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Noam Chomsky 2 transcript

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Oct 24th 2007
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MK: What do you make of the situation in Burma?

NC: As long as India and China support the junta there’s no reason for them to back off, I mean if they back off they are just going to be killed, they are not going to survive if there is a popular uprising, so you can’t expect them to give up peacefully.

MK: So you’re not optimistic about the prospects?

NC: I’m not optimistic, no, because there’s no real pressure. I mean the U.S. makes a fuss about it at the UN, but it’s just showboating. If they meant anything they would say they are going to sanction India for cooperating with the Burmese junta.

MK: What is the history of the US and the Burmese junta? Was it always such an adversarial relationship?

NC: It is an ugly history which is being not talked about. In the 1950’s – the period of decolonisation – Burma kicked the British out, like they were everywhere, they were moving towards a functioning parliamentary democracy, with some major international statesman like Rhutan, who was Secretary-General of the UN and a decent person, I met him.

In 1958 the Eisenhower administration was involved in serious clandestine operations all over the region – they were trying to overthrow the government of Indonesia, they were sponsoring an insurrection in Cambodia, Vietnam we know about – but they were also trying to harass China, and one of the ways they were doing this was by bringing Chinese nationalist forces and exporting them to northern Burma so that they could carry out terrorist attacks from China. Well, the Chinese nationalist generals had different ideas.

Instead of moving into China and getting killed by the Red Army, they decided that it would be more fun to organise the tribesman in the hill areas and start narcotics production and enrich themselves and in fact that’s one of the main sources of the famous Gold Triangle. It became one of the major centers of opium production over the world. The Burmese tried to repress it, but they were unable to, and the military were upset about it and there was a military coup which overthrew the parliamentary government and the junta is still there now.

MK: So why is the US being so vocal about Burma now?

NC: Because it’s cheap.

MK: Cheap words?

NC: Yeah. So they can say they are terribly upset about something we can’t do anything about. Why were they upset about Pol Pot? It was horrible, did they have a suggestion? You take a look back, there was not one suggestion about what we should do about it. So it’s a cheap way to pontificate and look righteous.

MK: So you’d agree with sanctions on Burma now?

NC: I would think that sanctions on Burma would make sense. But what I think would really make sense would be diplomatic efforts that would involve primarily India where the US has plenty of influence, it doesn’t have that much influence on China, but India is different. To pressure Indian and China and Thailand also, to make moves towards some kind of rapprochment, sanctions are probably meaningless or harmful. But diplomatic steps could be made – some way to ease the Burmese junta out without committing suicide, you’ve got to give them some options otherwise they won’t let go. As long as they have the complete loyalty of the army which apparently they do have, no uprising is going to take place, people are going to get slaughtered in the streets.

MK: Yeah it’s apparently dying out now.

NC: It was not a major show of force. It was a show of force enough, maybe a dozen people got killed. It’s not the kind of thing we’ve seen elsewhere, like, say, Pinochet in Chile where they killed 3,000 people.

MK: I just wanted to move on to your views of human nature. You’re an innatist.

NC: Everyone is an innatist.

MK: Yes, but you are unique in the fact that you are an innatist but you have an optimist view of human nature.

NC: Not really. I mean, you can’t have a view a of human nature. When you talk about human nature there’s many aspects of it. So the fact that we have a mammalian visual system is human nature. But what we are talking about now is human nature in social and moral domains, and there you can’t have an opinion, we don’t know anything.

MK: Really? But what do you think about the findings of evolutionary psychology that certain intuitions and moral structures have developed because of natural selection. You know Robert Trivers and his reciprocal altruism theory…

NC: Well Trivers work is serious, but he’s not one of the standard evolutionary psychologists. I mean his work is actually serious and they have shown things for animals; you can’t show much for humans because you can’t do experiments and so on. He has developed a theory of reciprocal altruism which is intellectually interesting and has some empirical support in the animal world, so that makes sense. He is an intelligent guy, if you read him you are not going to find him saying, This proves that humans have to socialists, or something.

MK: Yeah, so do your political opinions rest on some conception of human nature?

NC: Well everybody’s political opinions rest….

MK: Well exactly, then one does exist.

NC: One knows it exists.

MK: Yes, well then you are making a guess at what it is.

NC: Every political opinion you have, where you are a revolutionary or a reformist, fascist, whatever you may be, is based on some assumption about what’s right for people, unless you’re a pure opportunist and you say, I’ll beat you over the head with a club. But if you belong within the moral universe, any proposal you make is based on some assumptions about human nature.

There is a very limited basis, scientific basis.

MK: But ideas about innatism have changed in the 20th century. I mean it wasn’t always like this. In your field now it’s accepted across the board.

NC: Well the whole discussion is almost meaningless. In fact there’s been a big debate about innatism, the innatist hypothesis and so on. But if you look at the debate it’s completely one-sided. There are people who denounce it and criticise it but there’s no-one who defends it. I mean I have never said I defend the innatist hypothesis, which is because there is no hypothesis. There’s a truism – our genetic endowment is crucially implicated in our attitudes, beliefs, intellectual achievements and so on. The only alternative to that is miracles, so if you dispense with miracles, then yes there’s a genetic endowment. But to try to find out how it is is a very hard scientific problem. We can’t answer questions like that for insects. Take say bee communication or ant navigation – they are pretty spectacular achievements and you can study them and learn a lot about them, but to try to find a genetic basis, it’s a very difficult scientific problem, nobody knows how to solve it.

MK: So what do you base your ideas about anarchism on, then?

NC: Hope.

MK: Hope?

NC: Well there’s some experience to support that. You can pick out of human history and human experience and human intuition various strains that make it credible that this is a decent way for people to live. But if you ask for proof, you can’t give proofs in areas like that.

MK: But am I right in saying that you think that humans are capable of all sorts of things and that it depends on the society that they are bought up in that represses certain aspects and promotes others.

NC: Yes, that’s part of it, a large part of it. And that much we know. Children bought up in different conditions will behave quite differently. And probably everyone of us has the genetic capacity to be a torturer or a saint. The question has to do with the particular circumstances in which one develops – people do differ, there may be different innate tendencies, but largely it’s a question of what the social circumstances support and what they reject. So we happen to live in a society where there is tremendous pressure to accept the view that you should be out for yourself and what’s important is to maximize your own gain.

Take an economics course they teach you that rational man is a utility maximiser for himself. It doesn’t come from any scientific basis, it’s just that’s the ideology – it’s the natural ideology to develop in a semi-capitalist society which is dominated by an ideology that says you should really look to gain personal wealth and power. And there is a strain in human nature which that supports, but there’s nothing universal about it. In fact if you look back at the classics, like Adam Smith - he was meant to be their hero, it wasn’t his view. His view was that the fundamental element of human nature is sympathy.

MK: But he did believe in capitalism. Maybe not in the form we have it now, but he believed in it.

NC: In an interesting sense. He did argue in favour of markets. If you read Wealth of Nations – his argument was pretty nuanced – his argument in favour of markets was an argument that claimed – it’s not true – that under conditions of perfect of liberty markets will lead to perfect equality – and he meant equality of outcome, not equality of opportunity. So his argument for markets is it will lead to equality of outcome.

MK: But that is Milton Friedman’s argument about perfect liberty also.

NC: That’s Adam Smith’s argument, not Milton Freidman’s. Freidman’s argument is that it will lead to the best society, but he’s not saying it’s going to lead to perfect equality. In fact, for him it’s fine if one person owns everything. He just says we need it because it works. But that’s not what Adam Smith said. He had an argument saying that it’s justified because it will lead to equality.

MK: How can markets lead to equality? Is that not naïve?

NC: There’s sort of an argument. You can make an argument for it. You can say if you had conditions of perfect liberty prices and wages would stablise at fixed points, everybody does what they can. It’s not a good argument. But there’s nothing in economics that’s a good argument.

But anyway, if you want to look at the moral basis of this position. The moral basis was a commitment to sympathy, solidarity, equality of outcome, not opportunity; and he thought markets could contribute to that. His view of markets is pretty nuanced. In fact Adam Smith is nothing like what he is described. I don’t know if you’ve taken an economics course?

MK: No, I’ve read Wealth of Nations.

NC: Well take the courses. Everybody who’s gone to college has read the first paragraph of Wealth of Nations about distribution of labour, how wonderful it is, baker bakes bread, everybody is happy. Not many people go on a couple of hundred pages where he discusses distribution of labour and he says it’s “a crime”, he says division of labour will turn people into creatures “as stupid and ignorant as a human being can possibly be.” Because, you know, it leads to one guy turning an assembly line. So he says in any civilized society the government is going to have to intervene to prevent division of labour. Well, that’s Adam Smith. That’s not what you read.

MK: But you are fundamentally anti-capitalist unlike Smith.

NC: Yeah, but it doesn’t even mean anything. What’s capitalism?

MK: Well, the production of surplus value, the privatisation of the means of production. The structure of capitalist relations is an unequal one with wage-labour and the rest.

NC: It could be, and in fact it is, so I don’t think Adam Smith’s argument works. But, yeah, I think being forced to rent yourself to survive is not very different from being forced to sell yourself to survive. Furthermore there’s nothing radical about that view, it was the majority view of Americans in the 19th century.

MK: But it’s often said that people on the left don’t have any ideas of what to replace it with. Is there an idea?

NC: Sure, there are lots of ideas.

MK: But they just don’t like them.

NC: Yeah, they don’t like them. Some are spelt out in extensive detail. Take things like guild socialism. In the literature written after the Spanish revolution it spells out in meticulous detail what an anarcho-syndaclist Spain should look like, too much detail I think. If you come to the modern period there are lots of proposals, maybe the most developed ones are the participatory-economics proposals, but there are plenty of others. You can argue about whether they have the right idea of not but it’s not difficult to make proposals.

MK: But we’re so far from anywhere near that. The socialist leaders in the world now – say Chavez in Venezuela and Morales in Bolivia – they are not arguing to overturn capitalism, they are saying they want to attenuate it with social democratic type stuff…

NC: Well, it’s not so clear. You know, Venezuela is a complicated place, there’s elements of authoritarianism, there’s elements of participatory democracy, but if the later develops, if the community organisations really begin to function and if power is really devolved to community organisations – communes, cooperatives and so on, it could be a move in that direction. It’s not impossible. Same could happen in Bolivia. Same could happen here.

In fact, there have been and there still are a fairly substantial array of worker managed bits of the economy. They’re not General Electric, but they’re not zero either. Incidentally there are people on the right who have developed models of social organisation which do not involve wage-labour, like Dave Elinor, who was an economist who was close to Joseph Stiglitz, he was his assistant at the World Bank, but he’s been an activist on work-managed industry for a long time. You know, elaborate discussions of how renting yourself for survival is in violation of fundamental principles of human rights.

MK: Do you borrow any ideas from Karl Marx when you talk about this?

NC: You can’t because Marx had no ideas.

MK: He was a critic rather than a……

NC: He was a critic, he was a theorist of capitalism, a certain abstract form of capitalism and out of that theory came a lot of interesting observations and insights. But if you look through Marx’s huge works and try to find some description of a future society you’ll find a couple of scattered sentences here and there: we’ll ultimately overcome animal needs and be able to pursue human needs, you’ll be able to be a fisherman in the afternoon and a writer in the evening. A couple of odd sentences like that.

But his belief was that there are historical laws and he tried to show that they will lead towards a social form in which working people will take over and run the society.

MK: Do you think it would always end up like Leninist Russia?

NC: Didn’t have to. You know, for orthodox Marxists a revolution in Russia made absolutely sense.

MK: Because it wasn’t an advanced capitalist society?

NC: It wasn’t advanced society, right, they were actually looking for a revolution in Germany, in fact there was one was but it was smashed. Lenin himself was a pretty orthodox Marxist. He didn’t think – I mean he talked about it – but I’m sure he didn’t think you could have a socialist revolution in Russia. In fact, if you look at what he did, not his talk but his policies, and Trotsky too, the policies were to drive the country by force through industrialism and then sooner or later the laws of history and so on. Incidentally that’s not Marx, that’s Marxism. Marx in the last probably 20 years of his life was very much interested in peasant communal life in Russia. He was doing elaborate work on data collected by the Nuradniks, the populists who went out into the villages to look at what was happening, and Marx was pretty impressed by the sort of communist structure of the peasant society and wrote about it. That work was mostly suppressed by the Marxists. The Leninists didn’t like it for obvious reasons: it didn’t leave any goods for the central committee. And the social democrats, the mainstream of Marxism, they opposed it. They were urban intellectuals, for them the peasants were a backward mass that needed to be driven to urbanization, that was not Marx’s view. In fact, now this Marx literature is finally beginning to be revised.

MK: So do you think current day Marxists are adhering to some sort of religion?

NC: Almost anything that ends in ism is a religion. You don’t have Einsteinism in physics.

MK: OK on the topic of religion, you don’t talk out very often about religion and the pernicious things it does in the world. Is that conscious or it just doesn’t come up in the sort of topics you are discussing?

NC: Well actually I do, but some of the most pernicious religions are the secular religions. Nationalism, for example. That’s kind of like a secular religion. Let’s go right back to Bakunin- mixed story but he had some real insights, and one of the main insights he had, which turned out to be very accurate, was that there would be what he called a new class of scientific intellectuals who would try to appropriate the knowledge that’s developing – this explosion of knowledge and understanding and that they would appropriate it and use it to their advantage to dominate society and the world. And he said they would go in two directions. One would be what he called a ‘red bureaucracy’, which will establish the most brutal iron rule in history, and the others would be the ones who recognise that capitalism is not going to be overthrown and they become its servants; they become the servants of the capital class and they will beat the people with the peoples stick, as he put it, talk about democracy, the people that beat the people.

It’s a very good foretaste of what happened. And it led to what you could call religions, that is, doctrines based on faith.

MK: But they have a rational basis, surely.

NC: What’s the rational basis?

MK: Well, they have self-interest at heart.

NC: What’s rational about that? If the position said: I’m a gangster, I have my self interest at heart, I got a bigger club than you so I’m going to take everything you have, fine. That’s not what they are saying. What you are presented with is what you are taught by in school: it’s all for everyone’s benefit, the people are too dumb to rule themselves so we have to do it and so on and so forth. That’s a religion.

Just like the idea we have a society based on markets in which informed consumers make rational choices, that’s religion. I mean, is that what you see on television when you look at an advert?

But the actual religion – what we call religion – the so-called monotheistic religions, well they have a very ugly history. And personally I don’t think people should have irrational beliefs. On the other hand I have no right – say some child is dying and the child’s mother would like to believe that she’ll see him again in heaven, do I have a right to tell her there’s no rational basis for that.

MK: No, but if there’s a Zionist settler in the West Bank who thinks they were given that land by God, then you definitely have a right in that case.

NC: No, but that’s pernicious just like the secular religion that says, We own the world, is pernicious. Let’s take something concrete. Right now there’s a big debate going on about whether Iran is disrupting Iraq. You can’t have that debate unless you are a religious fanatic, you can’t have that debate unless you assume that the US is there by right, so if the US owns the world and the US is there by right, then if anybody is disrupting US control they’re criminals.

MK: But that’s religion without a God though, right?

NC: It’s worse, it’s religion with a State.

MK: Yes but at least the State exists in reality whereas God doesn’t.

NC: It’s a much worse religion. With God you can believe anything – maybe He’s benevolent. The state is just violent. And that’s probably 100% of the US discussion. Try to find an article anywhere in a newspaper that says whether Iran is sending roadside bombs or not we don’t have any right to be there.

Like in Russia in the 1980s, the US was purposefully and openly supporting Islamic fundamentalist maniacs to kill Russians. Did we think that was wrong? No, because the Russians had no right to be in Afghanistan. But unless you are an absolute religious fanatic you can’t believe that the US has a right to be in Iraq. And now I’m talking about close to 100% of opinion. This is much more dangerous than Christian evangelics and right-wing Zionists.

MK: So what do you think of the current atheist revival. The books out by Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris. They all think it’s a very important war to fight.

NC: Dawkins is serious. The others are frauds. I mean what’s the debate about. Do people like us have to debate about whether God exists? I mean, yeah, we know it doesn’t. In fact, take the religious people. Go to most of the religious faiths, they don’t literally believe in the Bible.

I mean there’s a sector that believes literally in the Bible, but first of all we don’t have to argue about that because nobody who’s going to read one word you are writing believes it, so you are talking to an audience that’s already convinced. And those who believe in the literal word of the Bible you are not going to convince them, so what’s the point?

MK: Well, a lot of terrible things are still happening because of religion…

NC: Certainly are. There are a lot of terrible things done because of religion, and there are even worse things done because of state religion.

MK: Yeah but can you fundamentalist religion without moderate religion? Don’t you have to fight it all on one plain?

NC: Depends someone’s religion is. Take the Bible, let’s say. I sort of memorized it when I was a kid. On the one hand it’s the most genocidal text in the whole literary canon. It’s just beyond belief. If you talk about the God; that God was willing to destroy every living thing on earth because some human being offended Him. You can’t beat that. On the other hand, there’s some very elevated sentiments, usually by dissidents, by people who were persecuted.

The prophets were what we call dissidents, they were imprisoned, driven into the desert, persecuted, and like other dissidents they had some good things to say. So you find what you like.

EMAIL EXCHANGE ON FRANK ELLIS, RACE REALISM?, AND A FEW OTHER THINGS:

NC: Looked a the article. Surely academic freedom should be preserved, and the cases you mention should not occur. They are known, and receive enormous attention, because they are way out at the margins of infringement of academic freedom and freedom of speech generally. The far more serious cases, which are legion, are rarely discussed, because they are too important. They involve the measures taken to ensure that the university system, like the media, will be subject to Orwell’s critique of the suppression of freedom of speech and thought in England. One of the main devices, he wrote, is a good education, which instills in you the understanding that there are certain things it wouldn’t do to say — or to think. Far and away the most crucial and pervasive examples have to do with dissident critique from the left. The Columbia J Review provides some interesting examples, and in England there are some really atrocious ones. Unprotested and unremarked, of course.

2.

MK: The irony in this situation I suppose is that all the campaigns against these professors I document were launched and sustained by leftist students who thought they were promoting equality and fairness. Evolutionary psychology as you know is something that upsets a lot of dogmatic students because it contradicts a lot of preconceptions about human equality etc.

I do agree with the students that a lot of the methods are faulty and unsound, and talking to some of the proponents of racial differentials suggested that their opinions were formed before their research and it was a reductionist method which completely ignored the environmental and logistical factors in testing intelligence.

But of course leftist academics are and have always been targeted; the situation is deteriorating currently because the right is trying to shut down one of the last outposts in American society that they can’t control ideologically.

The situation is different in Britain though, I think what happened to Finkelstein and others would not have happened in Europe, although maybe.

3.

NC: I wouldn’t call the people you mentioned representatives of evolutionary psychology. One can debate the significance of the field, but at least it is a serious discipline. The people you mentioned, at least those I know of, are mostly cranks, working far at the margins of serious inquiry. I doubt that most evolutionary psychologists would have even heard of them.

The topics they address are mostly ridiculous. Take the studies of correlation between race and IQ. Plainly, they have no scientific interest at all. In general, there is little significance in a correlation between two traits, unless the study is undertaken within some explanatory theory, and here there is none. Furthermore, if one does want to study this question of marginal interest, you wouldn’t pick traits as obscure and complex as race and IQ. So the scientific significance is zero. What about the human significance? The question would be of interest in a racist society, where each individual is assigned to the mean of his race group. In a non-racist society, it doesn’t make the slightest difference what the mean of some group is by some measure; each individual is what he or she is.

The very fact that the issue is discussed, instead of just dismissed as an absurdity, is a sign of deep-seated racism. The same with the other examples.

Leftists can, unfortunately, take on the worst characteristics of their adversaries.

There are many illusions about Europe, including England. As far as protection of freedom of speech is concerned, the US is far more advance. In England the concept is barely understood. The continent is much worse. One can’t imagine laws in the US granting the Holy State the right to determine Historical Truth and to punish deviation from its declarations, to mention just one example. And the shameful British libel laws, which are used to muzzle speech and close down dissident journals, are inconceivable here, fortunately. Just to take a few examples.

4.

> I wouldn’t call the people you mentioned representatives of evolutionary
> psychology. One can debate the significance of the field, but at least it
> is a serious discipline. The people you mentioned, at least those I know
> of, are mostly cranks, working far at the margins of serious inquiry. I
> doubt that most evolutionary psychologists would have even heard of them.

MK: I don’t know if I agree with this. Your friend Steven Pinker gives
time to the ideas and in fact excised a chapter in one of his books
because he was worried about the reaction it might garner. Also,
Helmuth Nyborg and Satoshi Kanazawa and Andy Furnham and
others are well respected psychologists (most of the others are cranks
as you say) and they have been targeted for intemperate remarks. Also,
the argument goes that well respected academics do not look into it
because they are to scared of what it will do to their reputation.

> The topics they address are mostly ridiculous. Take the studies of
> correlation between race and IQ. Plainly, they have no scientific interest
> at all. In general, there is little significance in a correlation between
> two traits, unless the study is undertaken within some explanatory theory,
> and here there is none. Furthermore, if one does want to study this
> question of marginal interest, you wouldn’t pick traits as obscure and
> complex as race and IQ. So the scientific significance is zero. What about
> the human significance? The question would be of interest in a racist
> society, where each individual is assigned to the mean of his race group.
> In a non-racist society, it doesn’t make the slightest difference what the
> mean of some group is by some measure; each individual is what he or she is.

MK: I think these academics have an explanatory theory to back up their
ideas — namely that brain structure and resulting cognitive ability
varies between different races because of divergent patterns of
evolution. I think it’s ridiculous as you say because the differences
are so small if at all, but it’s there. I don’t know if you saw that
study which posited that Ashkenazi Jews have a higher IQ because the forces of
natural selection favoured shrewd financial minds in a hostile
climate.

As you say IQ is a nugatory index really from what I can understand.
Intelligence is so complex an area and not enough is understood yet to
make such grand pronouncements as we find here. But the idea, for all
of its marginal significance, can’t be ruled out a priori.

It’s interesting what you say about motivations because I asked them
all that, and they said that they had always been interested in it as
a burgeoning part of evolutionary psychology, although I am much more
suspicious, like you.

> The very fact that the issue is discussed, instead of just dismissed as an
> absurdity, is a sign of deep-seated racism. The same with the other
> examples.

MK: I agree with this. It is strange we still think in race terms at all,
seems very anachronistic/atavistic/racist to me. It’s as absurd as
researching the intelligence of all the people in the world with blue
eyes, you wouldn’t do it, unless you lived in a society where there
had been persecution of people with blue eyes through history, then it
would become an issue. Agree.

> Leftists can, unfortunately, take on the worst characteristics of their
> adversaries.

MK: I think the students actually had good intentions, but we know where
these can end. It’s a sticky one because to a lot of people I know it
was an open and shut case, there was a racist professor who shouldn’t
be allowed to teach. Their adherence to academic freedom was trumped
by some other moral precept they held higher, which is dangerous, but
what is the interaction between moral precepts and immovable
principles?

> There are many illusions about Europe, including England. As far as
> protection of freedom of speech is concerned, the US is far more advance.
> In England the concept is barely understood. The continent is much worse.
> One can’t imagine laws in the US granting the Holy State the right to
> determine Historical Truth and to punish deviation from its declarations, to
> mention just one example. And the shameful British libel laws, which are
> used to muzzle speech and close down dissident journals, are inconceivable
> here, fortunately. Just to take a few examples.

MK: Again I think you are a bit harsh on England and Europe. The US
probably has a firmer grasp of free speech because of the written
Constitution which we don’t have. But I think our universities have a
much higher tolerance of criticism of Israel in particular, which
means academics are allowed to be much freer in their remarks (no
Finkelstein cases).

I really think the parameters of debate in mainstream discourse
especially on the Middle East are much wider in Europe, and I think
this has a direct affect on the quality of free speech. Literally
nothing can get in the mainstream liberal press here, whereas the
Guardian publishes torrents of comment, news which is critical of
Israel and the occupation. I know this is more free press than free
speech, but I think the two are inherently linked: free speech means
nothing if your mute.

Admittedly we have some terrible laws now which have destroyed some
hard-won civil liberties, but we had Islamists calling for another
terrorist attack in London on the streets of London and they were not
prosecuted. Can you imagine the same thing in New York with Islamists
calling for another 9/11? They would be locked up straight away.

>> I wouldn’t call the people you mentioned representatives of evolutionary
>> psychology. One can debate the significance of the field, but at least
>> it
>> is a serious discipline. The people you mentioned, at least those I know
>> of, are mostly cranks, working far at the margins of serious inquiry. I
>> doubt that most evolutionary psychologists would have even heard of them.
>
> I don’t know if I agree with this. Your friend Steven Pinker gives
> time to the ideas and in fact excised a chapter in one of his books
> because he was worried about the reaction it might garner. Also,
> apparently Helmuth Nyborg and Satoshi Kanazawa and Andy Furnham and
> others are well respected psychologists (most of the others are cranks
> as you say) and they have been targeted for intemperate remarks. Also,
> the argument goes that well respected academics do not look into it
> because they are to scared of what it will do to their reputation.

NC: Pinker is not my friend and I know very little about him, but I am skeptical
about the idea that he excised a chapter out of fear of reaction. If so,
he’s an incredible coward. The reaction could be nothing compared with
what every political dissident faces without concern. Same with claims
about others.

- Show quoted text -

>
>
>> The topics they address are mostly ridiculous. Take the studies of
>> correlation between race and IQ. Plainly, they have no scientific
>> interest
>> at all. In general, there is little significance in a correlation
>> between
>> two traits, unless the study is undertaken within some explanatory
>> theory,
>> and here there is none. Furthermore, if one does want to study this
>> question of marginal interest, you wouldn’t pick traits as obscure and
>> complex as race and IQ. So the scientific significance is zero. What
>> about
>> the human significance? The question would be of interest in a racist
>> society, where each individual is assigned to the mean of his race group.
>> In a non-racist society, it doesn’t make the slightest difference what
>> the
>> mean of some group is by some measure; each individual is what he or she
>> is.
>
> I think these academics have an explanatory theory to back up their
> ideas — namely that brain structure and resulting cognitive ability
> varies between different races because of divergent patterns of
> evolution. I think it’s ridiculous as you say because the differences
> are so small if at all, but it’s there. I don’t know if you saw that
> study which
> posited that Ashkenazi Jews have a higher IQ because the forces of
> natural selection favoured shrewd financial minds in a hostile
> climate.

NC: They don’t have an explanatory theory, just a vague racist belief. There’s
an important difference. The story about Ashkenazi Jews is a bad joke.
Most of them were pretty much like my grandfather, living in a small town in
the Ukraine, in a culture that was so backward that they were not even
allowed to learn about America because it wasn’t in the Bible.

>
> As you say IQ is a nugatory index really from what I can understand.
> Intelligence is so complex an area and not enough is understood yet to
> make such grand pronouncements as we find here. But the idea, for all
> of its marginal significance, can’t be ruled out a priori.
>

NC: The question is not whether the significance of IQ can be ruled out, but
quite different. There is little scientific interest to the discover that
two traits correlate, except in the context of a scientific theory (which
does not exist here), and if one is interested in this marginal topic, they
wouldn’t take traits as crazy as race and IQ. Since there is no human
significance except to racists, it follows that the whole topic is of
interest only to racists.

- Show quoted text -

> It’s interesting what you say about motivations because I asked them
> all that, and they said that they had always been interested in it as
> a burgeoning part of evolutionary psychology, although I am much more
> suspicious, like you.
>
>
>> The very fact that the issue is discussed, instead of just dismissed as
>> an
>> absurdity, is a sign of deep-seated racism. The same with the other
>> examples.
>
> I agree with this. It is strange we still think in race terms at all,
> seems very anachronistic/atavistic/racist to me. It’s as absurd as
> researching the intelligence of all the people in the world with blue
> eyes, you wouldn’t do it, unless you lived in a society where there
> had been persecution of people with blue eyes through history, then it
> would become an issue. Agree.
>
>> Leftists can, unfortunately, take on the worst characteristics of their
>> adversaries.
>
> I think the students actually had good intentions, but we know where
> these can end. It’s a sticky one because to a lot of people I know it
> was an open and shut case, there was a racist professor who shouldn’t
> be allowed to teach. Their adherence to academic freedom was trumped
> by some other moral precept they held higher, which is dangerous, but
> what is the interaction between moral precepts and immovable
> principles?
>
>> There are many illusions about Europe, including England. As far as
>> protection of freedom of speech is concerned, the US is far more advance.
>> In England the concept is barely understood. The continent is much
>> worse.
>> One can’t imagine laws in the US granting the Holy State the right to
>> determine Historical Truth and to punish deviation from its declarations,
>> to
>> mention just one example. And the shameful British libel laws, which are
>> used to muzzle speech and close down dissident journals, are
>> inconceivable
>> here, fortunately. Just to take a few examples.
>
> Again I think you are a bit harsh on England and Europe. The US
> probably has a firmer grasp of free speech because of the written
> Constitution which we don’t have. But I think our universities have a
> much higher tolerance of criticism of Israel in particular, which
> means academics are allowed to be much freer in their remarks (no
> Finkelstein cases).
>

NC: It’s entirely true that criticism of Israel is easier in England. But take
a topic that is a matter of religious fanaticism among British
intellectuals, like the Balkans. The hysteria, lying and deceit in journals
like the Guardian and Observer surpasses anything about Israel in the US.
But apart from that, the kind of laws that people submit to in England would
never be accepted in the US, like those I mentioned. Britain even still has
laws of seditious libel, another disgrace.

> I really think the parameters of debate in mainstream discourse
> especially on the Middle East are much wider in Europe, and I think
> this has a direct affect on the quality of free speech. Literally
> nothing can get in the mainstream liberal press here, whereas the
> Guardian publishes torrents of comment, news which is critical of
> Israel and the occupation. I know this is more free press than free
> speech, but I think the two are inherently linked: free speech means
> nothing if you’re mute.
>

NC: True, but not to the point here. The Mideast is easier to discuss in
England, because England is only marginally involved in Israel-Palestine
affairs, unlike the US.. But when we turn to matters like the Balkans, it’s
quite the opposite. In the Guardian particularly. In fact, the Guardian
editors are responsible for some of the most atrocious and dishonest
behavior I’ve even seen in many years of dealing with the press.

> Admittedly we have some terrible laws now which have destroyed some
> hard-won civil liberties, but we had Islamists calling for another
> terrorist attack in London on the streets of London and they were not
> prosecuted. Can you imagine the same thing in New York with Islamists
> calling for another 9/11? They would be locked up straight away.

NC: I don’t agree. I think even in this respect Britain comes out very badly.


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