Dispositivo Alteracion Mental
by Malditos Cyborgs.org
__________________________________________________________________________
Viruses of the Mind
Richard Dawkins
1991
The haven all memes depend on reaching is the human mind,
but a human mind is itself an artifact created when memes
restructure a human brain in order to make it a better habitat
for memes. The avenues for entry and departure are modified
to suit local conditions, and strengthened by various artificial
devices that enhance fidelity and prolixity of replication:
native Chinese minds differ dramatically from native French
minds, and literate minds differ from illiterate minds.
What memes provide in return to the organisms in which they
reside is an incalculable store of advantages --- with some
Trojan horses thrown in for good measure...
-- Daniel Dennett, Consciousness Explained
1 Duplication Fodder
A
beautiful child close to me, six and the apple of her father's
eye, believes that Thomas the Tank Engine really exists.
She believes in Father Christmas, and when she grows up
her ambition is to be a tooth fairy. She and her school-friends
believe the solemn word of respected adults that tooth fairies
and Father Christmas really exist. This little girl is of
an age to believe whatever you tell her. If you tell her
about witches changing princes into frogs she will believe
you. If you tell her that bad children roast forever in
hell she will have nightmares. I have just discovered that
without her father's consent this sweet, trusting, gullible
six-year-old is being sent, for weekly instruction, to a
Roman Catholic nun. What chance has she?
A
human child is shaped by evolution to soak up the culture
of her people. Most obviously, she learns the essentials
of their language in a matter of months. A large dictionary
of words to speak, an encyclopedia of information to speak
about, complicated syntactic and semantic rules to order
the speaking, are all transferred from older brains into
hers well before she reaches half her adult size. When you
are pre-programmed to absorb useful information at a high
rate, it is hard to shut out pernicious or damaging information
at the same time. With so many mindbytes to be downloaded,
so many mental codons to be replicated, it is no wonder
that child brains are gullible, open to almost any suggestion,
vulnerable to subversion, easy prey to Moonies, Scientologists
and nuns. Like immune-deficient patients, children are wide
open to mental infections that adults might brush off without
effort.
DNA,
too, includes parasitic code. Cellular machinery is extremely
good at copying DNA. Where DNA is concerned, it seems to
have an eagerness to copy, seems eager to be copied. The
cell nucleus is a paradise for DNA, humming with sophisticated,
fast, and accurate duplicating machinery.
Cellular
machinery is so friendly towards DNA duplication that it
is small wonder cells play host to DNA parasites --- viruses,
viroids, plasmids and a riff-raff of other genetic fellow
travelers. Parasitic DNA even gets itself spliced seamlessly
into the chromosomes themselves. "Jumping genes"
and stretches of "selfish DNA" cut or copy themselves
out of chromosomes and paste themselves in elsewhere. Deadly
oncogenes are almost impossible to distinguish from the
legitimate genes between which they are spliced. In evolutionary
time, there is probably a continual traffic from "straight"
genes to "outlaw," and back again (Dawkins, 1982).
DNA is just DNA. The only thing that distinguishes viral
DNA from host DNA is its expected method of passing into
future generations. "Legitimate" host DNA is just
DNA that spires to pass into the next generation via the
orthodox route of sperm or egg. "Outlaw" or parasitic
DNA is just DNA that looks to a quicker, less cooperative
route to the future, via a squeezed droplet or a smear of
blood, rather than via a sperm or egg.
For
data on a floppy disc, a computer is a humming paradise
just as cell nuclei hum with eagerness to duplicate DNA.
Computers and their associated disc and tape readers are
designed with high fidelity in mind. As with DNA molecules,
magnetized bytes don't literally "want" to be
faithfully copied. Nevertheless, you can write a computer
program that takes steps to duplicate itself. Not just duplicate
itself within one computer but spread itself to other computers.
Computers are so good at copying bytes, and so good at faithfully
obeying the instructions contained in those bytes, that
they are sitting ducks to self-replicating programs: wide
open to subversion by software parasites. Any cynic familiar
with the theory of selfish genes and memes would have known
that modern personal computers, with their promiscuous traffic
of floppy discs and e-mail links, were just asking for trouble.
The only surprising thing about the current epidemic of
computer viruses is that it has been so long in coming.
2
Computer Viruses: a Model for an Informational Epidemiology
Computer
viruses are pieces of code that graft themselves into existing,
legitimate programs and subvert the normal actions of those
programs. They may travel on exchanged floppy disks, or
over networks. They are technically distinguished from "worms"
which are whole programs in their own right, usually traveling
over networks. Rather different are "Trojan horses,"
a third category of destructive programs, which are not
in themselves self-replicating but rely on humans to replicate
them because of their pornographic or otherwise appealing
content. Both viruses and worms are programs that actually
say, in computer language, "Duplicate me." Both
may do other things that make their presence felt and perhaps
satisfy the hole-in-corner vanity of their authors. These
side-effects may be "humorous" (like the virus
that makes the Macintosh's built-in loudspeaker enunciate
the words "Don't panic," with predictably opposite
effect); malicious (like the numerous IBM viruses that erase
the hard disk after a sniggering screen-announcement of
the impending disaster); political (like the Spanish Telecom
and Beijing viruses that protest about telephone costs and
massacred students respectively); or simply inadvertent
(the programmer is incompetent to handle the low-level system
calls required to write an effective virus or worm). The
famous Internet Worm, which paralyzed much of the computing
power of the United States on November 2, 1988, was not
intended (very) maliciously but got out of control and,
within 24 hours, had clogged around 6,000 computer memories
with exponentially multiplying copies of itself.
"Memes
now spread around the world at the speed of light, and replicate
at rates that make even fruit flies and yeast cells look
glacial in comparison. They leap promiscuously from vehicle
to vehicle, and from medium to medium, and are proving to
be virtually unquarantinable" (Dennett 1990, p.131).
Viruses aren't limited to electronic media such as disks
and data lines. On its way from one computer to another,
a virus may pass through printing ink, light rays in a human
lens, optic nerve impulses and finger muscle contractions.
A computer fanciers' magazine that printed the text of a
virus program for the interest of its readers has been widely
condemned. Indeed, such is the appeal of the virus idea
to a certain kind of puerile mentality (the masculine gender
is used advisedly), that publication of any kind of "how
to" information on designing virus programs is rightly
seen as an irresponsible act.
I
am not going to publish any virus code. But there are certain
tricks of effective virus design that are sufficiently well
known, even obvious, that it will do no harm to mention
them, as I need to do to develop my theme. They all stem
from the virus's need to evade detection while it is spreading.
A
virus that clones itself too prolifically within one computer
will soon be detected because the symptoms of clogging will
become too obvious to ignore. For this reason many virus
programs check, before infecting a system, to make sure
that they are not already on that system. Incidentally,
this opens the way for a defense against viruses that is
analogous to immunization. In the days before a specific
anti-virus program was available, I myself responded to
an early infection of my own hard disk by means of a crude
"vaccination." Instead of deleting the virus that
I had detected, I simply disabled its coded instructions,
leaving the "shell" of the virus with its characteristic
external "signature" intact. In theory, subsequent
members of the same virus species that arrived in my system
should have recognized the signature of their own kind and
refrained from trying to double-infect. I don't know whether
this immunization really worked, but in those days it probably
was worth while "gutting" a virus and leaving
a shell like this, rather than simply removing it lock,
stock and barrel. Nowadays it is better to hand the problem
over to one of the professionally written anti-virus programs.
A
virus that is too virulent will be rapidly detected and
scotched. A virus that instantly and catastrophically sabotages
every computer in which it finds itself will not find itself
in many computers. It may have a most amusing effect on
one computer ---- erase an entire doctoral thesis or something
equally side-splitting --- but it won't spread as an epidemic.
Some
viruses, therefore, are designed to have an effect that
is small enough to be difficult to detect, but which may
nevertheless be extremely damaging. There is one type, which,
instead of erasing disk sectors wholesale, attacks only
spreadsheets, making a few random changes in the (usually
financial) quantities entered in the rows and columns. Other
viruses evade detection by being triggered probabilistically,
for example erasing only one in 16 of the hard disks infected.
Yet other viruses employ the time-bomb principle. Most modern
computers are "aware" of the date, and viruses
have been triggered to manifest themselves all around the
world, on a particular date such as Friday 13th or April
Fool's Day. From the parasitic point of view, it doesn't
matter how catastrophic the eventual attack is, provided
the virus has had plenty of opportunity to spread first
(a disturbing analogy to the Medawar/Williams theory of
ageing: we are the victims of lethal and sub-lethal genes
that mature only after we have had plenty of time to reproduce
(Williams, 1957)). In defense, some large companies go so
far as to set aside one "miner's canary" among
their fleet of computers, and advance its internal calendar
a week so that any time-bomb viruses will reveal themselves
prematurely before the big day.
Again
predictably, the epidemic of computer viruses has triggered
an arms race. Anti-viral software is doing a roaring trade.
These antidote programs -- "Interferon," "Vaccine,"
"Gatekeeper" and others --- employ a diverse armory
of tricks. Some are written with specific, known and named
viruses in mind. Others intercept any attempt to meddle
with sensitive system areas of memory and warn the user.
The
virus principle could, in theory, be used for non-malicious,
even beneficial purposes. Thimbleby (1991) coins the phrase
"liveware" for his already-implemented use of
the infection principle for keeping multiple copies of databases
up to date. Every time a disk containing the database is
plugged into a computer, it looks to see whether there is
already another copy present on the local hard disk. If
there is, each copy is updated in the light of the other.
So, with a bit of luck, it doesn't matter which member of
a circle of colleagues enters, say, a new bibliographical
citation on his personal disk. His newly entered information
will readily infect the disks of his colleagues (because
the colleagues promiscuously insert their disks into one
another's computers) and will spread like an epidemic around
the circle. Thimbleby's liveware is not entirely virus-like:
it could not spread to just anybody's computer and do damage.
It spreads data only to already-existing copies of its own
database; and you will not be infected by liveware unless
you positively opt for infection.
Incidentally,
Thimbleby, who is much concerned with the virus menace,
points out that you can gain some protection by using computer
systems that other people don't use. The usual justification
for purchasing today's numerically dominant computer is
simply and solely that it is numerically dominant. Almost
every knowledgeable person agrees that, in terms of quality
and especially user-friendliness, the rival, minority system
is superior. Nevertheless, ubiquity is held to be good in
itself, sufficient to outweigh sheer quality. Buy the same
(albeit inferior) computer as your colleagues, the argument
goes, and you'll be able to benefit from shared software,
and from a generally large circulation of available software.
The irony is that, with the advent of the virus plague,
"benefit" is not all that you are likely to get.
Not only should we all be very hesitant before we accept
a disk from a colleague. We should also be aware that, if
we join a large community of users of a particular make
of computer, we are also joining a large community of viruses
--- even, it turns out, disproportionately larger.
Returning
to possible uses of viruses for positive purposes, there
are proposals to exploit the "poacher turned gamekeeper"
principle, and "set a thief to catch a thief."
A simple way would b to take any of the existing anti-viral
programs and load it, as a "warhead," into a harmless
self-replicating virus. From a "public health"
point of view, a spreading epidemic of anti-viral software
could be especially beneficial because the computers most
vulnerable to malicious viruses --- those whose owners are
promiscuous in the exchange of pirated programs --- will
also be most vulnerable to infection by the healing anti-virus.
A more penetrating anti-virus might --- as in the immune
system --- "learn" or "evolve" an improved
capacity to attack whatever viruses it encountered.
I
can imagine other uses of the computer virus principle which,
if not exactly altruistic, are at least constructive enough
to escape the charge of pure vandalism. A computer company
might wish to do market research on the habits of its customers,
with a view to improving the design of future products.
Do users like to choose files by pictorial icon, or do they
opt to display them by textual name only? How deeply do
people nest folders (directories) within one another? Do
people settle down for a long session with only one program,
say a word processors, or are they constantly switching
back and forth, say between writing and drawing programs?
Do people succeed in moving the mouse pointer straight to
the target, or do they meander around in time-wasting hunting
movements that could be rectified by a change in design?
The
company could send out a questionnaire asking all these
questions, but the customers that replied would be a biased
sample and, in any case, their own assessment of their computer-using
behavior might be inaccurate. A better solution would be
a market-research computer program. Customers would be asked
to load this program into their system where it would unobtrusively
sit, quietly monitoring and tallying key-presses and mouse
movements. At the end of a year, the customer would be asked
to send in the disk file containing all the tallyings of
the market-research program. But again, most people would
not bother to cooperate and some might see it as an invasion
of privacy and of their disk space.
The
perfect solution, from the company's point of view, would
be a virus. Like any other virus, it would be self-replicating
and secretive. But it would not be destructive or facetious
like an ordinary virus. Along with its self-replicating
booster it would contain a market-research warhead. The
virus would be released surreptitiously into the community
of computer users. Just like an ordinary virus it would
spread around, as people passed floppy disks and e-mail
around the community. As the virus spread from computer
to computer, it would build up statistics on users behavior,
monitored secretly from deep within a succession of systems.
Every now and again, a copy of the viruses would happen
to find its way, by normal epidemic traffic, back into one
of the company's own computers. There it would be debriefed
and its data collated with data from other copies of the
virus that had come "home."
Looking
into the future, it is not fanciful to imagine a time when
viruses, both bad and good, have become so ubiquitous that
we could speak of an ecological community of viruses and
legitimate programs coexisting in the silicosphere. At present,
software is advertised as, say, "Compatible with System
7." In the future, products may be advertised as "Compatible
with all viruses registered in the 1998 World Virus Census;
immune to all listed virulent viruses; takes full advantage
of the facilities offered by the following benign viruses
if present..." Word-processing software, say, may hand
over particular functions, such as word-counting and string-searches,
to friendly viruses burrowing autonomously through the text.
Looking
even further into the future, whole integrated software
systems might grow, not by design, but by something like
the growth of an ecological community such as a tropical
rain-forest. Gangs of mutually compatible viruses might
grow up, in the same way as genomes can be regarded as gangs
of mutually compatible genes (Dawkins, 1982). Indeed, I
have even suggested that our genomes should be regarded
as gigantic colonies of viruses (Dawkins, 1976). Genes cooperate
with one another in genomes because natural selection has
favored those genes that prosper in the presence of the
other genes that happen to be common in the gene pool. Different
gene pools may evolve towards different combinations of
mutually compatible genes. I envisage a time when, in the
same kind of way, computer viruses may evolve towards compatibility
with other viruses, to form communities or gangs. But then
again, perhaps not! At any rate, I find the speculation
more alarming than exciting.
At
present, computer viruses don't strictly evolve. They are
invented by human programmers, and if they evolve they do
so in the same weak sense as cars or aeroplanes evolve.
Designers derive this year's car as a slight modification
of last year's car, and then may, more or less consciously,
continue a trend of the last few years --- further flattening
of the radiator grill or whatever it may be. Computer virus
designers dream up ever more devious tricks for outwitting
the programmers of anti-virus software. But computer viruses
don't --- so far --- mutate and evolve by true natural selection.
They may do so in the future. Whether they evolve by natural
selection, or whether their evolution is steered by human
designers, may not make much difference to their eventual
performance. By either kind of evolution, we expect them
to become better at concealment, and we expect them to become
subtly compatible with other viruses that are at the same
time prospering in the computer community.
DNA
viruses and computer viruses spread for the same reason:
an environment exists in which there is machinery well set
up to duplicate and spread them around and to obey the instructions
that the viruses embody. These two environments are, respectively,
the environment of cellular physiology and the environment
provided by a large community of computers and data-handling
machinery. Are there any other environments like these,
any other humming paradises of replication?
3
The Infected Mind
I
have already alluded to the programmed-in gullibility of
a child, so useful for learning language and traditional
wisdom, and so easily subverted by nuns, Moonies and their
ilk. More generally, we all exchange information with one
another. We don't exactly plug floppy disks into slots in
one another's skulls, but we exchange sentences, both through
our ears and through our eyes. We notice each other's styles
of moving and dressing and are influenced. We take in advertising
jingles, and are presumably persuaded by them, otherwise
hard-headed businessmen would not spend so much money polluting
their air with them.
Think
about the two qualities that a virus, or any sort of parasitic
replicator, demands of a friendly medium,. the two qualities
that make cellular machinery so friendly towards parasitic
DNA, and that make computers so friendly towards computer
viruses. These qualities are, firstly, a readiness to replicate
information accurately, perhaps with some mistakes that
are subsequently reproduced accurately; and, secondly, a
readiness to obey instructions encoded in the information
so replicated.
Cellular
machinery and electronic computers excel in both these virus-friendly
qualities. How do human brains match up? As faithful duplicators,
they are certainly less perfect than either cells or electronic
computers. Nevertheless, they are still pretty good, perhaps
about as faithful as an RNA virus, though not as good as
DNA with all its elaborate proofreading measures against
textual degradation. Evidence of the fidelity of brains,
especially child brains, as data duplicators is provided
by language itself. Shaw's Professor Higgins was able by
ear alone to place Londoners in the street where they grew
up. Fiction is not evidence for anything, but everyone knows
that Higgins's fictional skill is only an exaggeration of
something we can all down. Any American can tell Deep South
from Mid West, New England from Hillbilly. Any New Yorker
can tell Bronx from Brooklyn. Equivalent claims could be
substantiated for any country. What this phenomenon means
is that human brains are capable of pretty accurate copying
(otherwise the accents of, say, Newcastle would not be stable
enough to be recognized) but with some mistakes (otherwise
pronunciation would not evolve, and all speakers of a language
would inherit identically the same accents from their remote
ancestors). Language evolves, because it has both the great
stability and the slight changeability that are prerequisites
for any evolving system.
The
second requirement of a virus-friendly environment --- that
it should obey a program of coded instructions --- is again
only quantitatively less true for brains than for cells
or computers. We sometimes obey orders from one another,
but also we sometimes don't. Nevertheless, it is a telling
fact that, the world over, the vast majority of children
follow the religion of their parents rather than any of
the other available religions. Instructions to genuflect,
to bow towards Mecca, to nod one's head rhythmically towards
the wall, to shake like a maniac, to "speak in tongues"
--- the list of such arbitrary and pointless motor patterns
offered by religion alone is extensive --- are obeyed, if
not slavishly, at least with some reasonably high statistical
probability.
Less
portentously, and again especially prominent in children,
the "craze" is a striking example of behavior
that owes more to epidemiology than to rational choice.
Yo-yos, hula hoops and pogo sticks, with their associated
behavioral fixed actions, sweep through schools, and more
sporadically leap from school to school, in patterns that
differ from a measles epidemic in no serious particular.
Ten years ago, you could have traveled thousands of miles
through the United States and never seen a baseball cap
turned back to front. Today, the reverse baseball cap is
ubiquitous. I do not know what the pattern of geographical
spread of the reverse baseball cap precisely was, but epidemiology
is certainly among the professions primarily qualified to
study it. We don't have to get into arguments about "determinism";
we don't have to claim that children are compelled to imitate
their fellows' hat fashions. It is enough that their hat-wearing
behavior, as a matter of fact, is statistically affected
by the hat-wearing behavior of their fellows.
Trivial
though they are, crazes provide us with yet more circumstantial
evidence that human minds, especially perhaps juvenile ones,
have the qualities that we have singled out as desirable
for an informational parasite. At the very least the mind
is a plausible candidate for infection by something like
a computer virus, even if it is not quite such a parasite's
dream-environment as a cell nucleus or an electronic computer.
It
is intriguing to wonder what it might feel like, from the
inside, if one's mind were the victim of a "virus."
This might be a deliberately designed parasite, like a present-day
computer virus. Or it might be an inadvertently mutated
and unconsciously evolved parasite. Either way, especially
if the evolved parasite was the memic descendant of a long
line of successful ancestors, we are entitled to expect
the typical "mind virus" to be pretty good at
its job of getting itself successfully replicated.
Progressive
evolution of more effective mind-parasites will have to
aspects. New "mutants" (either random or designed
by humans) that are better at spreading will become more
numerous. And there will be a ganging up of ideas that flourish
in one another's presence, ideas that mutually support one
another just as genes do and as I have speculated computer
viruses may one day do. We expect that replicators will
go around together from brain to brain in mutually compatible
gangs. These gangs will come to constitute a package, which
may be sufficiently stable to deserve a collective name
such as Roman Catholicism or Voodoo. It doesn't too much
matter whether we analogize the whole package to a single
virus, to each one of the component parts to a single virus.
The analogy is not that precise anyway, just as the distinction
between a computer virus and a computer worm is nothing
to get worked up about. What matters is that minds are friendly
environments to parasitic, self-replicating ideas or information,
and that minds are typically massively infected.
Like
computer viruses, successful mind viruses will tend to be
hard for their victims to detect. If you are the victim
of one, the chances are that you won't know it, and may
even vigorously deny it. Accepting that a virus might be
difficult to detect in your own mind, what tell-tale signs
might you look out for? I shall answer by imaging how a
medical textbook might describe the typical symptoms of
a sufferer (arbitrarily assumed to be male).
1.
The patient typically finds himself impelled by some deep,
inner conviction that something is true, or right, or virtuous:
a conviction that doesn't seem to owe anything to evidence
or reason, but which, nevertheless, he feels as totally
compelling and convincing. We doctors refer to such a belief
as "faith."
2.
Patients typically make a positive virtue of faith's being
strong and unshakable, in spite of not being based upon
evidence. Indeed, they may fell that the less evidence there
is, the more virtuous the belief (see below).
This
paradoxical idea that lack of evidence is a positive virtue
where faith is concerned has something of the quality of
a program that is self-sustaining, because it is self-referential
(see the chapter "On Viral Sentences and Self-Replicating
Structures" in Hofstadter, 1985). Once the proposition
is believed, it automatically undermines opposition to itself.
The "lack of evidence is a virtue" idea could
be an admirable sidekick, ganging up with faith itself in
a clique of mutually supportive viral programs.
3.
A related symptom, which a faith-sufferer may also present,
is the conviction that "mystery," per se, is a
good thing. It is not a virtue to solve mysteries. Rather
we should enjoy them, even revel in their insolubility.
Any
impulse to solve mysteries could be serious inimical to
the spread of a mind virus. It would not, therefore, be
surprising if the idea that "mysteries are better not
solved" was a favored member of a mutually supporting
gang of viruses. Take the "Mystery of Transubstantiation."
It is easy and non-mysterious to believe that in some symbolic
or metaphorical sense the eucharistic wine turns into the
blood of Christ. The Roman Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation,
however, claims far more. The "whole substance"
of the wine is converted into the blood of Christ; the appearance
of wine that remains is "merely accidental," "inhering
in no substance" (Kenny, 1986, p. 72). Transubstantiation
is colloquially taught as meaning that the wine "literally"
turns into the blood of Christ. Whether in its obfuscatory
Aristotelian or its franker colloquial form, the claim of
transubstantiation can be made only if we do serious violence
to the normal meanings of words like "substance"
and "literally." Redefining words is not a sin,
but, if we use words like "whole substance" and
"literally" for this case, what word are we going
to use when we really and truly want to say that something
did actually happen? As Anthony Kenny observed of his own
puzzlement as a young seminarian, "For all I could
tell, my typewriter might be Benjamin Disraeli transubstantiated...."
Roman
Catholics, whose belief in infallible authority compels
them to accept that wine becomes physically transformed
into blood despite all appearances, refer to the "mystery"
of transubstantiation. Calling it a mystery makes everything
OK, you see. At least, it works for a mind well prepared
by background infection. Exactly the same trick is performed
in the "mystery" of the Trinity. Mysteries are
not meant to be solved, they are meant to strike awe. The
"mystery is a virtue" idea comes to the aid of
the Catholic, who would otherwise find intolerable the obligation
to believe the obvious nonsense of the transubstantiation
and the "three-in-one." Again, the belief that
"mystery is a virtue" has a self-referential ring.
As Hofstadter might put it, the very mysteriousness of the
belief moves the believer to perpetuate the mystery.
An
extreme symptom of "mystery is a virtue" infection
is Tertullian's "Certum est quia impossibile est"
(It is certain because it is impossible"). That way
madness lies. One is tempted to quote Lewis Carroll's White
Queen, who, in response to Alice's "One can't believe
impossible things" retorted "I daresay you haven't
had much practice... When I was your age, I always did it
for half-an-hour a ay. Why, sometimes I've believed as many
as six impossible things before breakfast." Or Douglas
Adam's Electric Monk, a labor-saving device programmed to
do your believing for you, which was capable of "believing
things they'd have difficulty believing in Salt Lake City"
and which, at the moment of being introduced to the reader,
believed, contrary to all the evidence, that everything
in the world was a uniform shade of pink. But White Queens
and Electric Monks become less funny when you realize that
these virtuoso believers are indistinguishable from revered
theologians in real life. "It is by all means to be
believed, because it is absurd" (Tertullian again).
Sir Thomas Browne (1635) quotes Tertullian with approval,
and goes further: "Methinks there be not impossibilities
enough in religion for an active faith." And "I
desire to exercise my faith in the difficultest point; for
to credit ordinary and visible objects is not faith, but
perswasion [sic]."
I
have the feeling that something more interesting is going
on here than just plain insanity or surrealist nonsense,
something akin to the admiration we feel when we watch a
ten-ball juggler on a tightrope. It is as though the faithful
gain prestige through managing to believe even more impossible
things than their rivals succeed in believing. Are these
people testing --- exercising --- their believing muscles,
training themselves to believe impossible things so that
they can take in their stride the merely improbable things
that they are ordinarily called upon to believe?
While
I was writing this, the Guardian (July 29, 1991) fortuitously
carried a beautiful example. It came in an interview with
a rabbi undertaking the bizarre task of vetting the kosher-purity
of food products right back to the ultimate origins of their
minutest ingredients. He was currently agonizing over whether
to go all the way to China to scrutinize the menthol that
goes into cough sweets. "Have you ever tried checking
Chinese menthol... it was extremely difficult, especially
since the first letter we sent received the reply in best
Chinese English, 'The product contains no kosher'... China
has only recently started opening up to kosher investigators.
The menthol should be OK, but you can never be absolutely
sure unless you visit." These kosher investigators
run a telephone hot-line on which up-to-the-minute red-alerts
of suspicion are recorded against chocolate bars and cod-liver
oil. The rabbi sighs that the green-inspired trend away
from artificial colors and flavors "makes life miserable
in the kosher field because you have to follow all these
things back." When the interviewer asks him why he
bothers with this obviously pointless exercise, he makes
it very clear that the point is precisely that there is
no point:
>That
most of the Kashrut laws are divine ordinances without reason
given is 100 per cent the point. It is very easy not to
murder people. Very easy. It is a little bit harder not
to steal because one is tempted occasionally. So that is
no great proof that I believe in God or am fulfilling His
will. But, if He tells me not to have a cup of coffee with
milk in it with my mincemeat and peaces at lunchtime, that
is a test. The only reason I am doing that is because I
have been told to so do. It is something difficult.
Helena
Cronin has suggested to me that there may be an analogy
here to Zahavi's handicap theory of sexual selection and
the evolution of signals (Zahavi, 1975). Long unfashionable,
even ridiculed (Dawkins, 1976), Zahavi's theory has recently
been cleverly rehabilitated (Grafen, 1990 a, b) and is now
taken seriously by evolutionary biologists (Dawkins, 1989).
Zahavi suggests that peacocks, for instance, evolve their
absurdly burdensome fans with their ridiculously conspicuous
(to predators) colors, precisely because they are burdensome
and dangerous, and therefore impressive to females. The
peacock is, in effect, saying: "Look how fit and strong
I must be, since I can afford to carry around this preposterous
tail."
To
avoid misunderstanding of the subjective language in which
Zahavi likes to make his points, I should add that the biologist's
convention of personifying the unconscious actions of natural
selection is taken for granted here. Grafen has translated
the argument into an orthodox Darwinian mathematical model,
and it works. No claim is here being made about the intentionality
or awareness of peacocks and peahens. They can be as sphexish
or as intentional as you please (Dennett, 1983, 1984). Moreover,
Zahavi's theory is general enough not to depend upon a Darwinian
underpinning. A flower advertising its nectar to a "skeptical"
bee could benefit from the Zahavi principle. But so could
a human salesman seeking to impress a client.
The
premise of Zahavi's idea is that natural selection will
favor skepticism among females (or among recipients of advertising
messages generally). The only way for a male (or any advertiser)
to authenticate his boast of strength (quality, or whatever
is is) is to prove that it is true by shouldering a truly
costly handicap --- a handicap that only a genuinely strong
(high quality, etc.) male could bear. It may be called the
principle of costly authentication. And now to the point.
Is it possible that some religious doctrines are favored
not in spite of being ridiculous but precisely because they
are ridiculous? Any wimp in religion could believe that
bread symbolically represents the body of Christ, but it
takes a real, red-blooded Catholic to believe something
as daft as the transubstantiation. If you believe that you
can believe anything, and (witness the story of Doubting
Thomas) these people are trained to see that as a virtue.
Let
us return to our list of symptoms that someone afflicted
with the mental virus of faith, and its accompanying gang
of secondary infections, may expect to experience.
4.
The sufferer may find himself behaving intolerantly towards
vectors of rival faiths, in extreme cases even killing them
or advocating their deaths. He may be similarly violent
in his disposition towards apostates (people who once held
the faith but have renounced it); or towards heretics (people
who espouse a different --- often, perhaps significantly,
only very slightly different --- version of the faith).
He may also feel hostile towards other modes of thought
that are potentially inimical to his faith, such as the
method of scientific reason which may function rather like
a piece of anti-viral software.
The
threat to kill the distinguished novelist Salman Rushdie
is only the latest in a long line of sad examples. On the
very day that I wrote this, the Japanese translator of The
Satanic Verses was found murdered, a week after a near-fatal
attack on the Italian translator of the same book. By the
way, the apparently opposite symptom of "sympathy"
for Muslim "hurt," voiced by the Archbishop of
Canterbury and other Christian leaders (verging, in the
case of the Vatican, on outright criminal complicity) is,
of course, a manifestation of the symptom we discussed earlier:
the delusion that faith, however obnoxious its results,
has to be respected simply because it is faith.
Murder
is an extreme, of course. But there is an even more extreme
symptom, and that is suicide in the militant service of
a faith. Like a soldier ant programmed to sacrifice her
life for germ-line copies of the genes that did the programming,
a young Arab or Japanese [??!] is taught that to die in
a holy war is the quickest way to heaven. Whether the leaders
who exploit him really believe this does not diminish the
brutal power that the "suicide mission virus"
wields on behalf of the faith. Of course suicide, like murder,
is a mixed blessing: would-be converts may be repelled,
or may treat with contempt a faith that is perceived as
insecure enough to need such tactics.
More
obviously, if too many individuals sacrifice themselves
the supply of believers could run low. This was true of
a notorious example of faith-inspired suicide, though in
this case it was not "kamikaze" death in battle.
The Peoples' Temple sect became extinct when its leader,
the Reverend Jim Jones, led the bulk of his followers from
the United States to the Promised Land of "Jonestown"
in the Guyanan jungle where he persuaded more than 900 of
them, children first, to drink cyanide. The macabre affair
was fully investigated by a team from the San Francisco
Chronicle (Kilduff and Javers, 1978).
Jones,
"the Father," had called his flock together and
told them it was time to depart for heaven.
"We're going to meet," he promised, "in another
place."
The words kept coming over the camp's loudspeakers.
"There is great dignity in dying. It is a great demonstration
for everyone to die."
Incidentally,
it does not escape the trained mind of the alert sociobiologist
that Jones, within his sect in earlier days, "proclaimed
himself the only person permitted to have sex" (presumably
his partners were also permitted). "A secretary would
arrange for Jones's liaisons. She would call up and say,
'Father hates to do this, but he has this tremendous urge
and could you please...?'" His victims were not only
female. One 17-year-old male follower, from the days when
Jones's community was still in San Francisco, told how he
was taken for dirty weekends to a hotel where Jones received
a "minister's discount for Rev. Jim Jones and son."
The same boy said: "I was really in awe of him. He
was more than a father. I would have killed my parents for
him." What is remarkable about the Reverend Jim Jones
is not his own self-serving behavior but the almost superhuman
gullibility of his followers. Given such prodigious credulity,
can anyone doubt that human minds are ripe for malignant
infection?
Admittedly,
the Reverend Jones conned only a few thousand people. But
his case is an extreme, the tip of an iceberg. The same
eagerness to be conned by religious leaders is widespread.
Most of us would have been prepared to bet that nobody could
get away with going on television and saying, in all but
so many words, "Send me your money, so that I can use
it to persuade other suckers to send me their money too."
Yet today, in every major conurbation in the United States,
you can find at least one television evangelist channel
entirely devoted to this transparent confidence trick. And
they get away with it in sackfuls. Faced with suckerdom
on this awesome scale, it is hard not to feel a grudging
sympathy with the shiny-suited conmen. Until you realize
that not all the suckers are rich, and that it is often
widows' mites on which the evangelists are growing fat.
I have even heard one of them explicitly invoking the principle
that I now identify with Zahavi's principle of costly authentication.
God really appreciates a donation, he said with passionate
sincerity, only when that donation is so large that it hurts.
Elderly paupers were wheeled on to testify how much happier
they felt since they had made over their little all to the
Reverend whoever it was.
5.
The patient may notice that the particular convictions that
he holds, while having nothing to do with evidence, do seem
to owe a great deal to epidemiology. Why, he may wonder,
do I hold this set of convictions rather than that set?
Is it because I surveyed all the world's faiths and chose
the one whose claims seemed most convincing? Almost certainly
not. If you have a faith, it is statistically overwhelmingly
likely that it is the same faith as your parents and grandparents
had. No doubt soaring cathedrals, stirring music, moving
stories and parables, help a bit. But by far the most important
variable determining your religion is the accident of birth.
The convictions that you so passionately believe would have
been a completely different, and largely contradictory,
set of convictions, if only you had happened to be born
in a different place. Epidemiology, not evidence.
6.
If the patient is one of the rare exceptions who follows
a different religion from his parents, the explanation may
still be epidemiological. To be sure, it is possible that
he dispassionately surveyed the world's faiths and chose
the most convincing one. But it is statistically more probable
that he has been exposed to a particularly potent infective
agent --- a John Wesley, a Jim Jones or a St. Paul. Here
we are talking about horizontal transmission, as in measles.
Before, the epidemiology was that of vertical transmission,
as in Huntington's Chorea.
7.
The internal sensations of the patient may be startlingly
reminiscent of those more ordinarily associated with sexual
love. This is an extremely potent force in the brain, and
it is not surprising that some viruses have evolved to exploit
it. St. Teresa of Avila's famously orgasmic vision is too
notorious to need quoting again. More seriously, and on
a less crudely sensual plane, the philosophy Anthony Kenny
provides moving testimony to the pure delight that awaits
those that manage to believe in the mystery of transubstantiation.
After describing his ordination as a Roman Catholic priest,
empowered by laying on of hands to celebrate Mass, he goes
on that he vividly recalls
the
exaltation of the first months during which I had the power
to say Mass. Normally a slow and sluggish riser, I would
leap early out of bed, fully awake and full of excitement
at the thought of the momentous act I was privileged to
perform. I rarely said the public Community Mass: most days
I celebrated alone at a side altar with a junior member
of the College to serve as acolyte and congregation. But
that made no difference to the solemnity of the sacrifice
or the validity of the consecration.
It
was touching the body of Christ, the closeness of the priest
to Jesus, which most enthralled me. I would gaze on the
Host after the words of consecration, soft-eyed like a lover
looking into the eyes of his beloved... Those early days
as a priest remain in my memory as days of fulfilment and
tremulous happiness; something precious, and yet too fragile
to last, like a romantic love-affair brought up short by
the reality of an ill-assorted marriage. (Kenny, 1986, pp.
101-2)
Dr.
Kenny is affectingly believable that it felt to him, as
a young priest, as though he was in love with the consecrated
host. What a brilliantly successful virus! On the same page,
incidentally, Kenny also shows us that the virus is transmitted
contagiously --- if not literally then at least in some
sense --- from the palm of the infecting bishop's hand through
the top of the new priest's head:
If
Catholic doctrine is true, every priest validly ordained
derives his orders in an unbroken line of laying on of hands,
through the bishop who ordains him, back to one of the twelve
Apostles... there must be centuries-long, recorded chains
of layings on of hands. It surprises me that priests never
seem to trouble to trace their spiritual ancestry in this
way, finding out who ordained their bishop, and who ordained
him, and so on to Julius II or Celestine V or Hildebrand,
or Gregory the Great, perhaps. (Kenny, 1986, p. 101)
It
surprises me, too.
4
Is Science a Virus?
No.
Not unless all computer programs are viruses. Good, useful
programs spread because people evaluate them, recommend
them and pass them on. Computer viruses spread solely because
they embody the coded instructions: "Spread me."
Scientific ideas, like all memes, are subject to a kind
of natural selection, and this might look superficially
virus-like. But the selective forces that scrutinize scientific
ideas are not arbitrary and capricious. They are exacting,
well-honed rules, and they do not favor pointless self-serving
behavior. They favor all the virtues laid out in textbooks
of standard methodology: testability, evidential support,
precision, quantifiability, consistency, intersubjectivity,
repeatability, universality, progressiveness, independence
of cultural milieu, and so on. Faith spreads despite a total
lack of every single one of these virtues.
You
may find elements of epidemiology in the spread of scientific
ideas, but it will be largely descriptive epidemiology.
The rapid spread of a good idea through the scientific community
may even look like a description of a measles epidemic.
But when you examine the underlying reasons you find that
they re god ones, satisfying the demanding standards of
scientific method. In the history of the spread of fait
you will find little else but epidemiology, and causal epidemiology
at that. The reason why person A believes one thing and
B believes another is simply and solely that A was born
on one continent and B on another. Testability, evidential
support and the rest aren't even remotely considered. For
scientific belief, epidemiology merely comes along afterwards
an describes the history o its acceptance. For religious
belief, epidemiology is the root cause.
5
Epilogue
Happily,
viruses don't win every time. Many children emerge unscathed
from the worst that nuns and mullahs can throw at them.
Anthony Kenny's own story has a happy ending. He eventually
renounced his orders because he could no longer tolerate
the obvious contradictions within Catholic belief, and he
is now a highly respected scholar. But one cannot help remarking
that it must be a powerful infection indeed that took a
man of his wisdom and intelligence --- President of the
British Academy, no less --- three decades to fight off.
Am I unduly alarmist to fear for the soul of my six-year-old
innocent?
Acknowledgement
With
thanks to Helena Cronin for detailed suggestion on content
and style on every page.
References
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Sir T. (1635) Religio Medici, I, 9
Dawkins, R. (1976) The Selfish Gene. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Dawkins, R. (1982) The Extended Phenotype. Oxford: W. H.
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Dawkins, R. (1989) The Selfish Gene, 2nd edn. Oxford: Oxford
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Text
taken from Dennett and His Critics: Demystifying Mind, ed.
Bo Dalhbom (Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell, 1993).