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Posts archive for: April, 2007
  • Morality

    I received my copy of Nature today (visit www.nature.com). Every issue holds me captivated. Amongst all the technical terms and jargon, there's something enthralling to be found. For those with limited patience or time, a lot is summarized in the 'News and Views' section.

    What I particularly enjoyed today was the brief paper entitled Damage to the prefrontal cortex increases utilitarian moral judgements - a.k.a Feeling right about doing right.

    A handful of patients with damage to their prefrontal cortex were faced with moral dilemmas and asked to make a judgement concerning what action to take. The particular part of the prefrontal cortex that was damaged in these patients, is known to be responsible for social emotions. Their responses were compared to those of two control groups. Perhaps unsurprisingly, their moral judgements were different to those people with healthy brains or damage in other areas. The scenarios presented to them were of various types. Those to which the brain-damaged participants reacted most unusually were the ones where they had to choose between doing something repellent and ensuring the welfare of the person(s) involved or not acting - at the expense of the people involved.

    For example they might have been presented with the classic moral dilemma...

    You are in control of a train. At the moment it is headed down the left track where five people are sitting. To the right there is one person. Do you divert the train? Do you kill one to save five?

    This would be considered 'impersonal' and most people have no difficulty in choosing to divert the train.

    The more 'personal' and emotionaly charged dilemmas were of this type:

    You have a train headed down a track that will hit and kill five people. You can push one (rather large) person in front of the train to stop it. Do you do this? Do you sacrifice the one to save the five?

    This is ultimately exactly the same as the previous scenario in its outcome - but most people have more difficulty with it.

    What was fascinating about the people with brain damage is that they did not struggle the way most people would. They chose the utilitarian option - saving five at the expense of one.

    Obviously, this raises some interesting questions about human morality. Firstly, of course, it suggests our emotions play a significant role in our moral decisions. Also, that morality is, to an extent, entrenched in our brains - perhaps due to our evolutionary history - or, at the very least, that it is something physical that we can hope to study. It also poses the question of why we evolved to make emotional moral decisions as opposed to logical utilitarian ones.

    Consequently, which option is the right one now? Should we be utilitarian when making moral judgements? Or should we do what most 'healthy-brained' people do and 'listen to our hearts'? Are we even equipped to answer these questions; considering what we know now?

  • Seeds of (Mormon) Faith

    Well those Mormons were back again... and they brought that third person along for 'moral support'.

    The two missionaries who came door-knocking the first time were actually relatively reasonable people. Well, maybe 'reasonable' is the wrong word - respectable? Maybe.

    But Mormon Number Three was a totally different breed. He was what I would describe as a fundamentalist. He did not allow any reinterpretation or cherry-picking of either the Bible or the Book of Mormon. How he manages this is beyond me - but he made it pretty clear that he thought I should convert immediately... OR ELSE!

    The first 'session' I spent with the two Mormon missionaries was an entertaining - though baffling - experience. They seemed open to criticism and attempted to come up with answers. When they couldn't, the admitted it. This time, it was not entertaining. It was just baffling.

    I fail to grasp how people can believe such nonsense and not notice the contradictions. Of course, early indoctrination, no doubt, aids the process. But you need to be pretty blind to never see the problems - because there are just SO many!

    Mormons believe (or these did anyway) that 'God' has a Divine Plan which he put into motion around 6000 years ago when he created Earth. On the other hand, he also created/has created several other 'Earths' so the universe itself, they concede, need not be only 6000 years old. Obviously, the Earth is not only 6000 years old - but lets leave that aside for now.

    So God created The Plan before he created humans in the form of Adam and Eve (more nonsense there of course). In competition with Satan, God attempted to bribe souls into consenting to be sent to Earth to live out their mortal lives. If they obeyed him, they'd get to go to the 'Celestial' realm (heaven). If they were good people but not great (in God's eyes), they'd stick to Terrestrial - the rest go to the Telestial plane. Satan has a better offer - he suggested the souls do as he says and they can all stay with him for eternity - no need to waste time on Earth trying to earn his approval.

    Cute story. But why? God is all-knowing. You would think his omniscience and omni potence would mean he could snap his fingers and ensure everyone is perfect and gets to spend eternity with him. "No!" they tell me, "that violates our free will!"

    Well I'm tired of that argument. If there is a god - any omniscient type - free will cannot exist. It's as simple as that. She knows what's going to happen. Not only does she recognize what our decisions will be - she also knows her own. An omniscient god not only makes for a predetermined world for each of us, it even eliminates her own freedom to make decisions. (Which then means she's not omni potent either - there goes 'God' - oops!)

    But what gets me isn't so much this flaw in the fefinition of 'God' - after all, can 'God' make a rock too heavy for him to lift? No, what bothers me is that people feel a god who sends us to Earth to prove ourselves - when he knows perfectly well what's going to happen already - is considered 'loving' and deserving of piety. The idea that we needed to be 'saved' - from a situation he created - and that we should be thankful for this. And if we're not? He's going to punish us! What an ass!

    Anyway - however hard I tried to explain the problems to the Mormons, they replied in the same way - you must have Faith.

    So I gave up and moved on, "How can I have Faith?"

    So out comes the King James Bible...

    I was read some passage from John - something about Praying with a Genuine Interest in the Answer and with Faith in God... "Then you'll get your answer."

    Umm... right... I need faith first, then I'll be 'blessed' with faith...

    Their response was something about seeds...

  • Mormons

    Well, short anecdote...

    I was visited by a couple of door-knocking Mormons yesterday and I decided that, for once, I'd invite them in.

    Absolutely mind-boggling experience! They began and ended with a prayer. These sanwiched a lengthy (2 or so hour) questions and answers session (I asked the questions). Whilst fascinating, it was also quite terrifying.

    Most is not worth mentioning as they appear to believe in the same Christian nonsense you hear about every day. But they also had some 'interesting' ideas...

    I asked them to acount for dinosaur fossils. After a pause, one said to me - "Well we believe God created several planets with life so he may have used recycled material." So now dinosaurs are extra-terrestrials. I like it - it's original. It is also absolutely INSANE.

    Another one of these moments came when I asked how these people 'know' they are correct - and every other one of the 10,000 or so large-ish world religions are not. Their answer?

    "We pray to God and ask Him whether it's true."
    "Ok, so, if I were to pray tonight, God would tell me that the Mormons are correct?"
    "Yes, but you need to really genuinely want to know the answer."
    "Hell I do!"
    "And you need to ask a straight-forward question (God gets confused?)."
    "Like a 'yes-no' question?"
    "Exactly"
    "Ok, I'll ask 'Are the claims of The Book of Mormon True (note capital)?"
    "Yes, and you'll either be told 'yes, they are' or 'no, they're not'"
    "Hold on a minute... If I'm told that they are not true, by whom am I being told this?!"

    That actually made them pause... so I continued.

    "In fact, you're telling me that there will either be an answer (yes) or none at all."
    "Well yes - but, we don't mean anything profound. It might be very subtle and can be difficult to recognise (surprise, surprise)."
    "So if I get no reply?"
    "Keep trying."
    ¨
    Let's recap - pray and ask the yes-no question. If you get a 'yes', all's well in Mormon Land, if you get no reply - NO you don't conclude they are incorrect (ever) - you keep asking!

    Anyway, they're coming back with an extra person because they couldn't deal with certain (science-related) issues I brought up - and I get to make up alist of questions between now and then...

  • Introductions

    I suppose it is only appropriate that I begin by introducing myself. So who am I?

    I was considering this apparently profound question last night. It seems to me that it requires a complex answer - and far more thought than we give it on a day-to-day basis. What does it mean to be 'you'?

    As a hatchling biologist, my first reaction is to ask the question 'nature or nurture?' Well I've thought about this before - it's either one or the other - but it all depends on how you define each part of the question. What constitutes 'nurture'? If 'nurture' means strictly how your parents raise you - not the environment in general - and 'nature' is all that is 'natural' - your biology - then the answer must be 'nature'. After all, humans are the product of their evolution. If you go back far enough, there are no 'nurturing parents' at all. Bacteria do not exactly care for their young - mitosis makes that impossible.

    On the other hand, define 'nurture' as 'the environment', and I must draw the opposite conclusion. After all, go back even further, and what were we? Organic molecules - and further back? We weren't exactly alive - a product purely of the 'environment'. 'Nature' derived from 'nurture'.

    Of course, it is absurd to think in these terms. When I'm not reducing things ridiculously, I apprecaite that it is both 'nature' and 'nurture' that add to what and 'who' we are. I am certain that a huge part of who I am is in my genes - or at least resulted from the effects of the environment on my genes at a very early stage in my development. Now, however, I am more evidently affected by my day-to-day experiences. My brain, in particular, develops with each new piece of information I receive. Again, though, my genes set the limits - there's a reason you can't teach a dog to speak English.

    So, ok, part of me is to do with my genetic make-up and part is to do with the effects of my environment on that basic blank slate. But there's even more to it.

    If I am ultimately a machine - a bunch of molecules working together according to natural laws, I am also just a bunch of atoms that obey the laws of physics. But think about that for a moment. Atoms are not stationary things. Neither are their components. From one moment to the next, the components that make 'me' up reshuffle, are lost, replaced. Even complete molecules and cells are lost and replaced through-out any person's lifetime.

    If you compare your constituents now to those you were made of when you were born, they would not be the same. Well now, that's amazing! Being 'you' isn't even static. From moment to moment, 'you' are changing.

    Now let me digress a little... Though it sounds impressively like science fiction, it has been suggested that, perhaps, in the future it will be possible to make 'back-ups' of our personalities and upload them onto computers. When we die, therefore, we will effectively live on. This idea, while beautiful, disturbs me. If I were one of these future peoples, I would love to have a personality back-up - but would that be me? I feel that it would just be a 'copy'. I would still be standing there after its upload right? It has to be a copy.

    And thus, back to my point - moment to moment, you have a 'copy' of yourself being 'created', in effect. We may each feel that we do not change, but we are in fact constantly in flux. Not only are 'you' no longer in existence from moment to moment, your new 'copy' is also slightly different to 'you'.

    The conclusion? Well I'm not too sure. I think there's more to explore. Even if you are appalled by my death-defying (quite literally, in this case) leaps and assumptions, perhaps you've found something to think about.

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