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            IDEAS                                                         Raymond Tallis: Enemy of  Despair



PRESENTING
RAYMOND TALLIS






    Professor Raymond Tallis, a practising geriatrician with
    a special interest in neurological disease, is the author
    of  a number of books, both medical and philosophical. In the latter he analyses and
    criticizes
    what he considers to be dangerous trends in much contemporary thought
    in both Science and the Humanities.  He believes that
    these all culminate in undermining the central Enlightenment
    concept
    of human beings as autonomous, conscious, responsible individuals.  In Science: artificial
    intelligence theorists, cognitive psychologists
    and evolutionary biologists marginalize human
    consciousness. In the Humanities: there exist trends
    which are openly counter-Enlightenment, anti-Science
    and deny the possibility of objective knowledge. Tallis believes that the
    ‘scientistic’ reduction of men and  women to animals or machines together
    with
    the radical relativism of some influential intellectuals in the Humanities are
    both misconceived and socially and
    politically dangerous.  He subjects a number of writings
    in both fields as well as in the arts to detailed analysis and refutation.
    The following article describes his books and summarizes some of his main arguments.
It was originally published in Episteme, (Year II, Nos 5-6, October/Winter 2000) Technical
University of Lisbon).


     ENEMY OF DESPAIR
                            Presenting Raymond Tallis
        By Patrícia Lança


    INTRODUCTION

    RAYMOND TALLIS IS little known in Portugal and yet he has been described in The
    Times Higher Education Supplement as one of the most intriguing and original figures in
    the current intellectual scene.  His central project—affirmation of the uniqueness of
    human consciousness—would seem at first sight to be a restatement of the obvious.  
    After all, never before in history has mankind been so surrounded by evidence of this
    uniqueness: from space travel to information technology, from the conquest of disease to
    the mapping of the human genome, and so much more.  All these are products of human
    consciousness—of the intentional endeavours of individual human beings to work with one
    another in applying  their capacity for rationality—and might be expected to lead rather
    to hubris than  despair.  And yet never till the past century, and with mounting
    stridency in recent decades, has the uniqueness and power of human consciousness been
    so questioned, or rationality and the possibility of objective knowledge so denigrated.  
    Tallis believes that both in Science and the Humanities there exist influential trends
    which, from altogether different perspectives, all converge in emptying or at least
    marginalizing consciousness: either by (in Science) reducing human beings to animals or
    machines, or else (in the Humanities) by portraying them as helpless victims of social
    structures.  These ideas have seeped out into the media from the laboratory and the
    academy to become part of received opinion among the educated public.  Tallis thinks
    that what lie at the heart of the problem are erroneous thinking and  ignorance of
    Philosophy.

    All those whose interest in current debates in the field of epistemology and what  
    Americans call the ‘culture wars’ was aroused by the Sokal hoax1  will find in Tallis’s
    works ample material for reflection. Copious quotations from a number of humanist
    intellectuals were the main arms of Sokal and Bricmont, thus subjecting certain literary
    gurus to a wave of ridicule whose ripples may still be observed.  Tallis shares with Alan
    Sokal similar antipathies and the same capacity for documenting the arguments of his
    adversaries.  However, Tallis’s scope is vastly wider: he is also a sharp critic of some
    trends in Science. He  makes every effort to present the positions of those he criticizes
    as fairly as possible.  His use of ridicule is sparing and his arguments are both historical
    and philosophical

    There can be no better introduction to his work than Enemies of Hope.2  As the author
    says, this book does not claim to be a work of primary scholarship but a survey and
    critique of  documented arguments and counter-arguments of influential thinkers from
    the Enlightenment to the present day. As a practising clinician (he is Professor of
    Geriatric Medicine at the University of Manchester and the author of numerous medical
    works) and knowledgeable in the latest developments in a variety of scientific fields,
    Tallis is an uncompromising defender of Science against its present and past detractors.  
    But he is severe in his critique of ‘scientism’ and of all forms of reductionism which
    overlook essential characteristics of what it is to be human.  He is unsparing of what he
    regards as negative trends in evolutionary psychology, cognitive psychology and ‘artificial
    intelligence’ theory (AI), all of which lead to reducing Mind to events in the brain.  He is
    equally critical of the relativism so fashionable among scholars in the Humanities:
    marxists, freudians, structuralists, post-structuralists and other post-modernist
    theorists—whose concern seems to be with form rather than with content and who also
    end up marginalizing and misrepresenting consciousness.3  

    Tallis is no enemy of technology and he is  convinced that Science is the most
    internationally-minded and  universalist of all intellectual activities. More than anyone
    else, its practitioners are able to talk to one another on equal terms across the barriers
    of language or of ethnic and national origin.  As a literary critic and author of both
    poetry and fiction Tallis also concerns himself with Art, that third activity of the human
    mind, and where crisis is no less apparent.4  It is not surprising that here too he is
    solidly on the side of realism and impatient with its adversaries among practitioners and
    critics of art and literature.

    All of Tallis’s targets have encountered cogent and mounting criticism from  others, many
    of them specialists in the areas concerned. What make his work singularly illuminating
    and productive are four characteristics.  First, he is a trained and thoughtful scientist
    with an impressive bibliography in his own speciality.  He is also sufficiently familiar with
    quantum physics to have no hesitation in approaching the origin of matter (and of Mind) as
    an essentially  metaphysical question.  Second, unlike the majority of scientists, he is
    not only philosophically educated but possesses a massive erudition in the literature. He
    is impressively (and unusually) familiar with both modern and  contemporary Continental
    and Anglo-American philosophy, which so often in the past century have had their backs
    turned on each other. Third, he makes no use of religious or ‘idealist’ arguments but
    anchors his position firmly in the real world, from which all his thought proceeds, though
    in no traditional way. His criticisms of certain aspects of neo-Darwinism, for instance,
    will bring no comfort to creationists. Fourth, he is deeply humanist, passionately
    concerned with the tragic condition of humanity.

    Tallis places chief blame for present intellectual confusion on the continuing divide
    between the ‘two cultures’ of Science and the Humanities, famously denounced by C.P.
    Snow half a century ago.5  However, he remains an optimist and believes it is in the
    coming together of the ‘two cultures’ that there is hope for a better future.6  

    It would, of course, be self-contradictory for scientists to denigrate the Enlightenment.
    Tallis devotes considerable attention to its defence against those fashionable libels of
    what Isaiah Berlin called ‘one of the best and most hopeful episodes in the life of
    mankind’.7 He examines the diversity of Enlightenment as well as of Counter-
    Enlightenment thinkers and the positive and negative aspects of each side. Nevertheless,
    he has no doubt that it is among the latter, from Joseph de Maistre onwards, that we
    can find the intellectual roots of tyranny and not in the allegedly arid area of reason,
    science and technology to which the Enlightenment gave rise. The heart of what leads to
    fascism, Tallis is convinced, is hostility towards rationality and nostalgia for a mythical
    past.8  

    In Part I of Enemies of Hope9  Tallis examines what he calls ‘mythohistory’ or the
    metamythology of writers such as Dudley Young who, borrowing from Darwinian
    evolutionary theory, look to mankind’s simian ancestry to explain irrational behaviour in
    contemporary humans.  Young presents an idealized view of primitive man who, he alleges,
    succeeded in overcoming animal brutality and developing social order through ritual and a
    generalized sacralization of all aspects of life.10  This author recommends as a cure for
    today’s ‘disenchantment’ some sort of return to pagan irrationalism to compensate for the
    ‘spiritual aridity’ fostered by science.  Tallis dissects the arguments presented in Young’s
    widely-read book and shows their inherent contradictions. After all, the author in his
    attacks on science and rationality has recourse to both: evolutionary theory,
    anthropological findings (often dubious) and much (though often vague) ‘recent research’.

    Tallis presents a detailed examination of ‘mythohistory’ because he sees it as
    paradigmatic of the kulturkritik which manifests itself in many other fields. As a medical
    doctor, in his daily practice in touch with the miseries of many of the aged, and with
    experience of medical practice in Africa, Tallis has very little patience with those
    comfortably installed academics who mourn for the alleged virtues of a bygone age and
    look on science and technology as responsible for current woes.  It is singularly
    inappropriate, he thinks, for people who would not for a moment tolerate in their own
    flesh the discomforts and ills so common until very recently, to sentimentalize over the
    imagined delights of  pre-industrial life.  Tallis does not believe that ‘the spiritual price
    of rational societies outweighs the material and other gains associated with them’.

    …few critics of modernity would prefer untreatable cystitis to anomie, chronic malnutrition to
    alienation, and few would find being under the thrall of the priest, the local squire, an
    unaccountable government or an unchallengeable workplace bully in an organic community better
    than living in an atomic society.11

    And though it is true that the horrors of the pre-industrial world have been replaced by
    the horrendous consequences for the planet of unregulated technology (nuclear weapons,
    pollution, threats to the ozone layer, extinction of species, etc.) it is no less true that
    it is in science and technology that the tools to remedy these ills can be found if political
    will exists to do so. Tallis’s provocative views include disagreement with the third-
    worldist misconception that improved affluence in the West has been bought at the cost
    of a deterioration in conditions in other parts of the world.  Such affluence, which owes
    itself to ‘western’ science and technology, will only be available to all mankind when there
    is universal access to what some humanist intellectuals so busily denigrate and this is a
    political question which cannot be used to criticize Science and its achievements.

    Though Tallis  believes firmly in the possibility of a better world, his defence of reason
    does not make him an orthodox adept of utopianism.12   He endorses Popper’s opposition
    to holism, adding that:

    The critique of blueprint rationalism on the grounds that no one can calculate the overall effects of
    social intervention has recently derived striking support from developments in the application of
    mathematics to dynamical systems. Chaos theory has shown how the effect of small inputs into complex
    systems may be totally unexpected and quite out of proportion to the size of the input. These effects
    may also be wide-ranging and long-lasting. Uncontrolled instabilities—as well as surprising stabilities—
    emerge in unexpected ways.13

    Though the philosophes of the Enlightenment entertained Utopian dreams, and some of
    these led to disaster, it is not to these that the responsibility for dystopias must be
    attributed, for there existed any number of utopian fantasies before them, from Plato’s
    Republic  onwards. Indeed it is also true that some twentieth-century horrors have to
    do neither with Enlightenment nor Counter-Enlightenment ideas.

    The recent genocide in Rwanda—in which, in just over 100 days, nearly one million men, women and
    children in a small country suffered a Stone Age death at the hands of their fellow-countrymen—
    is equally illustrative….The preferred weapon of the Hutus was not the atomic bomb nor even the
    machine gun, but the machete…. Genocidal bloodbaths have been sickeningly common in history and
    are not peculiar to advanced, industrial societies.14

    THE BOOKS
    Tallis’s main works are an elaboration of arguments persuasively introduced, in
    considerable depth, in Enemies of Hope. His work in Philosophy of Mind, The Explicit
    Animal: A Defence of Human Consciousness15  brings to bear both his specialized
    knowledge of neurology and his profound study of the writings of philosophers in this
    field. His concern is to tease out the differences between animal and human
    consciousness and to show that neither can be reproduced by machines, however much
    cognitive theorists and neuro-philosophers may have found certain useful parallels in
    information technology.

    In Not Saussure: A Critique of Post-Saussurean Literary Theory16  Tallis analyses the
    misuse by his successors of the linguistic theories of Ferdinand de Saussure. The humour
    with which the author so frequently makes difficult arguments accessible is present in
    the punning title, which an English reader would have no difficulty in recognizing as ‘not so
    sure’. This is meant to indicate that the theories of Saussure’s epigones are dubious
    indeed and constitute quite unwarranted extrapolations from the original hypotheses put
    forward by Saussure regarding language. Tallis regards the lucubrations of a whole series
    of maîtres à penser, from Lévi-Strauss to Barthes, Baudrillard, Lyotard, Lacan,
    Derrida, Foucault and their Anglo-American disciples, as ‘theorrhoea’ and demonstrates
    the errors and internal incoherence of their views.

    In one of his latest works, On the Edge of Certainty: Philosophical Explorations,17 Tallis
    explains his theory of knowledge and examines various approaches to the problem of
    Truth. Here again he shows the grounds for his opposition to ‘neuro-philosophy’ and the
    conclusions of cognitive psychologists.

    One of Tallis’s earliest non-medical works is In Defence of Realism.18  This is an
    examination of the flight from realism in contemporary art and literature, the theories
    and ideology that attempt to justify this flight and an elaboration of his own position
    that aesthetics has more than a little to do with truth and epistemology. It may well be
    that the concerns in this work, first published a dozen years ago, were what propelled
    him into developing his positions in the more specifically philosophical books that were to
    come later.  But his concern with art has persisted.  In Newton’s Sleep.19   he returns
    to artistic and aesthetic problems and examines the anti-science bias so prevalent in the
    arts.

    REALISM, EXISTENCE AND TRUTH
    No serious scientific worker can for a minute play with the self-defeating idea of
    solipsism. Descartes’ thought experiment about a malign entity who causes us to believe
    in a world that does not exist and in which the individual self is alone in the universe, for
    all its apparent logical coherence, simply does not work. Scientists in their professional
    activities, and all of us in our daily doings, base our actions on the assumption that the
    world and its contents are real, even if some of our beliefs about them may be untrue.
    Tallis stresses that before we can even begin to talk about truth or falsehood we must
    assume existence. Truth or falsehood (TF) are properties of propositions and not of the
    things about which propositions are made.

    As a critical admirer of Wittgenstein he cites the remarks made three weeks before
    that Anglo-Austrian philosopher’s death:

    It is so difficult to find the beginning. Or, better, it is difficult to begin at the beginning. And
    not to try to go further back.20  

    Tallis adds his own comment that ‘the problem with most theories is not that they start
    too far back, but that they don’t start far back enough.’

          
    The philosophical debate, at least of late, has been entered too far downstream. Discussion of
    the nature of truth overlooks the extraordinariness of the fact that, for us humans, there is
    something called the truth and that this, just as the existence of something called falsehood,
    requires thinking about before one engages in the business of establishing criteria for
    differentiating the true from the false.21

          
    Tallis, who in his The Explicit Animal  elaborates his ideas about the importance of
    explicitness, exposes the emptiness of certain concepts of truth exemplified in the ‘null
    possibility universe’ discussed by Derek Parfit.22  This leading British philosopher
    suggested that even if there were nothing at all in the universe, no human beings, no
    atoms, no stars, there would still exist the truth that this was so. Tallis points out that
    what is ignored here is that truth-bearers are a precondition of truths. He maintains
    that no ‘descriptions—and consequently the truths corresponding to them—have discrete
    existence prior to the existence of human consciousness(es) making them explicit.’23  He
    shows that overlooking explicitness leads to conceptual mistakes which arise in  
    ‘deflationary’ theories of truth thus rendering them ‘trivially analytic or empty’. The
    work of Tarski and Frege was used by philosophers such as the Cambridge mathematician
    F. P. Ramsay to make the notion of truth redundant. The aims of the two great logicians
    were, however, narrowly technical ones: ‘of defining the notion of truth for the
    sentences of formal languages in terms of the referents of their primitive names and
    predicates’.24  To imagine that the formulas of Logic cover the entirety of the notion of
    truth is to reduce this to a trivial tautology.  In closely argued pages in which he
    examines classical theories of truth,  Tallis concludes that existence conditions must be
    taken account of before looking for criteria to differentiate truth from falsehood. Tallis’
    s main concern, however, is to examine pragmatic theories of truth which relativize
    truth and knowledge to organic need (as in neo-Darwinism) or to social pressures as do
    the postmodernist relativists.

           Tallis examines the implications of developments in modern physics and
    extrapolations from Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle which have led to a bolstering of
    relativism with some thinkers, sometimes to the risible extent demonstrated in the
    Sokal hoax. A number of such intellectuals, mainly non-scientists, have concluded from a
    misunderstanding both of recent developments in physics and of scientific method itself
    that science has proved there to be no such thing as truth or objective knowledge. This
    notion has met with wide acceptance especially in the mass media where a smattering of
    deconstructionist theory and ignorance of science conspire to propagate superficial and
    harmful ideas. In this respect, of course, partly unjustified extrapolations from Kuhnian
    interpretation of science have been especially influential.25  

    A vulgarization of certain of Karl Popper’s positions has also been similarly misused.
    However, (whatever criticisms may be made of some aspects of his epistemological
    approach) Popper in fact argued that rather than trying for absolute truth what science
    does is to develop better and better theories. He did not himself regard this principle as
    opening the way to relativism. On the contrary it precisely did not imply that one theory
    was as good as another.26  Nor does Popper’s insistence on the priority of theory over
    observation diminish the importance of facts. ‘The theories drive us to unearth the facts
    but they do not determine them…facts are made explicit, are uncovered, by theories,
    but they are not internal to them.’  To recognize that truth is never absolute, does not
    mean we must regard it as relative. Objective knowledge is possible and the pursuit of
    it, the search for truth about the world, is the noblest aim of science and should,
    indeed, be that of philosophy.

    BRAIN AND MIND
    As has been indicated, Tallis is no adept of Cartesian dualism. Neither is he a monist
    for he is deeply opposed to the notion that everything can be reduced to the physical.
    He himself admits that he inclines towards neutral monism, as for a time did Bertrand
    Russell. That is, he believes that nature has both a physical and a mental aspect and
    the latter, consciousness, cannot be reduced to the physical. He devotes an entire book
    to elaborating on what he means by calling man an ‘explicit animal’ and this concept is
    central to his theory of Mind and to his conclusion that consciousness exists as a uniquely
    human attribute, which cannot be replicated in any conceivable computer.

    As the biochemist Behe says at the beginning of his notable work on the challenge of
    molecular biology to the Darwinian paradigm ‘…understanding how something works is not
    the same as understanding how it came to be.’27  Now, Tallis knows a great deal about
    how the brain works but he acknowledges frankly that neither he nor anybody else really
    knows how consciousness works and even less how it came into being. Brain science can
    tell us a great deal about how various components of consciousness work through
    perception and the neural networks: smells, colours, spatial dimensions, etc. as the brain
    interprets them, both in human beings and many other animals. Neurology has provided
    considerable knowledge in these areas and there can be no doubt that the advances in
    brain-mapping will do much for medicine. But this is a far cry from explaining
    consciousness and its human variety—self-consciousness.

    Tallis approvingly quotes one of Nagel’s arguments against physicalism.28  It is entirely
    conceivable that science could discover everything about a bat, its physiology, nervous
    system, etc. What it can never discover is what it is like to be a bat. Neither can the
    bat tell us this.  In the case of man, it is also conceivable that scientists may come to
    be able to tell us everything to be known about man as a physical organism (his
    physiology, his nervous system, a map of the brain, the human genome and so on) but
    technology cannot put into algorithmic form what it is like to be a man or a woman. The
    individual human being, however, unlike the bat and other animals, which certainly do
    have a form of consciousness, can tell one another about this. They can reflect upon
    their own consciousness and adduce theories, as the author and his reader do. They
    experience ‘qualia’ i.e. they know what it is to have an experience (pain, joy, seeing
    redness and so on) as distinct from the material things which provoke these experiences.
    Humans are intentional beings, able to make complex plans, short and long-range, and are
    capable of explaining them. In other words human beings have a consciousness of self.
    However, that essential part of human consciousness, the self, (the ‘knowing that I
    know’, the ‘knowing that it  is I who does the knowing’) has not been scientifically
    explained. Indeed cognitive scientists seem to disregard or at least marginalize the
    problem. Those who do deal with the question have a physicalist approach, believing that
    while they cannot yet explain consciousness or the self, that it will eventually be
    explained in physicalist terms precisely how Mind can be reduced to events in the brain.

    Tallis, in considering the differences between consciousness and the impressive
    performance of computers (so often superior in some capacities to the human brain) cites
    the well-known thought experiment of the Chinese room proposed by the American
    philosopher J.R. Searle.29  Here an individual who knows nothing of the Chinese language
    is placed in a room where he is provided with a large number of inscriptions in Chinese.
    He is given instructions in his own language about how to give answers in groups of
    Chinese characters to certain sets of questions also in Chinese characters. He knows
    nothing of their content or meaning and proceeds only according to their form. With a
    little concentration he is able to perform this task but of course knows no more about
    the Chinese language than he did to start with. Searle concludes that this is a fair
    description of what a computer actually does. AI theorists have subjected Searle’s
    position to much criticism and in responding to these Searle conceded that perhaps his
    argument would not apply if ‘wetware’, or some biological element, were introduced into
    computer technology. However, this would not appear to resolve the objections put
    forward by Tallis. If the programmer knows neither precisely what consciousness is nor
    how it comes into being he cannot programme with consciousness either the hardware or
    the ‘wetware’. He cannot put into algorithmic or any other form what he knows nothing
    about. Tallis devotes many pages to careful consideration of the claims of AI theorists
    including those who suggest that when a certain degree of complexity is reached
    consciousness somehow ‘emerges’, a notion that has just about the same explanatory
    force as the ancient belief in spontaneous generation.        

    In his critique of AI and cognitive science Tallis discusses the confusions that arise from
    the use of the ‘transferred epithet’. ‘Both biological and computational models of
    consciousness depend for their apparent plausibility upon the use of terms that have a
    multiplicity of meanings.’30  We become so accustomed to the use of certain common
    terminology that ‘we have ceased to notice how we are conferring intentionality upon
    systems that are themselves only prosthetic extensions of the conscious human body.’ It
    is thus forgotten ‘that seeing a computer as anything other than an unconscious
    automaton is crude animism.’ ‘If you make machines into minds by describing them in
    mental terms, you are already half-way to making minds into machines.’ And this is
    ‘what lies at the root of the myth that modern neurological science has somehow
    explained, or will explain, or has  advanced our understanding of, what consciousness truly
    is.’ He catalogues a number of these terms and shows how they misrepresent what
    machines are doing.  In other words there is an  element of Orwellian ‘newspeak’ in
    ‘computerese’.31

    Addressing himself to the claims of cognitive theorists such as Johnson-Laird  and the
    Churchlands.32   Tallis raises two key questions: first, whether the mind is essentially a
    calculator and, second, whether computers actually calculate. ‘Calculating machines are
    extensions of the mind, yes; but they are mind-like (or perform mental functions) only in
    conjunction with minds. They are mental prostheses or orthoses, not stand-alone minds.
    In the absence of a consciousness derived from somewhere else, the electrical events
    occurring in computers are just that—electrical events—and not calculations.'33  Tallis
    elaborates on these premises to refute the unwarranted claims of cognitive scientists.
    He demonstrates the close connection between these and those of the AI theorists who
    tend to use each other’s discoveries and arguments for mutual reinforcement.

    EVOLUTIONARY APPROACHES TO CONSCIOUSNESS
    Evolutionary psychology is in a similar predicament to that of the AI and neuro-
    philosophers. Its problems, however,  are rather more complex and, given generalized
    adoption of the neo-Darwinian paradigm, its arguments seem so plausible as to have
    gained wide public acceptance. It has one foot in scientism, in that it has pretensions to
    scientific method (without testability), and another foot in the pragmatism that informs
    the stance of relativist humanists, namely the notion of interest behind or underneath
    consciousness. Moreover, the position of cognitive scientists, mentioned earlier, is itself
    in accord with the core idea of evolutionary psychology that living organisms came to
    develop consciousness, culminating in its particular human manifestations, in consequence
    of the struggle for survival. In sum, consciousness somehow emerged in certain organisms
    because it has survival value. Though he does not question Darwinian theory insofar as
    micro-evolution is concerned, Tallis thinks it necessary to question this basic assumption.
    Even from the neo-Darwinian perspective, does consciousness really have survival value?  
    Evolution has produced a multitude of organisms with exquisitely tuned mechanisms which
    enable their survival. We humans also possess these, and often consciousness interferes,
    with disastrous results, in their functioning. It might well have been a more successful
    development if evolution had gone in the direction of ‘advanced mechanism’ to ‘very
    advanced mechanism’.34 Some neo-Darwinists such as Humphrey35  see consciousness as
    ensuring social cohesiveness. However, it has been pointed out by Weiskrantz that the
    contrary is more likely to be the case:

    Man is the only creature that perversely gets into social difficulties of any really serious kind,
    and one reason for this is that he is conscious and thinks about all the social complications he
    might confront or deviously try to exploit for gain or for protection.36

    Tallis adds: ‘Consciousness—and consciousness of others’ consciousness—is the necessary
    precondition of paranoia and other abnormal and maladaptive psychological states.’37

    Another big problem for an evolutionary explanation of consciousness (and indeed of all
    bodily organs) is that it is of the essence of neo-Darwinism that development was
    gradual. Even if the pace of gradualness were to be speeded up along the lines of
    Dawkins’s contention that while mutation is random, natural selection is very
    non-random,38  this still leaves us with an incommensurable rate of gradualness. This
    raises the question: how can an incipient development towards a doubtlessly useful organ
    necessarily be useful in its early stages? In other words, what ensures the survival value
    of the early steps towards something that only turns out to be useful later? Dawkins
    answered Hitchings’s39  example of the eye (which functions whole or not at all) by
    claiming that even a single photosensitive spot would confer advantage on its owner and
    thus would begin the evolutionary process ending in eye-hood.40

    Tallis believes that there are huge difficulties in applying Dawkins’s eye argument to
    consciousness (the mind) whose nature is quite unlike that of physical organs.
    ‘Consciousness,’ he says, ‘is either there or not: you can’t be a little bit conscious any
    more than you can be a teeny-weeny bit pregnant.’  How could an organism benefit by
    having a tiny bit of mind? From one point of view it would be a positive handicap, as we
    see with those humans now who are in just that position. To clarify this question it
    seems necessary to distinguish between, on the one hand consciousness in the sense that
    animals have it of alertness to their surroundings and, on the other, of self-
    consciousness as possessed by humans. What use would a little bit of self-consciousness
    be? seems to be the crucial question.

    Tallis gives careful consideration to Dawkins’s arguments, which he criticizes with
    considerable subtlety. However, says Tallis, Dawkins not only does not deal with the
    problem of how consciousness could have emerged, he does not appear to be at all
    interested in the question: the index to Dawkins’s important book has no entries under
    ‘consciousness’ or ‘mind’.

    CRISIS IN THE HUMANITIES
    The very expression ‘post-modernism’ is itself a catch-all expression for a whole number
    of different schools of thought.  Tallis discusses, in turn,  many of these and their
    forerunners: Marx and neo-marxists; freudians, (from the master to Lacan);  
    kulturkritik (from Nietzche to the Frankfurt school and meta-mythology); structuralists
    such as Durkheim and Levy-Strauss; the neo-Saussurians and literary theorists.  He
    shows the threads linking them and their  eclectic borrowings. Because these thinkers
    are so many and varied it is not easy, without misrepresentation, to summarize their
    positions or Tallis’s criticisms elaborated in several of his works.  What characterizes
    the Humanities figures he criticises is their engagement (intentional or not) in an
    enterprise, which began with Marx, of undermining the concept of individual autonomy and
    responsibility, a movement that has gained momentum in the past half century. Tallis
    cites the words of  the American literary critic Lionel Trilling written over thirty years
    ago:

    (There is) a particular theme of modern literature which appears so frequently and with so much
    authority it may be said to constitute one of the shaping and controlling ideas of our epoch.  I can
    identify it by calling it the disenchantment of culture with culture itself—it seems to me that the
    characteristic element of modern literature, or at least of the most highly developed modern
    literature, is the bitter line of hostility to civilization which runs through it.42
     
    Marx, who believed he was turning Hegel on his head, was not as original as he thought
    when he uttered his famous dictum that it was the social existence of men that
    determined their consciousness and not the other way round. Tallis points out that Hegel
    did, in fact, radically criticize individualist models of agency, especially self-conscious
    rational agency. Marx’s original contribution was his stress on changes in the social order
    being governed by changes in the mode of production, and the class relations of
    production determining  the consciousness of class members.  Marx viewed people as in
    the grip of ideology, unable to see the world except in terms of their class position, and
    adopted the concept of  ‘alienation’ to describe the position they were in. Marx’s
    admiration for science, however,  was such that he called his thought ‘scientific
    socialism’ and he regarded the Enlightenment, though an emanation of ‘bourgeois’ class
    interest, as a positive historical step. Nevertheless as Tallis and others before him have
    pointed out:

    Once it is accepted that ideas (about the world, about society, about ourselves) are not powerful
    because they are true, rather that they seem true because they emanate from the powerful—
    ‘the ruling ideas of each age have ever been the ideas of its ruling class’—the way is open for the
    undermining of reason in argument and, more profoundly, for the decentring of the self.43

    The way was indeed opened.  Over a century later one of the most radical of the
    deconstructionists, Michel Foucault, was to dismiss his critics with his well-known
    response: D’ou parles-tu?  That the notion of  concealed interest behind or underneath
    any argument is subject to the accusation of pragmatic self-refutation is, of course, a
    facile rejoinder, and is dismissed as such by deconstructionists and others.  Tallis
    believes it is more useful to examine their positions by means of empirical verification
    where this is possible and, where it is not, by looking at their internal coherence.  And
    this he does over many chapters and in connexion with figures who preceded and, like
    Marx, paved the way for deconstructionist aberrations.

    Tallis  gives considerable attention to Freud, whose ideas and methods are now largely
    discredited in scientific psychiatry  but who still exerts keen fascination on literary
    intellectuals. Here again we observe the same idea that the contents of consciousness
    are hidden from us and that what we say, or what we believe that  we think, is not
    really what is going on in the hidden realms of the subconscious.  Freud, who was not a
    political thinker, did not attribute false consciousness to class interest but to something
    rather more titillating for everybody: the repression of sexual experience in early
    childhood, especially of the more scabrous variety. As Freud’s stature as an icon of
    literary theory, the media and Hollywood, has grown in inverse proportion to his
    shrinking  status as a scientist, there is now scarcely a literate person in the Western
    world for whom some of his expressions have not become household words.

    Tallis is in no way indifferent to the significance of many questions raised by Durkheim.  
    What he disagrees with are some of Durkheim’s answers.

    The cumulative impact of Durkheim’s ideas upon the notion of a controlling, self-possessed
    consciousness at the centre of the individual’s life is devastating. It goes far beyond exorcising
    the Cartesian ghost in the machine. In the collaboration between the individual and society that
    determines the individual’s understanding of the world, the individual is a minor partner. 'The
    individual is born of society and not society of individuals'.45

    Durkheim was not, however, anti-science and believed his approach to be scientific,
    objective and eliminatory of all that is subjective. His ideas were to prove enormously
    influential giving rise to functionalism and eventually behaviourism:

    Durkheim paved the way to a structuralist sociology, which takes social science further along the
    path leading from a recognition of the sociality of individuals (society being the result of individual
    interaction which then reshapes individuals) to one of the reduction of individuals to functions of
    society.46

           A combination of Durkheim’s ideas and those of Saussure found their apogee in the
    anthropology of Claude Levi-Strauss.  Tallis quotes the latter’s well-known words in
    connection with the analysis of myths:

    We are not claiming to show how men think the myths, but rather how the  myths think
    themselves out in the men and without men’s knowledge.47
     
    There were many differences between Durkheim and Levy-Strauss, but Tallis thinks they
    ‘have in common a profound conviction that mind does not know itself; that individual
    consciousness has an opaque heart, namely the collective unconscious.’48

    From a different direction came another significant influence for the formation of the
    structuralist outlook: Saussurean linguistics.49   Founder of modern linguistics, Ferdinand
    de Saussure recognized that behind the arbitrariness of linguistic signs their significance
    arises from  the system to which they belong.  It is the system which gives linguistic
    sounds their meaning.  ‘…behind every speech-act—indeed, every discourse act—lies a
    language system of which speakers are largely unconscious.’50  However, post-
    Saussureans seized on this seminal idea to ‘confuse the language system with the use of
    that system by an individual on a particular occasion in generating a particular speech-
    act,’ This is not warranted by Saussure’s thought, for he made the express distinction
    between langue (language as a system)  and parole (the speech of persons).  Soon the
    post-Saussureans went further to conclude that ‘discourse is closed off from the extra-
    linguistic world.’51   And here the rot set in to culminate in what Tallis calls the ‘post-
    Saussurean dissolution of the speaking (or discoursing) subject’.  He identifies three
    types of claims coming from the deconstructionists:

    1.        The denial (associated in particular with Barthes) of the originality and unitary nature of
    the author.
    2.        The denial (associated with Derrida) of the presence of the speaker (or his/her
    intentions) in the speech-act.
    3.        The assertion (associated with Benviste) that the self, the self-present I, the centred
    ego, is the product of language and (according to Lacan and Derrida) is therefore illusory.52  

    It would be supererogatory to catalogue here the many incongruities produced by
    deconstructionists in sociology, literary studies and women’s studies or Tallis’s criticisms
    of them. That there is no such thing as an author of a text; that we do not use language
    but that language speaks through us; that we are not in control of the meaning of our
    utterances; that writing has priority over speech; that a work of literature is only about
    literature; that there is no such thing as objective knowledge; that scientific discourse
    has no privileged status but is just one more myth reflecting power relations in society:
    these are just a few.  They are dealt with in exhaustive detail in Not Saussure,53,
    where Tallis fully exposes the radical relativism and anti-humanism that informs them.

    At first glance there would not seem to be much connection between the marginalizers of
    consciousness in scientific fields and its denigrators in the Humanities.  Certainly there
    are striking differences. The scientific marginalizers  base their positions on scientific
    methodology, which of course  assumes rationality, logic and the possibility of objective
    truth.  They state their positions clearly and usually welcome discussion and peer review.
    Most of Tallis’s targets in the Humanities (though not all) are, on the other hand,  
    essentially anti-Enlightenment in their denial of rationality and the possibility of
    objective truth.  Many, (though again, not all)  are openly hostile to science and its
    methods, including peer review.  Many of them tend to a posture of ex cathedra  
    pronouncements, the maître à penser or guru pose as ‘soul doctors to a sick civilization’ in
    the apt words of Merquior.54  The positions assumed by many are insulated by their own
    premises from criticism.

    Nevertheless, there do exist certain  common denominators. One is the marginalization
    of explicit human consciousness and its uniqueness.  Another is the way that effluents
    from both areas have seeped out into society generally to create a kind of zeitgeist in
    which pessimism has become generalized.  Both the concepts of human beings as machines
    or mere animals and that of denial of individual autonomy lead to political passivity and
    moral irresponsibility among the governed.  Moreover the dominance of relativist and
    reductionist attitudes in the Humanities (from which most members of our governing
    elites and opinion-makers are recruited), together with scientism among technocrats, are
    unlikely to foster true humanism or value-convictions among those who govern.  Viewing
    men and women as pawns of uncontrollable biological or social forces may not lead
    inexorably to the establishment of concentration camps or the gulag,  but it is a
    dangerous step in that direction.  Perhaps Tallis is harder on the Humanist intellectuals
    than he is on the scientific marginalizers of consciousness. But then, the latter are
    usually willing to debate their theories. While the former, ex hypothesi, see no point to
    it: after all, if there is no possibility of objective knowledge, then anybody’s ideas are
    as good as anybody else’s, except, of course if you are a white European male, in which
    case your ideas are to be condemned. In Tallis’s own words:

    If we are to believe—as I do, in opposition to many of the thinkers whose views have dominated
    intellectual life in Europe in the twentieth century—that the hope of progress is well founded, we
    must also believe in the central role in human affairs played by the conscious, responsible,
    individual human agent, and refuse to cede this role to unconscious social, historical or linguistic
    forces. Clearly, if we do not believe in the reality or the beneficence of the conscious
    autonomous, rational individual human being able to work together with other such individuals
    towards the common good, then there is no certain way forward for humanity. Maistre’s universal
    bloodbath seems as likely an outcome as any other, and there is nothing we can do to influence
    how things turn out. Consequently, if there is a moral obligation incumbent upon intellectuals at
    present, it must be to oppose the prevalent trahison des clercs—deeper even than the one that
    Benda deplores—of humanist academics who deny (or pretend to deny) the uniquely non-animal
    nature of humanity and who refuse to recognize the superiority of reason to irrationality, of
    science to magic, of accountability to unaccountable power, of hard-won factual knowledge to
    myth. 55        


    NOTES

    1.Sokal’s purpose was to expose the methods used by some influential intellectuals in the
    Humanities who bolster their arguments in favour or relativist epistemologies with a
    misuse (andoften gross ignorance) of examples taken from the natural sciences. See: Alan
    Sokal and René Bricmont, Imposturas Intellectuais (Lisbon: Gradiva, 1999), which
    explains and elaborates upon the
    Sokal hoax embodied in an article written by Alan Sokal and published under the title:
    ‘Transgressing
    the Boundaries: Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity’ in Social
    Text, 46/47
    (Spring/Summer 1996) p.217-252.

    2.Raymond Tallis, Enemies of Hope: A Critique of Contemporary Pessimism, Irrationalism,
    Anti-Humanism and Counter-Enlightenment (London: Macmillan, 1999)

    3. Not Saussure: A Critique of Post-Saussurean Literary Theory (London: Macmillan, 2nd
    Edition 1995).

    4. Tallis, In Defence of Realism (London: University of Nebraska Press, 1998).

    5. C. P. Snow, The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution (Cambridge: Cambridge
    University Press, 1959).  Snow’s 1959 Rede lecture on the same subject aroused a
    furore at the time and rancorous responses from some eminent academics in the
    Humanities.

    6. Tallis, Newton’s Sleep: Two Cultures and Two Kingdoms (London: Macmillan, 1995).

    7.  For Tallis’s eloquent appraisal of the faults and virtues of the Enlightenment see
    Prologue toEnemies of Hope, op. cit. p. 1-65.

    8. Ibid. p.55. Tallis refers to Heidegger who ‘in a lecture in 1949, likened 'the
    manufacturing of corpses in gas chambers and concentration camps ' to the mass
    production of agricultural goods. This disgusting analogy has actually a rather more
    complex significance than might at first be appreciated: the source is a Fascist
    sympathiser who believed that Nazism had “inner truth and greatness”
    because it addressed the “encounter between global technology and modern man”…For this
    Fascist supporter, who subscribed to an organic mysticism about blood and soil and the
    volk, the unimaginably terrible outrages of Auschwitz—upon  which he conspicuously
    refused to comment after the war—were comparable merely to the agribusiness he
    loathed.’

    9. ibid. pp. 71-176.

    10. DudleyYoung, Origins of the Sacred: the Ecstasies of Love and War (London: Little,
    Brown and Company, 1992).

    11. Enemies of Hope, op.cit. p.42.

    12. Ibid., p. 375-409..

    13. Ibid., p.49.

    14. Ibid., p.56.

    15. Tallis, The Explicit Animal: A Defence of Human Consciousness (London: Macmillan,
    1999).

    16. Op.cit.

    17. Tallis,. The Explicit Animal, op.cit.

    18. Tallis, In Defence of Realism, (Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press,
    1998.)

    19.Tallis, Newton’s Sleep: The two Cultures and the Two Kingdoms (London, Macmillan,
    1995).

    20. Tallis, On the Edge of Certainty (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1999),  p.xv, citing
    Ludwig Wittgenstein,  On Certainty (Oxford: Blackwell, 1974).

    21. Ibid., p.xvi.

    22 Derek Parfit, ‘Why Anything, Why This?, London Review of Books, 22 January 1998.

    23. On the Edge of Certainty, op.cit., p.10.

    24 On the Edge of Certainty,  op.cit., p.12 ff. Tallis is here referring especially to
    Alfred Tarski, 'The Semantic Conception of Truth« and the 'Foundations of Semantics’,
    in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, vol.4 (1944)

    25. Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions  (New York, 1962, 1969)

    26.   On the Edge of Certainty, op.cit., pp..19-20.

    27. Michael Behe, Darwin´s Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution (New
    York, Simon and Schuster, 1996), p. ix.

    28.Thomas Nagel, ‘What  is it  like to be a bat?’ in Philosophical Review 83 (1974), 435-
    50, and The View from Nowhere (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986).

    29. John Searle, Minds, Brains and Programs, in The Behavioural and Brain Sciences,  
    Vol.3 (1980).

    30. On the Edge of Certainty, op. cit. pp.72 ff.
.

    31.P.N. Johnson-Laird, The Computer and the Mind (London: Fontana, 1988).

    32. Paul Churchland, Matter and Consciousness (Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 2nd Edn.,
    1988) which Tallis recommends as ‘an excellent summary of mainstream thinking about
    the relationship between matter and mind and the biologism that informs much of that
    thinking.). See: On the Edge of Certainty, op.cit, p.66. See also: Patricia Churchland,
    Neurophilosophy,( Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press,1986). It is interesting to note that the
    Portuguese best-selling neuro-philosopher, António Damásio, who is
    not mentioned by Tallis, is an adept of  the Churchlands’ positions. See: Damásio,
    Descartes’ Error
    (New York: Avon Books, 1994) and The Feeling of What Happens (New York, Harcourt
    Brace, 1999),
    published in Portuguese respectively as: O Erro de Descartes (Lisbon: Europa-América,
    1994) and
    Sentimento de Si (Lisbon: Europa-América, 2000).

    33. On the Edge of Certainty, op.cit. p.77.

    34.The Explicit Animal, op.cit. p.38 ff.

    35. Nicholas Humphrey, ‘The Inner Eye of Consciousness’, in: Colin Blakemore and Susan
    Greenfield (eds). Mindwaves (Oxford: Blackwell, 1987).

    36. Larry Weiskrantz, ‘Neuropsychology and the Nature of Consciousness’, in Blakemore
    and Greenfield, op.cit.

    37. The Explicit Animal, op.cit.  p.41.

    38. Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker (Harmondworth: Penguin Books, 1988)

    39. Francis Hitching, The Neck of the Giraffe or Where Darwin Went Wrong (London:
    Pan Books, 1982).

    40. Karl Popper discussed this thorny question at some length in a lecture delivered in
    Oxford in 1961 and published in Objective Knowledge: An Evolutionary Approach (London:
    Oxford University Press, 1972), pp. 270-284.

    41. The Explicit Animal, op.cit., p.31.

    42. Lionel Trilling, ‘On the Teaching of Modern Literature’ in Beyond Culture. Essays on
    literature and learning (Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1967).

    43. Enemies of Hope,  op.cit., p.232.

    44. ‘Durkheim and the Social Unconscious’, pp. 240 ff.

    45. Ibid. p.246.

    46. Ibid., p.249.

     47. Claude Lévi-Strauss, ‘Overture to Le Cru et le Cuit’, in Jacques Ehrmann, ed
    Structuralism (Garden City, New York:Anchor Doubleday, 1970) pp. 31-55.

     48. Enemies of Hope, op.cit. p.250.

     49.See Ferdinand de Saussure, Cours de linguistique générale (Paris, 1915).

     50. Ibid. p.275.

     51. Ibid. p.275.

    52. Ibid

    53. Op.cit.

    54. J. G. Merquior, From Prague to Paris (London: Verso, 1986)

    55. Enemies of Hope,op.cit.p.64


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SOME NON-MEDICAL BOOKS BY
RAYMOND TALLIS

Enemies of Hope, A
Critique of Contemporary
Pessimism

The Explicit Animal. A Defence of Human Consciousness

In Defence of Realism

Newton's Sleep: Two Cultures and Two Kingdoms

Not Saussure: A Critique of Post-Saussurean Literary Theory

On the Edge of Certainty

The Pursuit of Mind (co-editor with Howard Robinson)

Theorrhoea and After