"Pinker's book contains an overwhelming argument against the theory that the human mind is a social construct. But it is far from being a mere diatribe. It is also a wide-ranging and unfailingly sensible discussion of the ethical and political implications of accepting that we have a common nature. As Pinker points out, nothing of ethical importance follows logically from the truth that human mental capacities are largely hard-wired. Certainly, that humans are born with different talents and abilities does not mean they should be treated as being of unequal worth. Nevertheless, the scientific demonstration of the reality of human nature does have some political implications, and - as Pinker shows very clearly - these are consistently anti-utopian."
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Academics from CanadaCognitive scientistsPhilosophers from CanadaLinguists from CanadaPsychologists from Canada
Original Language: English
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Sources
John Gray, "The darkness within. John Gray on why the left is in flight from “human nature”", New Statesman (16 September 2002)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Steven_Pinker
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Steven Pinker
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