This is an era in which science is finally imposing its supremacy on the
lily-livered species that is man.
We've tried our emotion-based way of life for a little too long. We talk of
love and God as if they are tangibles.
But if a scientist can't see it, touch it, analyze it, and alter it, then
it isn't real.
Thankfully, we will soon all be wearing Google Glass and behaving like
automatons. Life will become rational and predictable. Safe, even. We need no
happily-ever-afters because we will simply keep on living in a timeless space.
Until the food runs out and the planet melts.
There is still a little work to be done before we reach Nirvana, so how can
we begin to adjust some of the extremities of human behavior that plague our
daily lives?
Oxford University researcher Kathleen Taylor believes that neuroscience can
begin to affect -- with a view to, perhaps, curing -- human beings of their most
extreme beliefs.
She gave a presentation this week at the U.K.'s Hay Festival -- the same
festival in which Google's Eric Schmidt warned that teenagers' mistakes would
live forever, thanks, in part, to Google.
As the Huffington Post reports, Taylor thinks that there are certain
beliefs that might soon be treated as illnesses.
She said: "Someone who has for example become radicalized to a cult
ideology -- we might stop seeing that as a personal choice that they have chosen
as a result of pure free will and may start treating it as some kind of mental
disturbance."
In her view, certain beliefs cause "a heck of a lot of damage."
She referenced not only religious fundamentalism -- specifically that of
Islam -- but also behavioral mores such as spanking children.
On hearing her words, some might venture that so many other seemingly
irrational (to some) beliefs -- such as Apple fanboyism or the idea that wearing
socks with sandals is somehow acceptable -- can be altered through
neuroscientific manipulation.
This is where the moral gradient becomes treacherous.
Who decides which beliefs are really doing "a heck of a lot of damage"?
What if those in power decide that everyone should now believe something
entirely different from their previous beliefs?
Taylor has been studying the ramifications of brainwashing for some time.
She refers to the brain as "that lump of blood-infused blancmange" that is every
day impacted by elements of persuasion.
She recognized this in an earlier article for the Huffington Post:
"Techniques created to heal can also be employed for other purposes, and the
ability to get data from living brains is a holy grail for many interested
parties other than neuroscientists and doctors."
It's often quite startling to see people alter their beliefs radically.
It might be a right-wing politician who suddenly supports gay marriage
because he discovers his own child is gay. Perhaps it's someone who survives a
serious illness and turns to religion in a far more committed manner.
Sometimes, we simply encounter people who change the way we see the world
because somehow their view makes a little more sense than ours.
The things we hold dearest can be beliefs that have simply been passed down
to us through generations.
The things we hold dearest might also (or, even, therefore) be the result
of a pathology, as much as an essence of our very being.
Part of the problem with attempting to cure us of some of our
fundamental(ist) beliefs is that we'll know it's happening. We'll know that
someone thinks there's something wrong with us.
And we all get very, very touchy when someone thinks we're not all there,
don't we?
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