Danskadreng 6 років тому +5

      Everyone is born with an individual talent, and I think the education system should be better at pointing them out, and then exploiting them for society to progress further towards the right direction.

    • @philj9594
      @philj9594 Рік тому

      @@Danskadreng Unfortunately that's just not true. It is enitrely possible to have no talents at all and there are millions of such people in our world. Now, technically, you could perform mental gymnastics to assign a talent to 100% of the global population, but definitions don't care about your own personal semantic interpretations. This is one of the many reasons why I believe a universal basic income should be a basic human right and is the only way to live in an ethical and fair society.

  • @dexterlecter7289
    @dexterlecter7289 8 років тому +96

    Thank you so much for your bravery. People like you help me realize I'm not insane. You're much better then Chomsky...

    • @user-eh3el2mk8c
      @user-eh3el2mk8c 8 років тому +26

      Doesn't take a lot to be better than Chomsky, but yes, Pinker is great.

    • @ggrey5990
      @ggrey5990 8 років тому +6

      +Dexter Lecter I don't think Steven Pinker would follow your logic, somehow.

    • @dexterlecter7289
      @dexterlecter7289 8 років тому

      ***** In which way? I'd disagree on many grounds. His logic and reasoning is very similar to my own.

    • @mohamedaly7539
      @mohamedaly7539 8 років тому +2

      +Dexter Lecter he's a dummy lol Chomsky is an actual scientist

    • @jessebaker3099
      @jessebaker3099 8 років тому +23

      Chomsky made important contributions to understanding the nature of grammar, e.g. in "Language and Thought" and "Language and Mind," two books he published in the '60s. Although his universal grammar thesis is now viewed with skepticism, no one doubts that all human languages share many features and a common mechanism of childhood acquisition. It was his injection of Marxist politics into the mix which ruined things.

  • @cherryberry360
    @cherryberry360 15 років тому +2

    I am such a fan of Steven Pinker! I'm reading The Language Instinct right now and really enjoying it. Plus he's Canadian :).

  • @monse7889
    @monse7889 4 роки тому

    Muy bueno, y al plantear la idea del cambio de perspectiva de la belleza me hizo recordar a Roger Scruton sobre el tema.

  • @henpo9
    @henpo9 Рік тому +3

    Wow, its been over 20 years since the Blank Slate came out. Surely society has come to accept the conclusions put forth by Mr. Pinker.. Surely..

  • @AlmightScoop
    @AlmightScoop 15 років тому +8

    Steven Pinkner is great. I really want to read more of his stuff.

  • @jollygreengiant1743
    @jollygreengiant1743 Рік тому +2

    Honestly I think both nature and nurture play a role in a persons development and personality. I’m not sure if it’s 50/50 for both nature and nurture, there’s so many different debates and opinions, and this argument has been going on for years. Plus, human behaviour is so complex that I don’t think we will ever know for sure how much of a person is nature and how much is nurture.

  • @xander55577
    @xander55577 15 років тому +1

    This is a great book-worth some re-reading and critical analysis. I'm now reading "words and rules" by pinker...also enjoyable.

  • @dollaresque
    @dollaresque 15 років тому

    I think today's artists have a rapidly expanding set of mediums available to them. There is also an increase in techniques and tools available to create art. This expansion of what/where/how art can be produced is a possible explanation of why some of it seems less "great" - and consequently, artists photographing unique stains are simply getting comfortable with the medium right now. Given more exposure to and familiarity with the new tools/techniques will over time yield "greater" results.

  • @Cyno7
    @Cyno7 11 років тому

    love the song at the end...

  • @seanow8180
    @seanow8180 3 роки тому +1

    A perfect example is the Buffer brothers. They were separated young but both of them ended up introducing fighters before fights.

  • @DrHowbeit
    @DrHowbeit 11 років тому

    How does that follow from Pinker's talk?

  • @hydropascal
    @hydropascal 3 роки тому

    Can we have better updated resolution of the lecture? Please......

  • @tastelesstouch
    @tastelesstouch 6 років тому +10

    Was this powerpoint done in Windows 95?

    • @emiel89
      @emiel89 5 років тому

      Yes. This presentation is from 2003. Not very surprising then.

  • @GuppyPal
    @GuppyPal 10 років тому +8

    Talks do not get any better than this. Perfect. Thank you, TED, and thank you, Dr. Pinker.

  • @MassZombicide
    @MassZombicide 15 років тому +1

    In hindsight it wouldn't necessarily improve their chances of inheriting it anymore than if 2 members of the same had bred (& now that I've actually reread your statement, I remember why it was I agreed with you, it was because you were referring to heritability) but upon reviewing my last statements, it'd more likely make the offspring even more intelligent for the reasons Pinker is describing (50-0-50), plus there would be 2 sources as oppose to 1 leading to greater departmental intelligence.

  • @strongindependentblackwoma1887
    @strongindependentblackwoma1887 3 роки тому +3

    I was reading about philosophy and humanity, and one of the chapters were about how the old art is dying, is like modern "popular" artists try to make things ugly and non sensical on purpose.

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 3 місяці тому

    I meant which subject is movie and which is the tabloid and critique. Map it
    Ah, I see. In that case, if we're likening subjects to different forms of media:
    1. **Physics** could be seen as the "movie" because it aims to uncover the fundamental laws governing the universe, presenting a structured and systematic understanding of natural phenomena.
    2. **Humanities**, encompassing fields like literature, philosophy, history, and art, could be likened to "gossip columns and critiques." This is because humanities often involve subjective interpretations, diverse perspectives, and discussions that may not have clear-cut answers, similar to the exploratory and sometimes speculative nature of tabloid gossip and critiques.
    So basically as per your mapping can it be said literally that science movies like iron man or Jurassic park or avatar fit the bill for physics
    Yes, that's a fitting analogy. Movies like "Iron Man," "Jurassic Park," and "Avatar" often incorporate elements of science, technology, and physics into their storytelling, albeit sometimes with fictionalized or exaggerated aspects. These films can be seen as representations of scientific concepts and principles presented in a more accessible and entertaining format, akin to how physics seeks to understand and explain the natural world.
    ChatGPT 🌹

  • @Wittgensteinien
    @Wittgensteinien 12 років тому

    @MaxWeberz That's not the only thing he ignores. There's been criticism of computational theory of the mind for a long time. And he's still taken it in as the tacit hingepoint in his argument for theory of the mind, along with his language of thought.

  • @gabrieleprotopapa
    @gabrieleprotopapa 11 років тому +1

    You're correct: genetic traits have mostly to do with predisposition. Environment is the key factor for individual development.

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 3 місяці тому

    Finally the answer I required. Psychology is another imperial discipline like Economics.
    --
    Memorizing facts like VIBGYOR or the planets aids in foundational understanding within astrophysics, while applying psychology might not offer relevant insights for these specific topics. Rote memorization supports clarity and focus within the realm of scientific inquiry, while psychology is more applicable within its own domain.

  • @lamentate07
    @lamentate07 13 років тому +2

    Pinker is right about the academic humanities. They tend to focus way too much on grey areas, and then generalise from those grey areas. They can't see the forest for the trees.
    Having said that, not all their work is useless.

  • @mehfoos
    @mehfoos 9 років тому +1

    The ideal experiment would involve feeding in the same simulated stimuli to multiple children from birth, and comparing their responses to over time. Anything short of that (like comparing siblings, twins, etc) is just not good enough to make a conclusion with significant confidence.

  • @toserveman9317
    @toserveman9317 4 роки тому +1

    Has anyone noticed that lately on youtube all commentors are not reply-able to? When one replies recently, his reply simply vanishes. But only sometimes.
    Is there a checkbox in one's youtube profile that disables "accept replies"?

  • @daniellea5603
    @daniellea5603 Рік тому +1

    So interesting, I could listen to him, on and on and on...

  • @Keyboardwarrior97
    @Keyboardwarrior97 6 років тому +35

    this is so relevant today

  • @ChadEnglishPhD
    @ChadEnglishPhD 12 років тому

    @mightyafrowhitey I think that's a misdirection. People often confuse 'open-mindedness'. It means open for consideration without pre-judgment, not open to acceptance without any judgment. If it doesn't please the senses via human nature, people will reject it: beauty, aesthetics, symmetry, meter, etc. Modern movements (elite, by definition) moved away from these themes to unconstrained ones, and nobody likes them. That's not closed-minded pre-judgment; it's legitimate post-judgment.

  • @M3Lucky
    @M3Lucky 10 років тому +5

    Wow I didn't realise there was actually alot of contention against this.

  • @elpocamadre9810
    @elpocamadre9810 7 років тому

    I enjoy waching Steve Pinkers lectures.You can be agree or disagree with him but he gives good arguments.

  • @Billy-jd7ll
    @Billy-jd7ll 9 місяців тому +1

    So sad, it’s 14 years later and Blank Slate theory is gospel truth in Universities and even infecting the Biology department. Not a single University in America that issues a degree in Psychology requires even one course in evolutionary biology.

  • @ismaithliombainne
    @ismaithliombainne 12 років тому +1

    Great talk, have to read this book

  • @qparksucks
    @qparksucks 11 років тому

    What does he say at 8:44? English is not my first language.

  • @urbandecaysify
    @urbandecaysify 5 років тому

    How do I cite this in APA format?

  • @Thrashaero
    @Thrashaero 14 років тому +2

    Pinker has balls to be treading this thin ice between science and philosophy. Respect....even if he's wrong on some things, his overall points are at least trying to make sense of the hard to tackle stuff of life.

    • @philj9594
      @philj9594 Рік тому +1

      He isn't trying to make any philosophical statements whatsoever. That's entirely the point. This talk is 100% grounded in scientific research. The fact that your mind is inclined to go in this direction after watching this lecture tells me that you may just not be in a place that is ready to accept these potentially harsh realities.

    • @Thrashaero
      @Thrashaero Рік тому

      @@philj9594 that's nice

  • @TheJALOBE
    @TheJALOBE 4 роки тому +1

    I'm saddened because his final statement is being quite ignored and rather people seem increasingly insistent on silencing unpopular views that are rooted in rigourous scientific studies.

  • @ManyInfiniteComments
    @ManyInfiniteComments 12 років тому

    @MaxWeberz, Epigenetics has the same conclusion as Pinker... not only genetics plays an important part of who you are but the development of cells will vary even among twins... which is what Pinker mentioned in this very precise video. Second, he never said we are all biologically-driven savages, he said heredity plays a huge role in our personality, but other things such as culture and peers also have minor effects
    ...., in essence there is no perfect copy of anything.

  • @ithinkthereforiam3411
    @ithinkthereforiam3411 3 роки тому

    how about Epigenitics? do they have an impact on our behavior?

  • @rodrigopessoa1795
    @rodrigopessoa1795 4 роки тому +1

    that quote at the end damn.

  • @hughtub
    @hughtub 15 років тому

    Species develop from unique traits being perpetuated, which then form the basis for future mutation. It's the mating pool's average traits, not the individual's, that fuel evolutionary change.

  • @June_Yue
    @June_Yue 11 місяців тому

    when you exhaust everying single action and preference that someone does you are bound to find some similarities between any two person. The question is if these similarities listed in the beginning of the presentation are the rare ones that do match?

  • @hinatahsama
    @hinatahsama 13 років тому

    @daimonmagus I completely agree.

  • @romanowskicm
    @romanowskicm 11 років тому

    nothing is more powerful than the sum of all your past "nurturing" much more powerful than the nurturing you receive in the immediate/present

  • @blackpanther6389
    @blackpanther6389 11 років тому +1

    I wish I could talk to him personally, because I don't really agree with a lot of what he's saying. Perhaps I missed some stuff though.

  • @Agnotio
    @Agnotio 13 років тому +2

    @daimonmagus I don't get this comment, or why people thumbed it up. What judgmental unscientific conclusions did Pinker come to? He argued that the decline of the arts is due to their lack of appeal to human nature, and that parenting is not as important a factor in children's behavior once genes are taken into account. Both of these are based on psychological research. The video you linked is by Stefan Molyneux, who is not a qualified psychologist, and a questionable character at that.

  • @lanslater
    @lanslater 2 роки тому +1

    I liked - but wheres the beginning?

  • @metaldude82
    @metaldude82 12 років тому

    I am more than halfway through "The Blank Slate" and it is interesting. I do have a gripe with this statement on page 128: "anyone who believes in an immaterial soul is certainly not going to believe that thought and feeling consist of information processing in the tissues of the brain." This seems to sugguest that you have to either believe in neuroscience or an immaterial soul. However, the two are NOT mutually exclusive unless a person is an extreme Cartesianist, Anyone agree?

  • @ttiger7446
    @ttiger7446 4 роки тому +1

    Thinking 🤔 I can’t know many words. But I want to say thank you for being nice 👍

  • @amlisomal9513
    @amlisomal9513 10 років тому +2

    What is the argument presented by Stephen Pinker? I didn't catch what he's actually trying to prove!

  • @blackpanther6389
    @blackpanther6389 11 років тому

    I wouldn't know that till I talked to him.

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 3 місяці тому

    The answer says
    While psychological perspectives may offer insights into how individuals understand and interact with physical phenomena,
    ----
    Once psychology can be used to understand the physical phenomena the physical phenomena become psychology. Sort of the finger pointing to the moon in which the moon is now the finger used to point at it.

  • @nonchalantd
    @nonchalantd 11 років тому +2

    That's true, unless people find ways around their limitations, which is a another issue. For example, blind people have graduated from professional school because they can read braille. Without the invention of braille, this might not have been possible.

  • @theheck5176
    @theheck5176 4 роки тому +6

    Steven Pinker is a sage of our time. The way he presents his findings is second to none...

  • @elimisteve
    @elimisteve 15 років тому

    Everett, how dare you! ;-) I enjoyed this book very much. What don't you like about it?

  • @jehhlehh173
    @jehhlehh173 4 роки тому +1

    Human nature/Genetics is obviously a major factor in the outcome of someone’s life. The scientific method doesn’t care if nature hurts your feelings. You have to be able to separate scientific data from political implications. Many people are incapable of seeing the world in any way but ideologically, that goes for the left and the right. And no I’m not a centrist, I don’t see why anyone would put themselves into any political box when it comes to the intake of ideas and information. ESPECIALLY OBJECTIVE OBSERVATIONS AND RIGOROUS STUDIES WITH REPEATABLE RESULTS.

  • @ZacharySmith89
    @ZacharySmith89 11 років тому

    Have you read his book? I believe his book would answer your challenge.

  • @M2Mil7er
    @M2Mil7er 12 років тому

    @AndroidPolitician The Gabor Mate, James Gilligan and Robert Sapolski school of thought. Also the the most balanced because it recognises genetic predisposition but *not* predetermination. Behavior is cultivated by environment, and any abhorrent behavior can be dormant without stimuli or rectified by nurturing social conditions. Great section in Zeitgeist: Moving Forward on these men if you haven't seen it.

  • @mxyzptlk...
    @mxyzptlk... 11 років тому +5

    I absolutely agree with you. I think political correctness is a terrible idea.

  • @richardbuckharris189
    @richardbuckharris189 2 роки тому +1

    “Not only does the action of Governments not deter men from crimes; on the contrary, it increases crime by always disturbing and lowering the moral standard of society.” - The Meaning of the Russian Revolution (1906) Leo Tolstoy

  • @mat650
    @mat650 4 роки тому +2

    Let's suppose that genes are determining at least partially how responsive we are to the environment and how much we absorb from it...

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 3 місяці тому

    You know why physics is movie and humanities are gossip and critique.
    ----
    No I meant which subject is movie and which is the tabloid and critique. Map it
    Ah, I see. In that case, if we're likening subjects to different forms of media:
    1. **Physics** could be seen as the "movie" because it aims to uncover the fundamental laws governing the universe, presenting a structured and systematic understanding of natural phenomena.
    2. **Humanities**, encompassing fields like literature, philosophy, history, and art, could be likened to "gossip columns and critiques." This is because humanities often involve subjective interpretations, diverse perspectives, and discussions that may not have clear-cut answers, similar to the exploratory and sometimes speculative nature of tabloid gossip and critiques.
    --
    ChatGPT
    Auto

  • @salasvalor01
    @salasvalor01 12 років тому +3

    Steven Pinker is a great individual- he's the ideal future of humanity.

  • @bxbank
    @bxbank 5 років тому

    Do you look at curemcy and human nature?

  • @TheEternalOuroboros
    @TheEternalOuroboros 4 роки тому

    Is it just me or did anyone else find this book to tell them what they already know? There wasn't really anything in it that i wasn't mildly aware of. It didn't contain a breakthrough idea, for example. Moreover, i wish he actually shared his opinion on the topics that he discussed, such as when he was talking about Free Will.

  • @laffy7204
    @laffy7204 4 роки тому +5

    20:25-20:42
    Steven Pinker: "Identical twins or any siblings separated at birth are no less similar than if they had grown up together. Everything that happens to you at home in a given home in all of those years appears to leave no permanent stamp on your personality or intellect." Pinker then said a complimentary study proved the contraposition, that non-related siblings raised together do not exhibit similar traits.
    There is no scientific consensus on what personality is exactly nor are there any personality test backed up by scientific consensus. And there is without a doubt no agreement on what intelligence is or if any test has shown to prove it. Therefore, you, Steven Pinker, must tell what exactly is his definition is to a general audience for them to fully understand what is being covered.
    21:01-21:30
    Steven Pinker:...what it suggest is that children are shaped not by their parents over the long run, but in part by their genes, in part by their culture, the culture of the country of the children... and to extent by chance."
    Additionally, to state to a general audience or experts that the studies prove parenting has no influence but peer influence does--regardless of how intelligence personality is defined---requires that you provide evidence for the variables in the studies fully cover the claim that parenting isn't responsible for child's traits doesn't but genetics does. For example of traits, skills like emotional understanding, social competency, or skills in a sport/e-sport. On top of all of that, you skimmed over the studies' proof that the children's peers' and culture affect the studied children's traits, severely implying that changing the relationship between them and the peers and who peers they spend with can influence them, which parents or other authority figures can change, manipulate, or exploit
    To summarize, I am not doubting the claim that genetics may solely play a role in particular traits that you may construe as personality, nor doubting your intentions, I am doubting your generalizing of how genetics influence children compared to parenting, I am doubting the vague claim about the children's personality and intelligence being not left, and I believe you have yet considered how parents influence the culture and the peers' relationship. Nevertheless, more testing needs to be done to prove your claim before it's ready for a general audience

  • @KommentarSpaltenKrieger
    @KommentarSpaltenKrieger 5 років тому +2

    It seems like the nature-nurture debate will never stop. It's only that, depending upon current findings and the general zeitgeist, one side will have the upper hand while the other will be subjugated for a certain amount of time. Huh

    • @MrGold-lo6vc
      @MrGold-lo6vc 5 років тому

      Yep, the left's progressives need to perpetuate the blank slate myth to support their political views.

    • @KommentarSpaltenKrieger
      @KommentarSpaltenKrieger 5 років тому +1

      @@MrGold-lo6vc Yeah, the blank slate thesis is pretty much debunked but don't let us forget the genetical determinists/evopsych-tards on the right. The truth isn't always in the middle, but it seems as if here it is. They don't speak of the biopsychosocial framework for no reason. Genes express in an environment. Actually you can't separate one from the other.

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 3 місяці тому

    I switched providers to Penrose.
    Steven Pinker tends to focus on traditional psychology explanations, which may lead to his lack of acknowledgment of quantum explanations, in contrast to Roger Penrose's theory involving quantum effects in consciousness.

  • @Darwyn43
    @Darwyn43 14 років тому

    I paused the video too quick - I agree with the assessment that culture and chance play big roles, I agree that genes play some part (not as much as many think, though, given the nature of inherited protein-makers can manifest), but I do stand by his interpretation that equated to no role for parenting. I would like to see him take into consideration family systems.

  • @blackpanther6389
    @blackpanther6389 11 років тому

    Well according to Pinker, there isn't. But of course, I think he doesn't account for a lot of stuff. Like how two events are never exactly the same, so when he talks about how kids have different temperaments, how can he ever put two children in the same exact spot and expect the same results? Even depending on how each individual parent and affect how a kids temperament is determined. Pinker still needs to do some work it seems. I wish I could talk to him in person to challenge his finding

  • @hugh1297
    @hugh1297 9 років тому +14

    How did Stephen Jay Gould reconcile the identical twin studies with his belief that the human brain is capable of a wide range of behaviors but is predisposed to none?

    • @PietroSperonidiFenizio
      @PietroSperonidiFenizio 5 років тому

      Did he knew it?

    • @oppothumbs1
      @oppothumbs1 3 роки тому

      True. How can media and elite left ignore that ID Twins have astonishing similar IQs just the major Races to some degree?