The nature and nurture of
reviews
THIS (ALTHOUGH NO GUARANTEE is given) may be
the very last time that the subject of Steven Pinker's most recent book is
dealt with on this website.
Attentive visitors to the author's own site may have noticed that
the page which is
given over to The Blank Slate, has one particularly interesting
feature. I refer to the list of links to reviews of the book.
This is introduced by an invitation to 'click here for extracts from
reviews'. This link takes one, as anyone might reasonably expect, to a
selection of excerpts from reviews in which the book is praised
unreservedly and at times ecstatically. One certainly would not criticise
Pinker for this. One would hardly expect him to include excerpts from
bad reviews.
However the list of
reviews which appears underneath is a rather different matter. To the casual
visitor this list has every appearance of comprehensive-ness. It includes links
to more than thirty-five reviews which have appeared in English-language
newspapers or periodicals. The impression that the list has been compiled
without fear or favour by an author confident enough to include reviews by his
critics seems to be confirmed by the presence of a link to Simon Blackburn's
review in the
New Scientist.
For this review, as some readers of this page will recall, contained, amidst
its praise, serious criticisms of Pinker's thesis.
Yet a closer
inspection of Pinker's list reveals that, although he has included a link to
Blackburn's first review, he has omitted to include any mention at all of his
second much more critical review which appeared in the
New Republic. Nor is there
any mention of the equally perceptive and critical review by Louis Menand which
appeared in the
New Yorker.
A scrutiny of Pinker's list reveals other omissions. There is no trace, for
instance, of the critical review by Kenan Malik which appeared in Prospect
and which can now be found on Malik's
own website.
Mary Midgley's trenchant
Guardian critique of the book,
already linked to elsewhere on this site, is also missing. Nor is there any
reference to one of the most perceptive of the reviews which appeared in the
British press - the review by Marek Kohn which appeared in the Independent
and which can now be found on the
author's website.
Kohn's review concludes with these words:
Even if Pinker is right about the
innateness of personality, and parents' lack of influence over their children -
a point which readers will be likely to reject from experience, rather than
through denial - these are only the outlines of a person. Instead of a blank
slate, we might think of the inherited self as an unfurnished house: what we put
in it does not change the structure, but it makes all the difference
[italics added].
It would be difficult to find a more elegant and succinct rejoinder to
Pinker's main thesis than Kohn's final sentence. However, in this regard, as in
the other instances cited here, the webpage which documents the reviews of its
author's latest book appears to have become exactly what Pinker says human
nature is not - a blank slate.
By way of affording some light relief it should perhaps be
pointed that one link which is included on Pinker's website leads to the
remarkable
Luxuriant Flowing Hair Club for Scientists
(LFHCfS).
25 January 2003
……………………………………………………………………
© Richard Webster, 2002
www.richardwebster.net
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