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Steven Pinker: Enlightenment optimist

"We need to concentrate our efforts on how things can go right,” says the Harvard professor

March 1, 2018 10:17
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5 min read

In a world seemingly drowning with negativity, Steven Pinker is that rare specimen, the eternal optimist. “I don’t like to call myself an optimist, but a possibilist,” the evolutionary psychologist explains.

His latest book, which he has been busily promoting in the UK, encapsulates this world view. Enlightenment Now: A Manifesto for Science, Reason, Humanism and Progress is his answer to the inevitability of entropy chaos and disorder overtaking the universe.

Pinker believes the notion of entropy gives human beings options. “Entropy is the realisation that because there are so many ways for things to be in a state of disorder, rather than order, by the laws of probability, all systems will tend towards disorder,” he explains from his study in Boston, where he is Johnstone Family Professor of Psychology at Harvard University. “That means that, without intervention of energy, or human intelligence, things fall apart: and it means that poverty, ignorance, and chaos are natural. By the laws of probability, everything will go wrong. But we need to concentrate our efforts on how things can go right.”

The book also attempts to restate the ideals of that progressive intellectual movement from 18th-century western Europe the Enlightenment — and give those ideals relevance for the present day. “My main aim with this book is to show that the world, including ourselves, is intelligible; that beliefs should be subjected to empirical testing, rather than deduced from an ideology; that the sweep of history since the Enlightenment has shown that the application of reason, and some of the values of science, have led to enormous improvements in human welfare that most people are unaware of.”

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