Title: Mind, Brain and Behaviour
1Mind, Brain and Behaviour
- Framing biological and evolutionary questions
about human nature
2The ghost in the machine
Modern views of the mind are based upon a
Cartesian world view (which saw a split between
the body and the mind/soul)
- The soul/reason is the animating principle
without which the body would seem just a machine - The rational principle was key to identity and
to truth (I think, therefore I am) - Later thinkers (e.g. de la Mettrie) omitted the
idea of the soul and pursued a purely mechanistic
vision of the world
3Modern psychology
- Biological, cognitive and evolutionary psychology
are mechanistic and reductionistic - Mind is modular, physical and reducible to
neurochemistry, specialist neural architecture
and adaptive mechanisms - Atomistic view suggests that the body/mind
consists of smaller structures that can be
studied in their own right - Important implication of this view a
reductionistic view characterises the best
explanation of behaviour, i.e. there is no
holistic, systemic conception of how the system
works as a whole
4Roots of modern biopsychology
- Location of mind heart or brain?
- Galen situated mind in the ventricles of the
brain but the vital spirit which animated the
body and brain was situated in the heart
5Mechanism vs Vitalism
- Debates on the nature of perception Goethe vs
Newton - Debates on the nature of the mind Fodor vs
Edelman - Debates on the nature of the body and disease
holistic vs conventional medicine
6Assumptions of Biopsychology
- Assumes that even quite complex human behaviour
and thought can be explained according to
physiological mechanisms, e.g. hormones,
neurotransmitters - Genes (and gene-environment interactions) often
assumed as ultimate causes of behaviour that help
structure physiology and hence behaviour - Research focuses on detecting ever-finer levels
of physiological functioning in order to discover
the causes of behaviour
7Natural Selection
Organisms struggle for limited resources
Individuals vary in their physical behavioural
characteristics
NS shapes the characteristics of organisms and
those that survive are better adapted to the
environment
Some characteristics give organisms an advantage
over other organisms and thus enable them to
leave more offspring
8Evolutionary psychology rationale
- Stresses continuity of behaviour between humans
and animals - Claims that evolutionary explanations should be
sought for wide range of behaviour - Seeks to unify psychological approaches and
close the gap between psychology and the natural
sciences
9Universal human nature
Gradually shaped by NS over time
Help shape culture
Evolved psychological mechanisms
Mental mechanisms seen as domain-specific modules
to solve specific problems (e.g. finding food,
mates)
Adapted to problems found in EEA
Adaptations
10Evolved psychological mechanisms
- Evolutionary psychology sees the mind as a bit
like a Swiss army knife consisting of
domain-specific modules (sets of algorithms or
rules) evolved to solve specific problems our
ancestors faced, e.g. spatial cognition, mate
selection, parenting. This is essentially a
mechanistic view of the mind as an
information-processor. - Investigators might infer psychological
mechanisms from knowledge about ancestral
adaptive problems, or use evidence of existing
psychological mechanisms to infer details of
ancestral conditions and problems in the EEA.
11Environment of Evolutionary Adaptation (EEA)
Modern history and culture, including
agriculture, only dates back to the last few
thousand years.
Yet the earliest human species dates back 2.5
million yrs. Thus the time since the beginnings
of agriculture (10,000 yrs ago) is less than 1
of the 2 million yrs our ancestors spent as
hunter-gatherers in the Pleistocene. The EEA
therefore shapes our modern psychology and
behaviour.
12Levels of selection
Basic unit of selection is the gene, bodies are
simply vehicles for genes NS acts on
individuals, since it is individuals who live or
die NS acts on groups on a long term view it is
groups that survive or die out
GENE
INDIVIDUAL
GENE
GROUP
13Neodarwinism The modern synthesis
- Theory of Natural Sexual Selection Mendelian
- genetics
- Later researchers added the concepts of inclusive
- fitness and kin selection (Hamilton, 1964)
- Central dogma information flows from the
genotype to the phenotype, and not the other way
around as suggested by Lamarck - Indicates a physical and reductionistic view of
life
14Tinbergens Four Causes
- How does the behaviour develop (ontogeny or
development)? - How did the behaviour evolve (evolution)?
- What mechanism caused the behaviour (causation)?
- What is the behaviours function (survival
value)? - Psychologists have tended to focus on the first
two of these causes. Evolutionary psychologists
focus on the last two.
15Why do birds sing?
- What physical features of the vocal cords and
beak enable sound to be produced? - Is the ability to sing innate or does a bird
have to learn the song of its species? - How has the variety of bird song we hear today
evolved over evolutionary time? - What is the survival value of bird song?
specific to general
16Criticisms of evolutionary psychology
- All behaviours are not adaptive
- Researchers disagree as to the nature of EEA
- Finding adaptive explanations for behaviour
leads to Just- so stories - Researchers infer causes from results
- Gradual view of evolutionary change has been
criticised - The role of culture is given little importance
17The charge of Panglossianism
- Evolutionary psychology attempts to find an
adaptive reason behind every physical, mental and
behavioural characteristic. Even though some
behaviours are not adaptive, it is assumed that
they were at one time (in our evolutionary past). - For example, Wright (1994) suggests that our
fondness for sugar, while not particularly
healthy today in our fast-food, carbohydrate-rich
culture, presumably evolved in an ancestral
environment where fruit was relatively scarce and
a good source of vitamins (cited in Gould, 2000). - Gould calls this pure guesswork and suggests
that most such examples constitute Just-so
stories.
18Telling Just-So Stories
Some critics (namely Gould Lewontin, 1979)
accuse evolutionary psychological accounts of
being little more than contrived stories
speculating how behaviours and psychological
characteristics may have evolved (after Kiplings
humorous accounts).
Problem is one of inferring causes from results.
However, EP is not necessarily unscientific
because predictions can be made about EEA
conditions based on existing psychological
behaviours and mechanisms (and vice versa).
19Understanding the EEA
- The problem is that we cannot know for sure what
our hunter-gatherer ancestors lived like 2
million years ago. - Fossil record is fragmentary and there is little
evidence of the details of their social or
psychological life. - In addition, the EEA was not just one period
sometime in the Palaeolithic, but is best
conceptualised as a number of different periods
in historical time. We know little about how
different psychological characteristics of our
ancestors were developed to fit these different
environments.
20The role of culture
- EP stresses universality of human nature, e.g.
race does not determine intelligence. However,
the role of many cultural aspects in shaping many
aspects of modern life is ignored, while other
features of culture are seen as universal. - In particular, emphasis is placed upon inherited
gender specific behavioural responses, for
example abuse by stepfathers. All behaviours are
seen as adaptive - From pregnancy complications, to the stress
response, to the beauty in symmetry, to the
attraction of money, to the historical tendency
of the rich to favor firstborn sons, everything
we think, feel and do might be better understood
as a means to the spread of our own - or our
ancestors - genes. - Betzig (1997) cited in Rose (2000).
21Summary key concepts
- EP approach assumes people show physical and
mental adaptations to ancestral environments
(EEAs). These adaptations, shaped by NS, can be
assumed to be universal. - Evolved psychological mechanisms, shaped during
EEA, can explain complex human behaviour (from
altruism to religion). These mechanisms/modules
originally helped our ancestors to solve specific
adaptive problems. - Critics of EP challenge its assumptions about
adaptation, the EEA and the universality of human
nature.
22References
- Barkow, J. H., Tooby, J. Cosmides, L. (1992).
The Adapted Mind Evolutionary Psychology and the
Generation of Culture. Oxford Oxford University
Press (especially chapter The Psychological
Foundation of Culture by T C. - Barrett, L., Dunbar, R. Lycett, J. (2002).
Human Evolutionary Psychology. Palgrave. - Orians, G.H. Heerwagon, J.H. (1992). Evolved
responses to landscapes. In The Adapted Mind. - Lewontin, R.C., Rose, S. Kamin, L. (1984). Not
in our Genes. New York Pantheon. - Rose, H. Rose, S. (2000). Alas, Poor Darwin
Arguments against Evolutionary Psychology.
London Jonathan Cape. See especially chapters
by H. Rose and S. J. Gould. - Gould, S.J. Lewontin, R.C. (1979). The
Spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian
Paradigm A critique of the adaptationist
programme. Proceedings of the Royal Society of
London, 250, 281-288.