Unwanted Unknowns

To be wrong

“What if everything you knew was wrong?”

Way back in the late 2000s, I began blogging on an independent website called Zaadz, later bought up and destroyed by the rapacious maw of the Gaia corporation. When still operational, they had a daily writing prompt and, on one occasion, it was the above question. I answered it as a serious inquiry (and I had another stab at it later on). But, at the time, in looking around at the responses of others, it became apparent that it was impossible for most people to even imagine this kind of a scenario or allow it into their mind.

Basically, such a level of skeptical doubt and contemplation requires an extreme degree of the personality trait ‘openness to experience’ (FFM). This specifically includes tolerance for uncertainty, ambiguity, and cognitive dissonance (i.e., low need for certainty and closure), as related to what artists and the literati like to call negative capability.

The problem for most people in the modern world is that we are under stress that is severe and chronic, systemic and cumulative. Many of us are near constantly exhausted, depleted, and overwhelmed by life, pushed to or beyond our limits. As research shows, that shuts down ‘openness’ and hence everything that goes with it, such as need for cognition along with intellectual curiosity and intellectual humility.

If ‘openness’ is really low, a question like the one above would simply be incomprehensible and uninteresting or else felt as an existential threat to identity and the social order. Many of the relatively more liberal-minded could at least think about the posed inquiry, but even most of them are significantly compromised in a society like this. They would less likely have the fuller cognitive complexity, cognitive flexibility, and perspective shifting to entertain radically challenging answers to the question.

A strong expression of ‘openness’ is a rare hothouse flower at present in the United States. It’s like trying to swim back to shore against the pull of a rip tide or rip current.

This feeds into our demoralizing sense of being stuck. It’s been said that it’s easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. If so, that is only true because of a collective lack of ‘openness’. It forces us into an oppressive condition of ideological realism, a hopeless state of fatalism. There seems to be no way out of the prison, in the minds of an increasing number of people, other than overthrowing or killing the guards and blowing it up.

That is why a significant portion voted for Donald Trump, as the same people often said they would’ve voted for Bernie Sanders. Anyone who offers them a way out (or merely pretends to) will be supported, no matter the means of escape (even if only into fantasy). What Trump proposed was that he’d throw a grenade into the bunker of power (The Fantasy of Creative Destruction); and, in a way, he kept his promise, if he also destroyed so much that was good and worthy in the process.

MAGA and DOGE is a greater blow to the American Empire than was the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the entirety of World War II. Ironically, the present ongoing dismantling and dysfunction may have cleared the stage to allow more people, if mostly Trump’s opponents and detractors, to embrace radical imagination. It’s why socialism is suddenly on the table again, with someone like Zohran Mamdani able to win a major election.

A poly-crisis and a meta-crisis

Some of it may only be out of desperation. When everything seems to be failing or else in the process of intentional destruction, when the personal stakes are high and the consequences harsh, people can become more willing to consider and try something else, anything else. It’s a public mood that hasn’t been seen in generations.

Authoritarian pseudo-centrism, propagandistic false equivalency, and malignant lesser evilism is dead and buried.

Whatever comes next, good or bad, will be entirely new. The problem is there are too few with enough ‘openness’ to help guide us through the wreckage and pitfalls, to shine a light on future possibilities and visions. Like Trump with populists and the GOP, Bernie Sanders (and AOC, etc) too has ended up always herding leftists strays and stragglers back into the fold of DNC corporatism and Zionism where any leftist promise is neutralized (Anti-Zionism, Like Anti-Fascism, is the Dividing Line of Our Age).

Such co-optation and recuperation needs to end, and it seems most Americans are coming around to realizing that is the case. The purpose of our thought experiment here, though, is not mainly political. We are considering ideology on a larger battleground.

My thoughts at present are closer to a more recent piece of mine (A Paradigm Shift of Paradigm Shifts). We are in the middle of a replication crisis across nearly every major field of research, development, and application. To put it simply, the beginning question isn’t rhetorical. We are literally facing a situation of mass ignorance, including among supposed experts and other authority figures, where we’re unsure that we actually know what we think we know.

Many perceived reputable and foundational studies that have upheld conventional views, standard practices, and established protocols for decades or generations, once retested, have been challenged or disproven in part or whole. Simply put, a surprising percentage don’t replicate.

We are teetering on a precipice. The replication crisis is just one of numerous uncertainties and catastrophes looming on the horizon. It’s not only a general meta-crisis as we are also, specifically, in an identity crisis, civilizational crisis, and existential crisis. But to be fair, it’s happened before (The Crisis of Identity). If total destruction isn’t inevitable, the world as we know it might collapse, whatever may or may not follow afterwards.

Yet most people are still going about their lives as if it will go on on forever, as if the ship will be righted at the last moment before sinking. Allowing existential doubt into consciousness is too scary.

Knowledge of knowledge, or lack thereof

It’s an interesting situation. And though dire, maybe not as hopeless as we think. Answers are within our reach, if we’d reach out to grasp them.

We do have enough knowledge — along with wealth, resources, expertise, and human potential — to solve numerous problems and remedy diverse harms, to save the world and create a utopia (or eutopia and protopia) for the entirety of global humanity. It’s true that our ignorance of the universe and everything in it is vast beyond what our knowledge will ever be, since ignorance (or rather potential knowledge) is infinite. But we have enough working knowledge to know how to improve things on a basic level that, at a human scale, could be transformative.

Our only limitation is our own psyches, specifically the conditions that suppress ‘openness’. Ironically, the very problems that could be solved by enough people with high ‘openness’ are the same problems that close down the human mind and constrains human behavior; hence, unleashing conservatism, right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), social dominance orientation (SDO), and dark triad or tetrad (Machiavellianism, narcissism, & psychopathy; + sadism). And the right-wing elites understand this and so never let off on the pressure of stress-induced and fear-riled manipulation, forcing us into a state of endless anxiety and alienation.

The ruling elite are playing a game of chicken as they hit the gas pedal to launch us full speed at a cliff edge. They’re betting that the rest of us will blink rather than wrestle the steering wheel out of their hands. Our aspiring overlords are deranged and destructive, not only to others but also to themselves.

These elite, like most people in the world today, are severely compromised. They too lack the cognitive abilities to understand the world and what they’re doing, maybe to a greater degree than any other elite in modern Western history or maybe all of world history. They’re merely clever monkeys who got their paws on some levers of power and now are jerking them around with amused and manic glee. They’ve convinced themselves they’re visionary geniuses; but so far, as inept chaos agents, they’ve only accomplished not-so-controlled demolition.

We can’t last much longer at this pace.

So, the problem is twofold. First, we really do lack knowledge to a tremendous degree. Future humans, if we are to survive as a species and a civilization, will look back upon our present crude and primitive brutality with amazement. They won’t be able to understand how we lasted as long as we did or why we allowed it to go on.

Then, second, it’s not only the knowledge that we know we lack or even don’t know we lack but also, more importantly, the knowledge we think we know yet don’t. We know neither the limitations of our knowledge nor the extent of our ignorance. Too often, we’re confident and cavalier where we should be cautious, and we’re dismissive and defensive where we need to be open to new information, theories, hypotheses, and avenues of research.

But most of the funding, drawn from the profits of capitalism, is funneled back into further studying the certainties and convictions, further confirming the biases and beliefs of conventional ‘wisdom’, much of it being false at best. Good money gets thrown after bad, in an endless attempt to maintain the system and the establishment.

We have the most well-backed ignorance of any generation. Most humans in the past were content with blind faith, whereas we moderns deny our faith is faith. In many cases, we’ve been spending generations of effort and trillions of dollars on red herrings that keep us misdirected and preoccupied. For stability, a known falsehood is safer than an unknown truth.

The example of allopathic medicine

That pointless waste and diversion is seen, for example, with research on cancer and Alzheimer’s that have gone down many blind alleys (genetic mutations, brain plaque, etc), if that’s finally beginning to change with younger generations of researchers proposing new hypotheses and protocols.

Part of the difficulty is that most of the focus has been on diagnosing patterns of symptoms, putting a label on them to create a false sense of certainty, and then treating those symptoms to ameliorate anxiety, but often in the process conflating an effect with the cause. Much of healthcare is simply the placebo effect, subject-expectancy effect, and Pygmalion effect.

It creates an illusion that, under the sway of official authority, causes us to sometimes be interpellated into symptom relief or sometimes even measurable improvements. We want to be the good patient who heals and so our body tries its best to conform to expectations or maybe assuage the doctor’s ego. For example, many medications work well when first introduced on the market — and heavily advertised in the U.S. — but lose their efficacy over time.

Thus, the big pharma has to constantly pump out new hyped-up drugs. That indicates much of their efficacy was never objectively real in the first place or at least was never solely and fully attributable to the medication itself. They’re placebos, at least partly

Heck, a placebo isn’t required. Research has found that simply going to a doctor’s appointment, even when the doctor takes no medical action at all, will tend to leave the patient feeling better about whatever ails them. That is to say, to put it colloquially, a significant part of modern medicine is faith healing, hence the importance of good bedside manner. That isn’t to wave healthcare away as having no value, but it does once again demonstrate how little we understand.

Obviously, beyond simple and straightforward issues, this kind of confidence game can only go so far in dealing with real world problems.

For many major diseases, similar to large-scale and convoluted messes in society, we still don’t know the fundamental causes. Typically, the potentially most fruitful research is being ignored because it doesn’t fit into the hegemonic paradigm, not to mention it usually being difficult and expensive with rare promises of it leading to a profitable product that can be quickly marketed for a guaranteed return on investment.

Considers Dr. Dale Bredesen’s protocol for Alzheimer’s that is based on the premise that there is no single disease (hence, why a cure has been so elusive), rather overlapping patterns of symptoms involving various systems that are being affected by diverse causes: toxicity, nutritional deficiencies, metabolic disorder, mitochondrial dysfunction, etc. So, the treatment is multi-factorial and personalized, but almost no one wants to offer funding for a larger study. The majority of research grants go to studies that are limited to single factors.

That is why allopathic medicine primarily involves either a chemical pill or invasive procedure used in a targeted fashion, usually where separate specialists are treating each health issue as if it were unrelated to all the rest other than concern about drug interactions. Whereas functional medicine looks at the whole body as an integrated system of systems, all operating within larger conditions and environments requiring the doctor to holistically consider the patient’s lifestyle, diet, living situation, workplace, social stressors, relationships, etc.

The inadequacy of the former is that, in people’s lives, there is no such thing as controlling everything but one isolated factor, symptom, or issue. This is why standard research doesn’t always translate well or else only applies partly and inconsistently. Much of healthcare is throwing darts. The doctor tries one thing after another to see what might happen, in the hope that something will eventually show benefit, if also side effects at the same time.

We’re good at dealing with single symptoms or single physiological mechanisms, sometimes with amazing results. The problem is that, when you change one thing, it pushes and pulls numerous other systems with complicated and cascading webs of effects. This is how patients end up with long lists of drugs where many of them are treating the side effects of the others.

The doctor is often working blind or else with only the capacity to get glimpses into this or that, but doing so might require more expensive tests than insurance will pay for or the patient can afford. Even then, trying to put all the pieces together to make sense of it might be a near impossible task. It’s similar to reverse engineering, the attempt to figure out what was a piece of technology and what it did by looking at the scattered parts found after an explosion.

Reductionism and capitalist realism

What reductionism doesn’t acknowledge is that the whole is greater than the parts. There might be no way to get back to a comprehension of the whole merely going by the parts, no matter how many parts one has. Humpty Dumpty can’t be put back together again. The only way to get to the whole is to start with the whole.

Falling short in this fashion is not only intrinsic to medicine but the whole scientific model that has dominated for centuries. It’s been about an atomistic and analytical approach where one tiny factor and causal mechanism is isolated. Without a doubt, the knowledge gained can be literally powerful (e.g., atomic bomb). Though this has some merit in advancing science, the largest and worst problems we’re facing aren’t amenable to such a limited strategy (e.g., anthropocene).

This leaves us in a state of utter cluelessness about the complex systems within systems and their vast number of dynamically and interactively moving parts (e.g., biosphere). Sadly, our obsession with individual bodies, isolated from the social sphere and separate from environments, has caused us to ignore individuals in actual practice of medicine where everyone is put into cookie cutter diagnoses and treatment protocols, largely because of the capitalist demands of bureaucratic healthcare systems and insurance companies.

Obviously, the failure with this approach is that, though it sometimes can be narrowly effective, it rarely promotes and re-establishes full physical health and flourishing, either for the individual or society, much less for the environment. It’s the difference between treating millions of lead-poisoned children and cleaning up the lead in the environment and preventing the lead pollution in the first place. It targets particular areas or individuals, but often with many potential side effects and long-term consequences or simply leaving the cause of the problem unresolved.

Most modern medicine is a blunt instrument, while what really need is multifactorial interventions, often at the level of public health or other governmental policies, programs, and practices. We need to flexibly combine the large-scale with the individualized, but at present we don’t typically get either. Instead, we end up with a muddled compromise that only has the benefit of increasing profits.

This is how the U.S. has ended up with one of the most expensive healthcare systems in the world that gets far worse outcomes than countries with universal healthcare.

The challenge, of course, is that doctor deals with patients who live in a society that is systematically destroying their health on a daily basis: trauma, inequality, poverty, debt, economic desperation, permanent underclass overwork, exhaustion, dependence on simulants and sleep aids, malnourishing food system, manipulative media, and on and on. In the worst situations, it’s all combined as shit life syndrome.

Most often, the doctor can’t or won’t bother to try to change those conditions as it would make them the enemy of the very system they serve and benefit from. They too are trapped in ideological realism that is entrenched in path dependence. Understandably, with learned helplessness as cogs in the machine, the average doctor would rather not think about it because then they’d feel miserable and guilty. No one wants to see themselves as the bad guy, as part of the problem.

There is no profit in researching, promoting, and enacting this other systemic, integralist, and comprehensive understanding. All the institutional incentives, in fact, indoctrinate those working within the system to put their heads down and pretend they don’t see the horror show all around them. So, doctors try their best to patch up their patients, lessen the symptoms, numb the pain, and send them back into the battle to be sacrificed for the greater cause of the elite games of wealth and power.

It’s like the ancient Roman physician working on gladiators who only needed to fix them up enough so that they could later put on a good fight and die in the arena, as the second part of bread and circus. Or think of the vet treating the cow so that it will soon be healthy enough to pass inspection and be turned into meat. Modern medicine doesn’t need to heal us, doesn’t need to help us thrive and flourish, doesn’t need to ensure we live up to our potential. All that’s required is, however suffering and short our lives may be, that we can be good workers for a few decades to keep the profits flowing into the private bank accounts of the capitalist class. But with AI and automatization, most of us might no longer even have that value.

Certainly, the purpose isn’t to save anyone, other than the middle-to-upper classes with the privileges and access to resources. What the hegemonic status quo requires is relatively healthy ruling and managerial elites to keep the system running and to keep the peasants in line.

Costs: externalized and socialized, immeasurable and unknowable

The scale of the problem is vast.

Public health relates to environmentalism, and the latter operates at a global scale (Environment-Caused Deaths: Who is Counting, and Who Counts). Such harms don’t respect national boundaries. But it’s at a local level that it’s immediately and personally experienced. The capitalist class is able to pick healthy environments for themselves and their families while concentrating the sickness and suffering on the exploited, oppressed, and disenfranchised (e.g., offshoring factories in foreign countries with weak regulations, consisting of populations that are mostly poor and brown).

Such externalized costs are a way of punishment and control, a means of disciplining the permanent underclass (Capitalism as Social Control). The costs, though harming all of society, are deemed a worthy investment by the plutocrats and oligarchs so as to maintain their power and privilege (Costs Must Be Paid: Social Darwinism As Public Good). But such ruling elites don’t really have a clue what they’re doing, don’t appreciate the full costs, especially not the extent to which it even harms them (Keith Payne, The Broken Ladder; Christopher Ryan, Civilized to Death; etc).

That is what makes unrecognized and unconscious ignorance so dangerous. Informed rational actors would never create, support, and defend a civilization this insane and self-destructive.

Consider that the greatest known cause of disease and death, about 40%, is pollution (Socialized Medicine & Externalized Costs). Not to mention all the other physical and mental health issues likewise caused or contributed to by it, with the problems incurred being spread unevenly. Living near an unregulated factory pumping out pollution would translate to far higher numbers — 80%? 90%? — of disabilities, diseases, and deaths related to pollution. If we reduced that single factor alone, all the costs of healthcare, sick days, lost pay, disability payments, psychiatric problems, orphaned children, etc would drop like a rock.

It probably would be a reduction of at least trillions of dollars that are presently wasted worldwide every year. The global GDP is over $100 trillion, while a UN report found that almost no major global industry is a net gain for society when environmental costs are included.

Then consider environmental costs are just one portion of costs typically that are overlooked and dismissed. The diverse costs are so numerous and immense that we don’t even know what it all adds up to, especially as most of the costs are being deferred onto ignored populations and future generations. How does one put a price tag on resource loss, mass extinction, ecosystem destruction, ecological collapse, climate change, refugee crises, environmental-caused civil conflicts, resource competition that causes wars, poisoned groundwater, escaped GM crops, and on and on? Not to mention annihilation of indigenous knowledge that might hold answers to present or future problems, diseases, etc.

Most of the causes of harm are collective or else privatized with externalized costs, as part of socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor. We not only get sick because of what the rich do (e.g., factories and farmers dumping chemicals into our public waterways and atmosphere) but then we have to pay the rich to treat our sickness. They get us coming and going, as we’re corralled down the chute of the slaughter house.

At the very least, all of this means the global externalized and socialized costs are greater than the global net GDP, indicating that our apparent civilizational progress is actually an overall decline since its unsustainable and eventually the bill will come due. Some of the consequences could last for hundreds or thousands of years and, in some cases, forever.

Ignorance is magnified by inequality

Yet we’re told we can’t afford universal healthcare, environmental protections, or any other form of public good. That everything that benefits the common people must be cut. That destruction of the natural world is an inevitable price to be paid. But maybe we can’t afford to not improve conditions for all, can’t afford continued indifference and inaction, can’t afford the status quo that brought us to this point of crisis.

Certainly, though our ignorance is immense, we know enough to realize that wisdom tells us to heed the precautionary principle. That is part of the point of contemplating the original question: “What if everything you knew was wrong?” If we took it seriously, we’d act far differently. We need to be humbled. Then we might recognize that most of these costs could be avoided. But none of that is possible under capitalist realism that offers false confidence, a mirage of experts in control.

This constrained worldview applies to everything else as well.

Because of the profit model, most R&D funding simply goes to ascertaining methods to more effectively manipulate the physical and human world, including the psyche: “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads,” said Jeff Hammerbacher, an early employee at Facebook. It’s practical knowledge of a sorts, but it offers nothing in terms of wisdom and value. It doesn’t tell us what we should or shouldn’t do, what are the consequences of what we do or don’t do (Jathan Sadowski, The Mechanic and the Luddite).

As such, we’re able to obtain natural resources and build a vast industrial and technological society. But the Cassandras of the world get little audience and traction, no matter how vast and obvious are the costs, no matter how the evidence piles up. We remain collectively ignorant while awash in more knowledge than has ever before existed.

The techno-optimists simply wave it all away with their grand visions and authoritative posturing. New innovations will magically solve all problems, as it’s claimed. This sense of faith is theological dogma, not a thoughtful assessment and clear-eyed conclusion. These ambitious elites have no interest in the petty concerns of the “reality-based community” because they make their own reality or so they believe. They’re idiots with too much power. But in the power disparity of dominance hierarchies, there is no one in a position to tell them they’re idiots to their faces.

That is the thing. Humans didn’t evolve to be scientific researchers, objective analysts, and rational actors. Nor did we evolve to to live under such freakishly abnormal conditions that disconnect us from reality, that alienate us from one another. Our ability to comprehend the world was shaped under much simpler conditions of evolution.

Maybe that is why, among tech giants, they start sounding rather religious in their prognostications, as a new breed of self-proclaimed prophets. Consider Peter Thiel who talks about the Anti-Christ and AI in a single breath. One gets the sense that he sees himself as a priest-godman who will capture and control these new demiurgic forces and redirect their power toward a grander vision of humanity, if many will have to be sacrificed in the process. In his case, that means techno-feudalism with a daker version of trickle-down.

Nothing about this is scientific and rational. Such people are madmen. But they wield an immensity and extent of power that no human before possessed.

Ruled by animism projected onto social constructions

The supernatural impulse never goes away. It just gets transformed. If we continue on this path… Machines are what we’ll worship in the future. Machines are what we’ll put our faith in to save us. This is naive, of course. It’s hubris. Yet we’re well on our way.

Animism is what we humans fall back on when complexity is too great for our minds.

One can sense that in our having given corporations legal ‘personhood’, to the point they have more rights, privileges, and protections than actual humans. As we once had god-kings and god-emperors, we now have god-corporations. This creeping animism is an undercurrent that we pretend isn’t there because we modern Westerners are supposed to be smarter and more sophisticated than the primitive, backwards cultures of the past.

We treat collective organizations and systems as if they have lives of their own, as if they’re inevitable and outside of our control. They’re greater than us, above and beyond us. We’re told that we have no choice but to relent to their claims and demands, that to reassert our own humanity would be morally wrong because property rights are the only rights that matter, hence property is all that matters, with violence against property being the greatest of crimes (e.g., the FBI designating Earth First as a terrorist group).

Disturbingly, instead of corporations being property, we are moving toward a neo-feudalism where we of the neo-serfdom will be beholden to corporations (Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash). Already, on social media and such, we the commoners are treated as products, not customers. They harvest our data, our attention, etc and then sell it to the highest bidder.

This is our inevitable fate, as long as capitalist realism continues to rule our lives and minds. As Margaret Thatcher put it, there is no alternative (TINA). That is what they want us to believe without question, that we’re trapped without an escape.

Capitalism has come to be treated more real than humans. It’s a hegemonic entity and immortal deity that, presumably, can’t be defied, thwarted, or killed. We have no choice, so we’re told, other than to submit and bow down to the system that stands far above us, that came before us and will continue long after us. That is literally true in the case of some corporations that have continued for generations at this point, something the American Anti-Federalists and other revolutionary radicals warned about based on their direct experience with the British East India Company.

This might be understood as a result of the modern disenchantment and rationalization of everything, as Max Weber argued. It has been denied that the world is alive, that the biosphere is a living system. This took the wind out of traditional religion that, until quite recently, treated nature as divine Creation. It might be filled with demons as well as angels but it was never doubted that it was filled with animate powers, beings, minds, and voices. It wasn’t limited to overtly animistic cultures like indigenous tribes, as it likewise remained a potent worldview among early modern Europeans.

This was the expression of an oral culture. It’s easy to forget that, until the past century, most people in the world were still illiterate or else barely literate (e.g., only able to write their signature and maybe read a simple sign). It’s interesting that we only finally achieved mass literacy at the very moment the literary paradigm had been toppled from its throne by photography, radio, film, and television; as explained by Walter Lippman’s Public Opinion, Jeff Jarvis’ Gutenberg Parenthesis, Marshall McLuhan’s global village, and Walter J. Ong’s secondary orality.

Other things likely contributed. One intriguing case in point is the transition in substance usage. Western animism largely disappeared, by the 1800s, when caffeinated beverages and other addictive stimulants finally replaced the traditional gruit ales that were sometimes mildly psychedelic, beyond that of alcohol as depressant (“Yes, tea banished the fairies.”).

The point is that we modern WEIRDos (or MYOPICS) are not normal. And the world we’ve collectively created should not be treated as normative.

Old wine in new wineskins

In any case, the point is that animism is likely the starting point and resting state of the human psyche. It’s the evolutionary norm.

The more deadened the natural world comes to feel, the more its essence is displaced by the human-made world. As with a golem or tulpa (e.g., Pinocchio), we bring a sense of life and vitality to what we fantasize about and focus on. We pour ourselves into what we obsess over. We create the monsters that haunt us and vampirically prey upon our life force, leaving us depleted.*

Animism has never gone away, however much it’s repressed and unappreciated. The repressed, as it’s been said, returns with a vengeance.

In this light, capitalism has become our religion, technology our gods, and the tech oligarchs our priestly class (Eugene McCarraher, The Enchantments of Mammon). While we peons are lost in confusion, our lords and masters tell us they have everything under control. They give us the myth of rational téchnē. But it’s really the rituals and magic of a priesthood.

The rational facade is constantly breaking down and the underlying animistic impulse is forever reasserting itself, whether or not we acknowledge it. In fact, it can operate all the more powerfully to the degree it dwells in the shadows, by remaining obscured and hidden in the unconscious.

In the Bronze Age, no language had a word for ‘religion’.

That is because they perceived nothing separate from or outside their shared and contained ideological worldview. They were at the center of their world. Often referring to themselves as ‘The People’, they took the world they knew as having been made for them, or else that they had been made out of it.

It was comprehensive and totalizing, making sense of every aspect of their world and lives — there were no parts left on the shop floor. When a social system of beliefs, values, and practices gets labeled as something distinct in itself and distinct from all else (e.g., religion), it’s already been weakened and so, to that degree, needs to be enforced from above (e.g., a theocratic priestly class).

That is why religions have been involved in so much mass bloodshed since the Axial Age Revolution. Different than the Bronze Age, later rulers could no longer completely depend on a people who organically conformed and submitted to a communal reality without doubt and question.

Nonetheless, though clearly declining after the Bronze Age collapse (approximately 1177 BCE), there lingered much of the archaic sensibility, identity, and culture: dividualism, animism, bicameral mentality, bundle theory of mind, and 4/5E cognition (embodied, embedded, enacted, & extended; + ecological). Being a transitional period made the ancient world dynamic. Boundaries were less hardened and rigidified. There was constant conversion between, mixing of, and influence by diverse groups that made different claims on identity and reality.

Everything more easily could shift and become something else. There was still some animistic dirt on the roots. In their reaction, the new and emboldened literary elite (e.g., Plato in Classical Athens) didn’t like that continued vitality of oral culture and so they were constantly trying to stamp it out. But it kept reemerging and resurging, until more fully being strangled into a coma millennia later during modernity.

That ancient syncretism of ideologies and clash of mentalities, with its creative flux (why it’s sometimes called the Axial Age revolution), was eventually replaced by the authoritarianism of religion proper — the new world religions. But that old time religion has been slowly dying out in recent history, generation after generation. Ironically, the weapon of murder was the Protestant reformation with its promotion of mass literacy.

The modern ruling elite have needed a more powerful theurgy of interpellation (i.e., indoctrinated mental capture). What makes both science and capitalism so compelling is that, like the Bronze Age religions (and, if to a lesser degree, the medieval Church), they’re totalizing; hence, why political totalitarianism proper didn’t appear until the 20th century. Even fundamentalists today feel compelled to rationalize their faith with pseudo-scientific Creationism, as did the fascists with eugenics. And of course, televangelism is among the most successful and profitable products on any capitalist market.

One may be an atheist, Christian, Buddhist, or whatever, etc. But no matter the specific group identifiers, significant or superficial, everyone under science and capitalism has no choice in the matter in the claims held over them. It’s a hegemonic ruling paradigm that contains and defines all else. The past century of totalitarianism has been the return of that archaic hunger to be fully immersed, the longing for the lost living divine that once inhabited direct experience (Hunger for Connection; & Music and Dance on the Mind).

This totalitarianism has been so effective and successful that most of us can’t recognize it. And there is a mindless comfort in willfully not recognizing it. This is the blindness of our mass ignorance. It gets mistaken for reality, like a mime who can’t find his way out of an invisible box.

*Side note

Julian Jaynes’ offered a similar explanation about egoic consciousness (i.e., individualism; or, more broadly, what Brian J. McVeigh called the ‘propertied self’). Schizophrenics, with weak egoic boundaries, often have near boundless energy. Jaynes postulated that may have been true of archaic humans (i.e., bicameral mind). It would explain why they were capable of architectural feats through methods forgotten after the Bronze Age collapse.

Maybe it wasn’t only lost knowledge — yet another example of our present ignorance — but also lost energy.

The new psychic structure required more energy usage. It could also explain why we hyper-egoic moderns with our obsessive individualism need constant intake of sugar and stimulants (caffeine, theobromine, nicotine, cocaine, meth, Ritalin, etc), for mere daily functioning, along with depressants (alcohol, l-theanine, opioids, semi-opioids like kratom, etc) to take off the edge from our exhausted and frazzled existence. We’re running on fumes.

The thick, rigid, and highly-controlled boundaries of egoic consciousness are energetically expensive. But it allows for a much more complex society with all its advantages and benefits. There appears to be a correspondence between the intricacy of societal structures and intricacy of the psychological structures. Considering our modern massive nation-states, empires, and geopolitical order, that would suggest an equally impressive socially constructed identity to match it, all of it internalized.

In contrast to modern WEIRD society, take the Old Kingdom of Egypt.

The archaic Egyptian population was relatively small (1.5-2 million; equivalent to present Phoenix AZ, Philadelphia PA, or San Antonio TX), was mostly spread out across small farms in rural areas, had multiple semi-autonomous regions (though technically unified), and had little infrastructure or technology (no paved roads, bridges, cranes, etc). They didn’t even have a large slave class at the time to sacrifice in back-breaking labor.

Instead, the Great Pyramids apparently were built by freely acting farmers in the off-season. Mostly using sheer manual labor, apparently combined with innovative thinking, they quarried and transported — from about 500 miles away — stones that weighed upwards of 80 tons (e.g., above the King’s Chamber in the Great Pyramid of Giza), all of which was amazingly positioned with exacting precision. We literally don’t know how they accomplished this exploit and no one has ever been able to repeat it or come close to it. In any case, the manpower used was immense.

To put it in context, the first crane that could lift 80 tons was the Grove TM 800 built in 1970.

Another point could be added. It’s not only lost technical knowledge and lost access to physiological energy. It seems to represent a loss of an entirely different way of being. Part of modern ideological realism is that it traps us in a narrow sense of self, maybe by design (Enclosure of the Mind; & Containment of Freedom). We built the trap and, after being lured into it, we forgot that it was a trap, something separate from us. It’s ideological realism as Stockholm syndrome.

The familiarity of this ignorant state is comforting to many. Or rather, like a straightjacket, it would be extremely uncomfortable to get out of it. It’s easier and more relaxing to just accept the constraints of one’s conditions and work within them. Being blind doesn’t feel so crippling when one has never known anything else, has never met anyone who could see, and couldn’t even imagine the possibility of sight.

The constraints and the fatigue feel natural. Even if we could escape, we are like the animal confined to a small cage since birth. Most of us have permanently lost our range of motion. The hobbling is built into our very developed self. And it’s hard to miss what you never knew.

Conclusion: What’s next?

Let’s return to the question we began with.

  • What if all that we’ve taken as true and real turned out to be some combination of false, misunderstood, inaccurate, partial, uncertain, questionable, confused, illusory, fantastical, delusional, deceptive, contrived, artificial, socially constructed, obfuscatory, mystifying, and alienating?
  • Could we, if only momentarily, drop our guard of ideological realism, essentialism, absolutism, and fatalism to allow into consciousness our own doubts, uncertainties, and ignorance, maybe to glimpse beyond the veil of our psychological defenses and ideological groupthink?
  • Could we sit naked before our own immediate experience of the world as terra incognito and see it with fresh eyes, to relax into that undefended state of unknowing so as to find out what we might discover, notice, and learn, even to be surprised or fall into awe?

But to my mind, that’s merely the first step. It clears the board to start again. It empties the cup to fill it with something else. To imagine having a false understanding then makes possible imagining a better understanding. It’s a hopeful exercise of radical imagination. Ultimately, it’s a contemplation of human potential.

What if you, humanity, and the world are vastly greater than you were taught and indoctrinated to believe?

Many would see this emphasis of challenging criticality as negative. It goes against the prevailing mythos of Whiggish progressivism and confident utopianism, that the world is continuously improving and progressing in a linear pathway. If with nicer garb, our society is still ruled by an ideology of Manifest Destiny and White Man’s Burden. It’s just now our paternalistic overlords are think tank intellectuals, technocratic politicians, philanthro-capitalists, and big tech broligarchs.

Still, even as we are free to challenge this claim of authority over us and over our imaginations, we don’t have to deny that the arc of history bends toward justice, though that arc may take a winding and halting path. Sometimes the only realistic and meaningful way to have optimism about the future is through pessimism of the present. We must be ruthless in clearing the way for more inspiring possibilities, for greater expressions of human potential.

If this is the best of all possible worlds, then we should abandon all hope. But this being the best it can get is a simplistic conclusion of shallow optimism. It seems unlikely and silly, the mere self-serving rationalization of small minds and corrupt power. It’s time to take on our responsibility as co-creators of the good society we’ve long aspired toward, however often it gets obscured and forgotten.

The challenge is, in order to move in the right direction, we first need to stop going in the wrong direction. We need to pause, take a breath, and look around us so as to reorient ourselves, to reestablish environmental awareness, to assess our situation. Scientifically speaking, that is the purpose of the default mode network, a more open and undirected focus. Think of daydreaming, meditating, or going for a walk in nature. It’s to loosen the grip of egoic consciousness, if but for a moment.

In the modern world, we’re almost always in directed attention and repeatedly drawn into hard fascination, from work to media that leaves us in directed attention fatigue. Driven by stress and anxiety, this results in irritability, impatience, anger, aggression, etc; but also it’s associated with addictive behavior. Basically, we’re always on edge and distracted, and so ever more dependent on substances and activities to calm us down or ramp our minds back up to regain focus, never reaching a point of balance.

There is little left over for involuntary attention, such as soft fascination and a flow state. Yet it’s precisely in this other open and relaxed mentality where our psyches can process more deeply and think divergently, can engender creative and innovative responses (attention restoration theory). Otherwise, we get stuck in ruts.

Fortunately, it’s easy to change this. First off, we need to become aware of the attentional economy and how it’s harming us (Johann Hari, Stolen Focus; Jonathan Haidt, The Anxious Generation; & Marc Berman, Nature and the Mind). Pulling back from distraction and sidestepping addiction, we need to reclaim our own minds, our own personal psychic space. We need to regain our sense of place in the world.

The only way to enter, embrace, and pass through uncertainty is by relaxing into it. We should befriend the darkness, grow accustom to it, and develop our night vision. We might begin to discern the outlines of something else. We might glimpse something in our periphery, something around the next corner. At the edge of what we’ve seen before, on the other side of the dim murkiness, there might be gallery of light. Or an opening onto a vista. Or multiple pathways that leads deeper into the woods.

But we’ll never know if we passively remain in place, mesmerized by the flickering shadows on the wall.

How is knowledge spread and made compelling?

Our friend over at the Open Society blog republished one of our pieces. He “edited out some of the bit about right-left brains.” And we were fine with that, as we understood his reasons. He said that, “I think this sort of dichotomy causes more misunderstandings for the average person than it clarifies.” And, “in order to keep this piece accessible to everyone, it’s better not to get into ongoing technical neuroanatomy debates here.”

We have no dispute with his choice of editing. It was just information and we like to share information, but it wasn’t even a part of the central text of what had been written. Still, it was important in a general sense, as background knowledge and explanatory context. In another comment, he brought up scientific illiteracy and the sorry state of (un-)education in this country. And we couldn’t disagree with any of that. But we responded back with some lengthy comments clarifying our position.

It’s not my first instinct to edit myself, as might be apparent to anyone reading my blog. I’m not always known for my concision. The idea of changing what I write based on the presumed level of knowledge of prospective readers isn’t exactly my style, not that I don’t understand the purpose of doing so. It’s not as if I never consider how others might read what I write, something I always try to keep in mind. I do want to communicate well. I’m not here to merely talk to myself. But thinking about it made me more self-aware of what motivates me in wanting to communicate.

We’re talking about not only knowledge but, more importantly, understanding and meaning, what forms our sense of shared reality and informs our sense of shared purpose. It’s an interesting and worthy topic to discuss. By the way, we felt like speaking in the plural for the introduction here, but the comments below are in first-person singular. These are taken from the Open Society blog with some revision. So, we’re republishing our comments to the republishing of our post. It’s almost like a conversation.

Before we get to our comments below, let us share some personal experience. When we were young, we had regular conversations with our father. He would always listen, question, elicit further thoughts, and respond. But what he never did was talk down to us or simplify anything. He treated us as if we were intellectual equals, even though obviously that wasn’t the case. He was a professor who, when younger, had found learning easy and rarely studied. He had obvious proof his intellectual abilities. We, on the other hand, always struggled with a learning disability. Still, our father instilled in us a respect for knowledge and a love of learning.

That is how we strive to treat all others. We don’t know if that is a good policy for a blog. Maybe that explains why our readership is so small. One could interpret that as a failure to our approach. If so, we fail on our own terms. But we hope that, in our good intentions, we do manage to reach some people. No doubt we could reach a larger audience by following the example of the Open Society blog. That blog is a much more finished product than the bare-bones text on offer here. So, maybe all my idealism is moot. That is an amusing thought. Then again, Open Society has republished other posts by us. So that is some minor accomplishment. Maybe those edited versions are an improvement. I’ll leave that for others to decide

* * *

Sadly, you’re probably right that science education is so pathetically deficient in this country that discussion of even something so basic as the research on brain hemispheres likely “causes more misunderstandings for the average person than it clarifies.” I wish that weren’t true.

Still, I’d encourage others to look into the science on brain hemispheres. I’d note that the views of Iain McGilchrist (and Julian Jaynes, etc) have nothing to do with the layman’s interpretation. To be honest, there is no way to fully understand what’s going on here without some working knowledge in this area. But the basic idea comes across without any of the brain science. Maybe that is good enough for present purposes.

I’m not entirely opposed to making material more accessible in meeting people where they are at. But hopefully, this kind of knowledge will become more common over time. It is so fundamental that it should be taught in high school science classes. My aspiration for my blog is to inspire people to stretch their minds and learn what might at first seem difficult or strange, not that I always accomplish that feat. Instead, I’m likely to talk over people’s heads or simply bore them.

It can be hard to express to others why something seems so fascinating to me, why it’s important to go to the effort of making sense of it. I realize my mind doesn’t operate normally, to put it mildly. But even with my endless intellectual curiosity, I have to admit to struggling with the science at times (to be honest, a lot of the times). So, I sympathize with those who lose interest or get confused by all the differing and sometimes wrongheaded opinions about brain hemispheres or whatever.

* * *

Scientific illiteracy is a problem in the US. And it’s an open secret. I’ve seen plenty of discussion of it over the years. It would help if there was a better education system and not limited to college. Remember that three quarter of Americans don’t have any college education at all. That is why educational reform would need to start with grade school.

Still, I don’t know what is the main problem. I doubt the average American is quite as ignorant as they get treated, even if they aren’t well educated. For example, most Americans seem to have a basic grasp of the climate crisis and support a stronger government response. It’s not as if we had more science classes that we’d finally get politicians on board. The basic science is already understood, even by those politicians who deny it.

Saying the public is scientifically illiterate doesn’t necessarily tell us much about the problem. I was reading a book about the issue of climate change in one of the Scandinavian countries. They have a much better education system and more scientific literacy. But even there, the author said that it’s hard to have an honest public debate because thinking about it makes most people feel uncomfortable, depressed, and hopeless. So people mostly just don’t talk about it.

Part of it goes back to cognitive dissonance. Even when people have immense knowledge on a topic, there remains the dissociation and splintering. People can know all kinds of things and yet not know. The collective and often self-enforced silencing is powerful, as Derrick Jensen shows. The human mind operates largely on automatic. By the way, the science of brain hemispheres can explain some of why that is the case, a major focus of Jaynes’ work.

What we lack is not so much knowledge about the world as insight and understanding about our own nature. We have enough basic working knowledge already to solve or lessen all of the major problems, if we could only get out of our own way. That said, we can never have too much knowledge and improving education certainly couldn’t hurt. We’re going to need the full human potential of humanity to meet these challenges.

* * *

Here is a thought. What if underestimating the public is a self-fulfilling prophecy? Paralyzing cynicism can come in many forms. And I know I’m often guilty of this. It’s hard to feel hopeful. If anything, hope can even seem naive and wrongheaded. Some argue that we’re long past that point and now it’s time for grieving lost opportunities that are forever gone. But even if we resign ourselves to mere triage, that still requires some basic sense of faith in the future.

I’m not sure what I think or feel about all of this. But what does seem clear to me is that we Americans have never fallen into the problem of overestimating the public. Instead, we have a disempowered and disenfranchised population. What motivation is there for the public to seek further knowledge when the entire system powerfully fucks them and their loved ones over and over again? What would inspire people to seek out becoming better informed through formal education or otherwise?

Knowledge matters. But the larger context to that knowledge matters even more. I don’t know what that means in practical terms. I’m just thinking the public should be given more credit, not so easily let off the hook. Even when public ignorance appears justified based on a failed education system or a successful non-education system, maybe that is all the more reason to hold up a high standard of knowledge, a high ideal of intellectual curiosity, rather than talking down to people and dumbing down discussion.

That isn’t to say we shouldn’t try to communicate well in knowing our audience. On many topics, it’s true that general knowledge, even among the elite, is limited at best and misinformed at worst. But the worst part is how ignorance has been embraced in so many ways, as if one’s truth is simply a matter of belief. What if we stopped tolerating this willful ignorance and all the rationalizations that accompany it. We should look to the potential in people that remains there no matter how little has been expected of them. We should treat people as intellectually capable.

Education is always a work in progress. Still, the American public is more educated today than a century ago. The average IQ measured in the early 1900s would be, by today’s standards of IQ testing, functionally retarded and I mean that literally (increases in IQ largely measure abstract and critical thinking skills). Few Americans even had high school degrees until the Silent Generation. Society has advanced to a great degree in this area, if not as much as it should. I worry that we’ve become so jaded that we see failure as inevitable and so we keep lowering our standards, instead of raising them higher as something to aspire toward.

My grandfather dropped out of high school. You know what was one of his proudest accomplishments? Sending two of his kids to college. Now kids are being told that education doesn’t matter, that college is a waste of money. We stopped valuing education and that symbolizes a dark change to the public mood. To not value education is to denigrate knowledge itself. This isn’t limited to formal education, scientific literacy and otherwise. I failed to get much scientific knowledge in high school and I didn’t get a college degree. Even so, I was taught by my parents to value learning, especially self-directed learning, and to value curiosity. I’ve struggled to educate myself (and to undo my miseducation), but I was inspired to do so because the value of it had been internalized.

The deficiency in education doesn’t by itself explain the cause. It doesn’t explain why we accept it, why we treat mass ignorance as if it were an inevitability. Instead of seeing ignorance as a challenge, as a motivation toward seeking greater knowledge, American society has treated ignorance as the natural state of humanity or at least the natural state of the dirty masses, the permanent underclass within the Social Darwinian (pseudo-)meritocracy. In this worldview, most people don’t merely lack knowledge but lack any potential or worth, some combination of grunt workers and useless eaters. What could shift this toward another way of seeing humanity?

* * *

I was wondering where knowledge is truly lacking, where curiosity about a topic is lacking, and where it matters most. Climate change is one topic where I do think there is basic necessary level of knowledge, most people have a fair amount of interest in it, and it obviously is important. What’s going on with the climate change ‘debate’ has to do with powerful interests controlling the reigns of power. If politicians did what most Americans want, we’d already be investing money and doing research to a far greater degree.

Ignorance is not the problem in that case. But it’s different with other topics. I’ve noticed how lead toxicity and high inequality maybe do more fall victim to ignorance, in that for some reason they don’t get the same kind of attention, as they aren’t looming threats in the way is climate change. In one post, I called lead toxicity a hyperobject to describe its pervasive invisibility. Temperature can be felt and a storm can be watched, but lead in your air, water, and soil comes across as an abstraction since we have no way to concretely perceive it. Even the lead in your child’s brain shows no outward signs, other than the kid being slightly lower IQ and having some behavioral issues.

Nonetheless, I’m not sure that is a problem of knowledge. Would teaching about lead toxicity actually make it more viscerally real? Maybe not. That’s a tough one. If you asked most people, they probably already know about the dangers of lead toxicity in a general sense and they already know about specific places where there are high rates, but they probably don’t grasp how widespread this is in so many communities, especially toxicity in general such as with toxic dumps. I don’t know what would make it seem more real.

Lead, as tiny particles, doesn’t only hide in the environment but hides in the body where it wreaks havoc but slowly and in many small ways. Your kid gets into a fight and has trouble at school. The first thought most parents have is simple concern for treating the behavior and the hurt the child is expressing. It doesn’t usually occur that there might be something damaging their child’s brain, nervous system, etc. All the parent sees is the result of changes in their child’s behavior. Knowledge, on the personal level, may or may not help that parent. Lead toxicity is often a larger environmental problem. What is really needed is a change of public policy. That would require not only knowledge, as politicians probably already know of this problem, but some other force of political will in the larger society. But since it’s mostly poor people harmed, nothing is done.

It’s hard to know how knowledge by itself makes a difference. It’s not as if there haven’t been major pieces on lead toxicity published in the mainstream media, some of them quite in depth. But the reporting on this comes and goes. It’s quickly forgotten again, as if it were just some minor, isolated problem of no greater concern. There definitely is no moral panic about it. Other than a few parents in poor communities that live with most severe consequences, it isn’t even seen as a moral issue at all.

That is what seems lacking, a sense of moral outrage and moral responsibility. I guess that is where, in my own thinking, self-understanding comes in. Morality is a deeper issue. Some of these thinkers on the mind and brain (McGilchrist, Jaynes, etc) are directly touching upon what makes the heart of morality beat. It’s not about something like brain hemispheres understood in isolation but how that relates to consciousness and identity, relates to the voices we listen to and the authority they hold. And, yes, this requires understanding a bit of science. So, how do we make this knowledge accessible and compelling, how do we translate it into common experience?

Take the other example. What about high inequality? In a way, it’s a hot topic and has grabbed public attention with Thomas Picketty, Kate Pickett, and Richard Wilkinson. Everyone knows it’s a problem. Even those on the political right are increasingly acknowledging it, such as the recent book Alienated America by the conservative Timothy Carney who works for a right-wing think tank. The knowledge is sort of there and yet not really. Americans, in theory, have little tolerance for high inequality. The problem is that, as the data shows, most Americans simply don’t realize how bad it’s gotten. Our present inequality is magnitudes beyond what the majority thinks should be allowable. Yet we go on allowing it. More knowledge, in that case, definitely would matter. But without the moral imperative, the sense of value of that knowledge remains elusive.

As for brain hemispheres, I suppose that seems esoteric to the average person. Even most well-educated people don’t likely take it seriously. Should they? I don’t know. It seems important to me, but I’m biased as this is an area of personal interest. I can make an argument that this kind of thing might be among the most important knowledge, since it cuts to the core of every other problem. Understanding how our brain-mind works underlies understanding anything and everything else, and it would help to explain what is going so wrong with the world in general. Knowledge of the brain-mind is knowledge about what makes knowledge possible at all, in any area. I suspect that, as long as our self-knowledge is lacking, to that degree any attempt at solving problems will be impotent or at least severely crippled.

Would discussing more about brain hemispheres and related info in the public sphere help with the situation? Maybe or maybe not. But it seems like the type of thing we should be doing, in raising the level of discussion in general. Brain research might not be a good place to start with our priorities. If so, then we need to find how to promote greater psychological and neurocognitive understanding in some other way. This is why I’m always going on about Jaynes, even though he seems like an obscure thinker. In my opinion, he may be one of the most important thinkers in the 20th century and his theories might hold the key to the revolution of the mind that we so sorely need. Then again, I could be giving him too much praise. It’s just that I doubt the world would be worse off for having more knowledge of this variety, not just knowledge but profound insight.

All in all, it’s a tough situation. Even if Jaynes’ book was made required reading in every school, I don’t know that would translate to anything beneficial. It would have to be part of a larger public debate going on in society. Before that can happen, we will probably need to hit a crisis that reaches the level of catastrophe. Then moral panic will follow and, assuming we avoid the disaster of authoritarianism, we might finally be able to have some serious discussion across society about what matters most. I guess that goes back to the context of knowledge, that which transmutes mere info into meaning.

* * *

Here is an interesting question. How does knowledge become common knowledge? That relates to what I mentioned in another comment. How does knowledge become meaning? Or to put it another way: How does the abstract become concretely, viscerally, and personally real? A lot of knowledge has made this shift. So much of the kind of elite education that once would have been limited to aristocracy and monks has now become increasingly common. Not that long ago, most Americans were illiterate and had next to no education. Or consider, as I pointed out, how the skills of abstract and critical thinking (fluid intelligence) has increased drastically.

We can see this in practical ways. People in general have more basic knowledge about the world around them. When Japan attacked, most Americans had little concept of where Japan was. We like to think American’s grasp of geography is bad and it may be, but it used to be far worse. Now most people have enough knowledge to, with some comprehension, follow a talk or read an article on genetics, solar flares, ocean currents, etc. We’ve become a scientific-minded society where there is a basic familiarity. It comes naturally to think about the world in scientific terms, to such extent that we now worry about scientific reductionism. No one worried about society being overtaken by scientific reductionism centuries ago.

Along with this, modern people have become more psychologically-minded. We think in terms of consciousness and unconsciousness, motives and behavior, cognitive biases and mental illnesses, personality traits and functions, and on and on. We have so internalized psychological knowledge that we simply take it for reality now. It’s similar with sociology. The idea of race as a social construction was limited to the rarified work of a few anthropologists, but now this is a common understanding that is publicly debated. Even something as simple as socioeconomic classes was largely unknown in the past, as it wasn’t how most people thought. My mother didn’t realize she was part of a socioeconomic class until she went to college and was taught about it in a sociology class.

That is what I’m hoping for, in terms of brain research and consciousness studies. This kind of knowledge needs to get over the hurdle of academia and spread out into the public mind. This is already happening. Jaynes’ ideas influenced Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials which has been made into an HBO show. His ideas were directly discussed in another HBO show, Westworld, and caused a flurry of articles in the popular media. He also influenced Neal Stephenson in writing Snow Crash, also being made into a show, originally planned by Netflix but now picked up by HBO. I might take the superficial view of brain hemispheres as a positive sign. It means the knowledge is slowly spreading out into the general public. It’s an imperfect process and initially involves some misinformation, but that is how all knowledge spreads. It’s nothing new. For all the misinformation, the general public is far less ignorant about brain hemispheres than they were 50 years ago or a hundred years ago.

Along with the misinformation, genuine information is also becoming more common. This will eventually contribute to changing understandings and attitudes. Give it a generation or two and I’m willing to bet much of what McGilchrist is talking about will have made that transition into common knowledge in being incorporated into the average person’s general worldview. But it’s a process. And we can only promote that process by talking about it. That means confronting misinformation as it shows up, not avoiding the topic for fear of misinformation. Does that make sense?

Death By Incuriosity

Whether or not curiosity killed the cat, it is the lack of curiosity that killed the human. And sadly, lack of curiosity is common among humans, if not cats.

There are two people I’ve known my entire life. They are highly intelligent and well educated professionals, both having spent their careers as authority figures and both enjoying positions of respect where others look up to them. One worked in healthcare and the other in higher education. They are people one would expect to be curious and I would add that both have above average intellectual capacity. They are accomplished men who know how to get things done.

I pick these examples because each has had health issues. It’s actually the one in healthcare who has shown the least curiosity about his own health. I suspect this is for the very reason he has been an authority figure in healthcare and so has acted in the role of defending establishment views. And nothing kills curiosity quicker than conventional thought.

This guy didn’t only lack curiosity in his own field of expertise, though. In general, he wasn’t one who sought out learning for its own sake. He had no habit of intellectual inquiry. So, he had no habit of intellectual curiosity to fall back on when he had a health scare. The bad news he received was a diagnosis of a major autoimmune disorder. I would assume that he took this as a death sentence and most doctors treat it that way, as no medication has shown any significant improvement. But recent research has shown dietary, nutritional, and lifestyle changes that have reversed the symptoms even in people with somewhat advanced stages of this disease.

Once diagnosed, he was already beginning to show symptoms. He had a brief window to respond during which he maintained his faculties enough that he might have been able to take action to seek remedy or to slow down the decline. But this window turned out to be brief and the choice he made was to do nothing with some combination of denial and fatalism. Inevitably, this attitude became a self-fulfilling prophecy. It was not the diagnosis but his lack of curiosity that was the death sentence. His mind is quickly disintegrating and he won’t likely live long.

The second guy has a less serious diagnosis. He a fairly common disease and he has known about it for a couple of decades. It is one of those conditions more easily managed if one takes a proactive attitude. But that would require curiosity to learn about the condition and to learn about what others have successfully done in seeking healing. The body will eliminate damage and regrow cells when the underlying problems are resolved or lessened while ensuring optimal nutrition and such, not that one is likely to learn about any of this from a standard doctor.

Like the healthcare figure, this educational figure’s first response was not curiosity. In fact, he spent the past couple of decades not even bothering to ask his doctor what exactly was his condition. He didn’t know how bad it was, didn’t know whether it was worsening or remaining stable. He apparently didn’t want to know. He has a bit more curiosity than most people, although it tends to be on narrow issues, none of them being health-related. The condition he has that risks the length and quality of his life, however, elicited no curiosity.

I had more opportunity to speak to him than to the other guy. In the past few months, we’ve had an ongoing discussion about health. I recently was able to get him to read about diet and health. But the real motivation was that his doctor told him to lose weight. Also, he was beginning to see serious symptoms of aging, from constant fatigue to memory loss. It was only after decades of major damage to his body that he finally mustered up some basic curiosity and still he is resistant. It’s easier to thoughtlessly continue what one has always done.

I sympathize and I don’t. Not much in our society encourages curiosity. I get that. It not only takes effort to learn but it also takes risk. Learning can require challenging what you and many others have assumed to be true. In this case, it might even mean challenging your doctor and taking responsibility for your own healthcare decisions. Maybe because these two are authority figures, it is their learned response to defer to authority and any dominant views that stand in for authority. That is the same for others as well. We are all trained from a young age to defer to authority (even if you were raised by wolves, you received such training, as it is a common feature of all social animals).

So, yes, I understand it is difficult and uncomfortable. Some people would rather physically die than allow their sense of identity die. And for many, their identities are tied into a rigid way of being and belonging. Curiosity might lead one to question not only the ideological beliefs and biases of others but, more importantly, one’s own. It could mean changing one’s identity and that is the greatest threat of all, something that effects me as much as anyone (but in my case, I’m psychologically attached to curiosity and so my identity might be a bit more fluid than most; the looseness of ego boundaries does come at a cost, as is attested by the psychiatric literature).

Yet, in the end, it is hard for me to grasp this passive attitude. I’ve always been questioning and so I can’t easily imagine being without this tendency (I have many weaknesses, limitations, and failures; but a lack of curiosity is not one of them). I do know what it is like to be ignorant and to feel lost in having no where to turn for guidance. In the past, knowledge was much harder to come by. When I was diagnosed with depression decades ago, after my own life threatening situation (i.e., suicide attempt), I was offered no resources to understand my condition. The reason for that is, at the time, doctors were as ignorant as anyone else when it came to depression and so much else. High quality information used to be a scarce and unreliable resource.

It has turned out that much of past medical knowledge has proven wrong, only partly correct, or misinterpreted. Because of the power of the internet and social media, this has forced open professional and public debate. We suddenly find ourselves in an overabundance of knowledge. The lack of curiosity is the main thing now holding us back, as individuals and as a society. Still, that downplays the powerful psychological and social forces that keep people ignorant and incurious. For the older generations in particular, they didn’t grow up with easy access to knowledge and so now reaching old age they don’t have a lifetime of mental habit in place.

That is part of the difference. I’m young enough that the emerging forms of knowledge and media had a major impact on my developing brain and my developing identity. On the other hand, there is obviously more going on than mere generational differences. I look to my own generation and don’t see much more curiosity. I know people in my generation who have major health issues and their children have major health issues. Do most of these people respond with curiosity? No. Instead, I observe mostly apathy and indifference. There is something about our society that breeds helplessness, and no doubt there are plenty of reasons to be found for giving up in frustration.

That is something I do empathize with. There is nothing like decades of depression to form an intimacy with feelings of being powerless and hopeless. Nonetheless, I spent the decades of my depression constantly looking for answers, driven to question and doubt everything. I should emphasize the point that answers didn’t come easily, as it took me decades of research and self-experimentation to find what worked for me in dealing with my depression; curiosity of this variety is far from idle for it can be an immense commitment and investment.

My longing to understand never abandoned me, as somehow it was a habit I learned at a young age. That leaves me uncertain about why I learned that habit of open-minded seeking while most others don’t. It’s not as if I can take credit for my state of curiosity, as it is simply the way I’ve always been (maybe in the way an athlete, for random reasons of genetics and epigenecs, might be born with greater lung capacity and endurance). Even in my earliest memories, I was curious about the world. It is a defining feature of my identity, not an achievement I came to later in life.

Because it is so integral to my identity, I’m challenged to imagine those who go through life without feeling much inclination to question and doubt (as happier people may be challenged to imagine my sometimes paralyzing funks of depression). It is even further beyond my comprehension that, for many, not even the threat of death can inspire the most basic curiosity to counter that threat. How can death be more desirable than knowledge? That question implies that it is knowledge that is the greater threat. Put this on the level of national and global society and it becomes an existential threat. In facing mass extinction, ecosystem collapse, superstorms, and refugee crises, most humans are no more motivated to understand what we face, much less motivated to do anything about it.

We don’t have habits of curiosity. It isn’t our first response, not for most of us. And so we have no culture of curiosity, no resources of curiosity to turn to when times are dire. More than a lack of curiosity alone, it is a lack of imagination which is a constraint of identity. We can’t learn anything new without becoming something different. Curiosity is one of the most radical of acts. It is also the simplest of acts, requiring only a moment of wonder or probing uncertainty. But radical or simple, repeated often enough, it becomes a habit that might one day save your life.

Curiosity as an impulse is only one small part. The first step is admitting your ignorance. And following that, what is required is the willingness to remain in ignorance for a while, not grasping too quickly to the next thing that comes along, no matter who offers it with certainty or authority. You might remain in ignorance for longer than you’d prefer. And curiosity alone won’t necessarily save you. But incuriosity for certain will doom you.

* * *

For anyone who thinks I’m being mean-spirited and overly critical, I’d note that I’m an equal opportunity critic. I’ve written posts — some of my most popular posts, in fact — that have dissected the problems of the curious mind, specifically as liberal-mindedness such as seen with the trait openness. The downside to this mindset are many, as it true when considering any mindset taken in its fullest and most extreme form. For example, those who measure high on the openness trait have greater risk of addiction, a far from minor detriment. Curiosity and related attributes don’t always lead to beneficial results and happy ends. But from my perspective, it is better than the alternative, especially in these challenging times.

My argument, of course, is context-dependent. If you are living in an authoritarian state or locked away in prison, curiosity might not do you much good and instead might shorten your lifespan. So, assess your personal situation and act accordingly. If it doesn’t apply, please feel free to ignore my advocating for curiosity. My assumption that my audience shares with me a basic level of life conditions isn’t always a justified assumption. I apologize to anyone who finds themselves stuck in a situation where curiosity is dangerous or simply not beneficial. You have my sympathy and I hope things get better for you in that one day you might have the luxury to contemplate the pros and cons of curiosity.

I realize that life is not fair and that we don’t get to choose the world we are born into. If life was fair, a piece like this would be unnecessary and meaningless. In a society where we didn’t constantly have to worry about harmful advice, including from doctors, in a society where health was the norm, curiosity might not matter much in terms of life expectancy. The average hunter-gatherer no doubt lacks curiosity about their health, but they also lack the consequences of modern society’s unhealthy environment, lifestyle, and diet. As such, in some societies, how to have a healthy life is common knowledge that individuals pick up in childhood.

It would be wonderful to live in such a society. But speaking for myself, that isn’t the case and hence it is why I argue for the necessity of curiosity as a survival tool. Curiosity is only a major benefit where dangerous ignorance rules the social order and, until things change in this society, that major benefit will continue. This isn’t only about allegations of psychological weakness and moral failure. This is about the fate of our civilization, as we face existential crises. The body count of incuriosity might eventually be counted in the numbers of billions. We are long past the point of making excuses, specifically those of us living in relative privilege here in the West.

* * *

To make this concrete, let me give an example beyond anecdotal evidence. It is an example related to healthcare and deference to medical authority.

The United States is experiencing an opioid crisis. There are many reasons for this. Worsening inequality, economic hardship, and social stress are known contributors. We live in a shitty society that is highly abnormal, which is to say we didn’t evolve to act in healthy ways under unhealthy conditions. But there is also the fact that opiods have been overprescribed because of the huge profits to be had and also because painkillers fit conventional medicine’s prioritizing of symptom treatment.

Ignoring why doctors prescribe them, why do people take them? Everyone knows they are highly addictive and, in a significant number of cases, can destroy lives. Why take that risk unless absolutely necessary? It goes beyond addiction, as there are numerous other potential side effects. Yet, in discussing alternatives, Dr. Joseph Mercola points to an NPR piece (Jessica Boddy, POLL: More People Are Taking Opioids, Even As Their Concerns Rise):

“Indeed, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention note that as many as 1 in 4 people who use opioid painkillers get addicted to them. But despite the drugs’ reputation for addiction, less than a third of people (29 percent) said they questioned or refused their doctor’s prescription for opioids. That hasn’t changed much since 2014 (28 percent) or 2011 (31 percent).

“Dr. Leana Wen, an emergency physician and commissioner of health for the City of Baltimore, says that’s the problem. She says patients should more readily voice their concerns about getting a prescription for narcotics to make sure if it really is the best option. […]

” “Ask why,” Wen says. “Often, other alternatives like not anything at all, taking an ibuprofen or Tylenol, physical therapy, or something else can be effective. Asking ‘why’ is something every patient and provider should do.” ”

* * *

“Knowing is half the battle. G.I. Joe!” That was great wisdom I learned as a child.

Fantasyland, An American Tradition

“The American experiment, the original embodiment of the great Enlightenment idea of intellectual freedom, every individual free to believe anything she wishes, has metastasized out of control. From the start, our ultra-individualism was attached to epic dreams, sometimes epic fantasies—every American one of God’s chosen people building a custom-made utopia, each of us free to reinvent himself by imagination and will. In America those more exciting parts of the Enlightenment idea have swamped the sober, rational, empirical parts.”
~ Kurt Andersen, Fantasyland

It’s hard to have public debate in the United States for a number of reasons. The most basic reason is that Americans are severely uninformed and disinformed. We also tend to lack a larger context for knowledge. Historical amnesia is rampant and scientific literacy is limited, exacerbated by centuries old strains of anti-intellectualism and dogmatic idealism, hyper-individualism and sectarian groupthink, public distrust and authoritarian demagoguery.

This doesn’t seem as common in countries elsewhere. Part of this is that Americans are less aware and informed about other countries than the citizens of other countries are of the United States. Living anywhere else in the world, it is near impossible to not know in great detail about the United States and other Western powers as the entire world cannot escape these influences that cast a long shadow of colonial imperialism, neoliberal globalization, transnational corporations, mass media, monocultural dominance, soft power, international propaganda campaigns during the Cold War, military interventionism, etc. The rest of the world can’t afford the luxury of ignorance that Americans enjoy.

Earlier last century when the United States was a rising global superpower competing against other rising global superpowers, the US was known for having one of the better education systems in the world. International competition motivated us in investing in education. Now we are famous for how pathetic recent generations of students compare to many other developed countries. But even the brief moment of seeming American greatness following World War II might have had more to do with the wide scale decimation of Europe, a temporary lowering of other developed countries rather than a vast improvement in the United States.

There has also been a failure of big biz mass media to inform the public and the continuing oligopolistic consolidation of corporate media into a few hands has not allowed for a competitive free market to force corporations to offer something better. On top of that, Americans are one of the most propagandized and indoctrinated populations on the planet, with only a few comparable countries such as China and Russia exceeding us in this area.

See how the near unanimity of the American mass media was able, by way of beating the war drum, to change majority public opinion from being against the Iraq War to being in support of it. It just so happens that the parent companies of most of the corporate media, with ties to the main political parties and the military-industrial complex, profits immensely from the endless wars of the war state.

Corporate media is in the business of making money which means selling a product. In late stage capitalism, all of media is entertainment and news media is infotainment. Even the viewers are sold as a product to advertisers. There is no profit in offering a public service to inform the citizenry and create the conditions for informed public debate. As part of consumerist society, we consume as we are consumed by endless fantasies, just-so stories, comforting lies, simplistic narratives, and political spectacle.

This is a dark truth that should concern and scare Americans. But that would require them to be informed first. There is the rub.

Every public debate in the United States begins with mainstream framing. It requires hours of interacting with a typical American even to maybe get them to acknowledge their lack of knowledge, assuming they have the intellectual humility that makes that likely. Americans are so uninformed and misinformed that they don’t realize they are ignorant, so indoctrinated that they don’t realize how much their minds are manipulated and saturated in bullshit (I speak from the expertise of being an American who has been woefully ignorant for most of my life). To simply get to the level of knowledge where debate is even within the realm of possibility is itself almost an impossible task. To say it is frustrating is an extreme understatement.

Consider how most Americans know that tough-on-crime laws, stop-and-frisk, broken window policies, heavy policing, and mass incarceration were the cause of decreased crime. How do they know? Because decades of political rhetoric and media narratives have told them so. Just as various authority figures in government and media told them or implied or remained silent while others pushed the lies that the 9/11 terrorist attack was somehow connected to Iraq which supposedly had weapons of mass destruction, despite that the US intelligence agencies and foreign governments at the time knew these were lies.

Sure, you can look to alternative media for regularly reporting of different info that undermines and disproves these beliefs. But few Americans get much if any of their news from alternative media. There have been at least hundreds of high quality scientific studies, careful analyses, and scholarly books that have come out since the violent crime decline began. This information, however, is almost entirely unknown to the average American citizen and one suspects largely unknown to the average American mainstream news reporter, media personality, talking head, pundit, think tank hack, and politician.

That isn’t to say there isn’t ignorance found in other populations as well. Having been in the online world since the early naughts, I’ve met and talked with many people from other countries and admittedly some of them are less than perfectly informed. Still, the level of ignorance in the United States is unique, at least in the Western world.

That much can’t be doubted. Other serious thinkers might have differing explanations for why the US has diverged so greatly from much of the rest of the world, from its level of education to its rate of violence. But one way or another, it needs to be explained in the hope of finding a remedy. Sadly, even if we could agree on a solution, those in power benefit too greatly from the ongoing state of an easily manipulated citizenry that lacks knowledge and critical thinking skills.

This isn’t merely an attack on low-information voters and right-wing nut jobs. Even in dealing with highly educated Americans among the liberal class, I rarely come across someone who is deeply and widely informed across various major topics of public concern.

American society is highly insular. We Americans are not only disconnected from the rest of the world but disconnected from each other. And so we have little sense of what is going on outside of the narrow constraints of our neighborhoods, communities, workplaces, social networks, and echo chambers. The United States is psychologically and geographically segregated into separate reality tunnel enclaves defined by region and residency, education and class, race and religion, politics and media.

It’s because we so rarely step outside of our respective worlds that we so rarely realize how little we know and how much of what we think we know is not true. Most of us live in neighborhoods, go to churches and stores, attend or send our kids to schools, work and socialize with people who are exactly like ourselves. They share our beliefs and values, our talking points and political persuasion, our biases and prejudices, our social and class position. We are hermetically sealed within our safe walled-in social identities. Nothing can reach us, threaten us, or change us.

That is until something happens like Donald Trump being elected. Then there is a panic about what has become of America in this post-fact age. The sad reality, however, is America has always been this way. It’s just finally getting to a point where it’s harder to ignore and that potential for public awakening offers some hope.

* * *

Fantasyland
by Kurt Anderson
pp. 10-14

Why are we like this?

. . . The short answer is because we’re Americans, because being American means we can believe any damn thing we want, that our beliefs are equal or superior to anyone else’s, experts be damned. Once people commit to that approach, the world turns inside out, and no cause-and-effect connection is fixed. The credible becomes incredible and the incredible credible.

The word mainstream has recently become a pejorative, shorthand for bias, lies, oppression by the elites. Yet that hated Establishment, the institutions and forces that once kept us from overdoing the flagrantly untrue or absurd—media, academia, politics, government, corporate America, professional associations, respectable opinion in the aggregate—has enabled and encouraged every species of fantasy over the last few decades.

A senior physician at one of America’s most prestigious university hospitals promotes miracle cures on his daily TV show. Major cable channels air documentaries treating mermaids, monsters, ghosts, and angels as real. A CNN anchor speculated on the air that the disappearance of a Malaysian airliner was a supernatural event. State legislatures and one of our two big political parties pass resolutions to resist the imaginary impositions of a New World Order and Islamic law. When a political scientist attacks the idea that “there is some ‘public’ that shares a notion of reality, a concept of reason, and a set of criteria by which claims to reason and rationality are judged,” colleagues just nod and grant tenure. A white woman felt black, pretended to be, and under those fantasy auspices became an NAACP official—and then, busted, said, “It’s not a costume…not something that I can put on and take off anymore. I wouldn’t say I’m African American, but I would say I’m black.” Bill Gates’s foundation has funded an institute devoted to creationist pseudoscience. Despite his nonstop lies and obvious fantasies—rather, because of them—Donald Trump was elected president. The old fringes have been folded into the new center. The irrational has become respectable and often unstoppable. As particular fantasies get traction and become contagious, other fantasists are encouraged by a cascade of out-of-control tolerance. It’s a kind of twisted Golden Rule unconsciously followed: If those people believe that , then certainly we can believe this.

Our whole social environment and each of its overlapping parts—cultural, religious, political, intellectual, psychological—have become conducive to spectacular fallacy and make-believe. There are many slippery slopes, leading in various directions to other exciting nonsense. During the last several decades, those naturally slippery slopes have been turned into a colossal and permanent complex of interconnected, crisscrossing bobsled tracks with no easy exit. Voilà: Fantasyland. . . .

When John Adams said in the 1700s that “facts are stubborn things,” the overriding American principle of personal freedom was not yet enshrined in the Declaration or the Constitution, and the United States of America was itself still a dream. Two and a half centuries later the nation Adams cofounded has become a majority-rule de facto refutation of his truism: “our wishes, our inclinations” and “the dictates of our passions” now apparently do “alter the state of facts and evidence,” because extreme cognitive liberty and the pursuit of happiness rule.

This is not unique to America, people treating real life as fantasy and vice versa, and taking preposterous ideas seriously. We’re just uniquely immersed. In the developed world, our predilection is extreme, distinctly different in the breadth and depth of our embrace of fantasies of many different kinds. Sure, the physician whose fraudulent research launched the antivaccine movement was a Brit, and young Japanese otaku invented cosplay, dressing up as fantasy characters. And while there are believers in flamboyant supernaturalism and prophecy and religious pseudoscience in other developed countries, nowhere else in the rich world are such beliefs central to the self-identities of so many people. We are Fantasyland’s global crucible and epicenter.

This is American exceptionalism in the twenty-first century. America has always been a one-of-a-kind place. Our singularity is different now. We’re still rich and free, still more influential and powerful than any nation, practically a synonym for developed country . But at the same time, our drift toward credulity, doing our own thing, and having an altogether uncertain grip on reality has overwhelmed our other exceptional national traits and turned us into a less-developed country as well.

People tend to regard the Trump moment—this post-truth, alternative facts moment—as some inexplicable and crazy new American phenomenon. In fact, what’s happening is just the ultimate extrapolation and expression of attitudes and instincts that have made America exceptional for its entire history—and really, from its prehistory. . . .

America was created by true believers and passionate dreamers, by hucksters and their suckers—which over the course of four centuries has made us susceptible to fantasy, as epitomized by everything from Salem hunting witches to Joseph Smith creating Mormonism, from P. T. Barnum to Henry David Thoreau to speaking in tongues, from Hollywood to Scientology to conspiracy theories, from Walt Disney to Billy Graham to Ronald Reagan to Oprah Winfrey to Donald Trump. In other words: mix epic individualism with extreme religion; mix show business with everything else; let all that steep and simmer for a few centuries; run it through the anything-goes 1960s and the Internet age; the result is the America we inhabit today, where reality and fantasy are weirdly and dangerously blurred and commingled.

I hope we’re only on a long temporary detour, that we’ll manage somehow to get back on track. If we’re on a bender, suffering the effects of guzzling too much fantasy cocktail for too long, if that’s why we’re stumbling, manic and hysterical, mightn’t we somehow sober up and recover? You would think. But first you need to understand how deeply this tendency has been encoded in our national DNA.

Fake News: It’s as American as George Washington’s Cherry Tree
by Hanna Rosin

Fake news. Post-truth. Alternative facts. For Andersen, these are not momentary perversions but habits baked into our DNA, the ultimate expressions of attitudes “that have made America exceptional for its entire history.” The country’s initial devotion to religious and intellectual freedom, Andersen argues, has over the centuries morphed into a fierce entitlement to custom-made reality. So your right to believe in angels and your neighbor’s right to believe in U.F.O.s and Rachel Dolezal’s right to believe she is black lead naturally to our president’s right to insist that his crowds were bigger.

Andersen’s history begins at the beginning, with the first comforting lie we tell ourselves. Each year we teach our children about Pilgrims, those gentle robed creatures who landed at Plymouth Rock. But our real progenitors were the Puritans, who passed the weeks on the trans-Atlantic voyage preaching about the end times and who, when they arrived, vowed to hang any Quaker or Catholic who landed on their shores. They were zealots and also well-educated British gentlemen, which set the tone for what Andersen identifies as a distinctly American endeavor: propping up magical thinking with elaborate scientific proof.

While Newton and Locke were ushering in an Age of Reason in Europe, over in America unreason was taking new seductive forms. A series of mystic visionaries were planting the seeds of extreme entitlement, teaching Americans that they didn’t have to study any book or old English theologian to know what to think, that whatever they felt to be true was true. In Andersen’s telling, you can easily trace the line from the self-appointed 17th-century prophet Anne Hutchinson to Kanye West: She was, he writes, uniquely American “because she was so confident in herself, in her intuitions and idiosyncratic, subjective understanding of reality,” a total stranger to self-doubt.

What happens next in American history, according to Andersen, happens without malevolence, or even intention. Our national character gels into one that’s distinctly comfortable fogging up the boundary between fantasy and reality in nearly every realm. As soon as George Washington dies fake news is born — the story about the cherry tree, or his kneeling in prayer at Valley Forge. Enterprising businessmen quickly figure out ways to make money off the Americans who gleefully embrace untruths.

The Shallows of the Mainstream Mind

The mainstream mindset always seems odd to me.

There can be an issue, event, or whatever that was reported in the alternative media, was written about by independent investigative journalists, was the target of leaks and whistleblowers, was researched by academics, and was released in an official government document. But if the mainstream media didn’t recently, widely, extensively, and thoroughly report on it, those in the mainstream can act as if they don’t know about it, as if it never happened and isn’t real.

There is partly a blind faith in the mainstream media, but it goes beyond that. Even the mainstream news reporting that happened in the past quickly disappears from memory. There is no connection in the mainstream mind between what happened in the past and what happens in the present, much less between what happens in other (specifically non-Western) countries and what happens in the US.

It’s not mere ignorance, willful or passive. Many people in the mainstream are highly educated and relatively well informed, but even in what they know there is a superficiality and lack of insight. They can’t quite connect one thing to another, to do their own research and come to their own conclusions. It’s a permanent and vast state of dissociation. It’s a conspiracy of silence where the first casualty is self-awareness, where individuals silence their own critical thought, their own doubts and questions.

There is also an inability to imagine the real. Even when those in the mainstream see hard data, it never quite connects on a psychological and visceral level. It is never quite real. It remains simply info that quickly slips from the mind.

No One Knows

Here is a thought experiment. What if almost everything you think you know is wrong? It isn’t just a thought experiment. In all likelihood, it is true.

Almost everything people thought they knew in the past has turned out to be wrong, partly or entirely. There is no reason to think the same isn’t still the case. We are constantly learning new things that add to or alter prior fields of knowledge.

We live in a scientific age. Even so, there are more things we don’t know than we do know. Our scientific knowledge remains narrow and shallow. The universe is vast. Even the earth is vast. Heck, human nature is vast, in its myriad expressions and potentials.

In some ways, science gives a false sense of how much we know. We end up taking many things as scientific that aren’t actually so. Take the examples of consciousness and free will, both areas about which we have little scientific knowledge.

We have no more reason to believe consciousness is limited to the brain than to believe that consciousness is inherent to matter. We have no more reason to believe that free will exists than to believe it doesn’t. These are non-falsifiable hypotheses, which is to say we don’t know how to test them in order to prove them one way or another.

Yet we go about our lives as if these are decided facts, that we are conscious free agents in a mostly non-conscious world. This is what we believe based on our cultural biases. Past societies had different beliefs about consciousness and agency. Future societies likely will have different beliefs than our own and they will look at us as oddly as we look at ancient people. Our present hyper-individualism may one day seem as bizarre as the ancient bicameral mind.

We forget how primitive our society still is. In many ways, not much has changed over the past centuries or even across the recent millennia. Humans still live their lives basically the same. For as long as civilization has existed, people live in houses and ride on wheeled vehicles. When we have health conditions, invasively cutting into people is still often standard procedure, just as people have been doing for a long long time. Political and military power hasn’t really changed either, except in scale. The most fundamental aspects of our lives are remarkably unchanged.

At the same time, we are on the edge of vast changes. Just in my life, technology has leapt ahead far beyond the imaginings of most people in the generations before mine. Our knowledge of genetics, climate change, and even biblical studies has been irrevocably altered—throwing on its head, much of the earlier consensus.

We can’t comprehend what any of it means or where it is heading. All that we can be certain is that paradigms are going to be shattered over this next century. What will replace them no one knows.

Humanity in All of its Blindness

I’ve often written about various kinds of cognitive blindness.

Sometimes it’s an incomprehensibility. We don’t understand something and so to that extent we can’t really see it, not for what it is. The conceptual or cultural framework is lacking. There is no box to put it into or words to describe it. Maybe it wasn’t part of how we were raised.

Other times, there is a simultaneous knowing and not knowing. This relates to willful ignorance, in that we can go to great efforts at not knowing something that otherwise should be obvious. Even dissociation and splitting of consciousness can be involved, and it is probably more common than people think. It could involved suppressed trauma or even just general discomfort.

There is also context-dependent memories. I’ve had experiences that were some strange mix of emotions, almost visceral. When they happen, I recall having experienced them before. But when not experiencing them, I couldn’t for the life of me dredge up the memory of the experience, what it felt like or even figure out what elicited it. I forget all about them, until they pop back up in my experience.

All of these demonstrate how limited is our consciousness. Our perception is extremely narrow and filtered. We never see what is behind us, so to speak. The world is vast and we are puny. The flashlight of consciousness only lights up a few feet directly in front of us.

I was thinking about this because I came across another example of this. I’d heard of it before, but the way someone wrote about it caught my attention. It is from Scott Alexander at the Slate Star Codex blog. The post is: WHAT UNIVERSAL HUMAN EXPERIENCES ARE YOU MISSING WITHOUT REALIZING IT? I recommend checking it out. It’s a short read.

He discusses a number of examples of individuals lacking some common experience and not realizing it. These people even learn to speak about the experience, but they don’t realize that others are speaking literally. They assume it is just a metaphorical way of expressing something else.

This could involve color blindness or smell blindness. The blogger also shares his own experience of a medication that blunted his emotions for five years when he was a teenager, long enough that he forgot what he had lost, until he went off the medication.

I had a thought about how this might apply beyond the individual. I’ve been reading books about ancient societies. One of the challenges is that the best evidence left behind are texts, but that requires translation and interpretation. Many words in other languages simply have no equivalent in English. They might not even have any conceptual equivalent in our thinking. This brings up the question if we even have a psychological equivalent of the experience being described. Translation can end up blinding us to how different were those ancient societies and the people who lived in them.

We are creatures of our cultural upbringing, products of out time and place. After a few generations, events are lost from living memory. Experience dies with those who possessed the memory of them.

It isn’t even necessary to look to ancient societies to realize this. Cultural misunderstandings happen all the time. Modern languages also have words that don’t translate into other modern languages.  Heck, even when we share the same language, we often seem clueless and oblivious to other people’s experience.

That is why I find it bizarre that many people will assume that ancient people must have thought, felt, and perceived the world basically the same as they do. What immense hubris, considering many people struggle trying to understand their own family members and significant others.

The thing about being blind to something is that you are often blind to your blindness, as you are often ignorant to your ignorance. You just don’t know what you don’t know, and you don’t know that there is something you could or should know. That is how we live our lives until we stub our toe or walk face first into some aspect of reality or human experience we didn’t realize was there. But for most things we can go our entire lives without ever discovering our blindness.

The Shamelessness of Shaming

There’s a reason education sucks, it’s the same reason that it will never, ever, ever be fixed. It’s never going to get any better, don’t look for it, be happy with what you got. Because the owners of this country don’t want that. I’m talking about the real owners, now. The real owners, the big wealthy business interests that control things and make all the important decisions. Forget the politicians, they’re an irrelevancy. The politicians are put there to give you the idea that you have freedom of choice. You don’t. You have no choice. You have owners. They own you. They own everything. [..]

But I’ll tell you what they don’t want. They don’t want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don’t want well-informed, well-educated people capable of critical thinking. They’re not interested in that. That doesn’t help them. That’s against their interests. They don’t want people who are smart enough to sit around the kitchen table and figure out how badly they’re getting fucked by a system that threw them overboard 30 fucking years ago.

You know what they want? Obedient workers,­ people who are just smart enough to run the machines and do the paperwork but just dumb enough to passively accept all these increasingly shittier jobs with the lower pay, the longer hours, reduced benefits, the end of overtime and the vanishing pension that disappears the minute you go to collect it.

~ George Carlin

I was watching one of those videos showing how stupid kids are these days. It was the 2014 video from Texas Tech University. I think I’ve seen it before or one of the videos like it.

But the video itself isn’t important. It was highly edited and far from being an honest polling or scientific survey. It’s easy to focus on a few people and try to paint an entire demographic in bad light. It’s the same way the American media, political elite, and middle-to-upper classes love to shame the poor. It is good to keep in mind some of the kids in the video might be the first generation in their family to have gone to college.

This shaming has been going on for the entirety of US history, which is a relevant fact. Do the makers of such videos know the history of shaming? If not, what excuse do they have for being ignorant? It is fair to dismiss this bullshit shaming out of hand, because it is bullshit. People who participate in it are the ones who should feel ashamed.

The motivation behind the video, that of shaming people, irritated me. I went to a mediocre high school. And I know many people have gone to even worse high schools. Teachers are underpaid and overworked, and it just gets worse in poor areas. Few students get a good education and aren’t prepared for college, if and when they get there. I dropped out of college because of how underprepared and overwhelmed I was, although depression and learning disability played a role.

Anyway, the following are some of my thoughts.

* * *

I try to stay humble and keep perspective.

I know that when I came out of high school I was extremely ignorant. If anyone had asked me any questions about history, I would have given some really clueless answers, assuming I responded at all. It has taken me a couple of decades of serious reading and research to lessen that vast ignorance and I still remain ignorant about most areas of knowledge.

Learning is hard, for most of us. On top of that, many people have bad or uninspiring experiences of school. I suspect it is a rare person who makes it out of school with curiosity intact and a love of learning instilled in them.

I do find it sad that Americans aren’t better educated. But shaming them for a failed education system isn’t likely to improve anything. I understand the humor of wrong answers. And yet I save my outrage for the social problems and political incompetence that keeps producing ignorant Americans, generation after generation.

* * *

Ignorance is the starting point we all have in life. And it takes immense effort to move very far from that starting point.

I doubt people are more ignorant than they ever were. The closest equivalent to the Civil War for earlier generations might have been the War of 1812. If you asked young Americans a few generations ago why the War of 1812 was fought, most probably couldn’t have told you. It simply wouldn’t have felt relevant to them. Even talking to the older generations alive right now, those of my parents age and above, I’m constantly surprised by how little they know about American history and world history. It certainly isn’t limited to a single generation.

In the not too distant past, most people didn’t have much if any education at all. Even in early 20th century before universal public education, few Americans graduated high school or even elementary school. A large part of the population wasn’t even literate generations ago. In the late 1800s, about 1 in 5 Americans couldn’t read. Even though our education system is far from perfect, the improvements in public education are vast. We should fully appreciate that, even as we seek to do better.

I’d make another point. People tend to only know about what is close to their lives. When I was growing up, the Cold War was still going on. When my parents were growing up, the last of the Civil War veterans and former slaves were still living. When my grandparents were growing up, the last of the Indian Wars were fought. When my great grandparents were growing up, Reconstruction was still happening or had ended not too long before. When my great great grandparents were growing up, the Civil War took place—some of them having been born born near the death of the last American founders and could have met John Quincy Adams.

For most of US history, the country was young. No event was further back than a few generations. Now that we are in the 21st century, the the major events that shaped the country are beginning to feel ever more distant. There is also simply more history to be learned. Learning about US history for a kid born in the past was easier for the simple reason there was less to learn, but even then most Americans didn’t learn much history.

We are only shocked by ignorance today because, unlike in the past, we have come to believe that people shouldn’t be ignorant. It used be that people didn’t care about history all that much, for it didn’t put a roof over their heads or food on their tables. It is interesting that the world has changed so much that we now consider ignorance, the normal state of humanity, to be a mark of shame.

If we actually care about knowledge so much, why don’t we improve education and fund it better for all students?

* * *

I was thinking about what kinds of knowledge is valued.

Kids these days are taught a ton of info, a wider spectrum of knowledge than in past generations. For example, I bet the youth today know more about the larger world than did the youth a century ago. WWI was the first generation of Americans who even saw much of the world beyond US borders. And now traveling the world is common.

What we are taught is based on what those in power deem important. But that is dependent on historical situations and events. At present, kids are probably learning a lot about the Middle East and their knowledge in this area would put most adult Americans to shame. The focus of education in the past, for those who got an education, would have been far different.

I’ve talked to my parents about their childhood and young adulthood. My mom didn’t even know about the Cold War until the Reagan presidency, despite her having been born in the early Cold War. My parents barely knew what was happening in the Civil Rights movement when they were in high school and college. My parents didn’t know about sundown towns, even though my dad grew up in one and both of my parents went to college in one.

My dad also had never heard of bombing and terrorism of Black Wall Street, which occurred a short distance away from his mother’s childhood home. She moved to a major Klan center in high school. Her and my maternal grandfather had to have known the town they moved their young family to was a sundown town, as there were signs that said so. Yet no one talked about any of this and my father was raised in ignorance.

My maternal grandparents didn’t get much education. It is understandable that they didn’t know much. But my paternal grandparents were college educated. When the last of the Indian Wars happened in their childhoods, did any of my grandparents know about it. If not, why not? Like the Tulsa Riots, some of those Indian Wars happened not all that far from where my maternal grandmother spent her early life.

What excuses this ignorance? Nothing. Yet this is the common fate of humanity. We remain ignorant, unless we individually and collectively put immense effort toward informing ourselves. There is all kinds of knowledge we don’t value as a society, even when we should.

* * *

The impulse to shame is easy to give into. I do it myself on occasion.

I think this impulse comes from a place of frustration and apathy, verging on cynicism. We all see the problems we collectively face and we don’t know what to do about them. So, we look for scapegoats. Sometimes that means the youth and at other times it means the poor, minorities, or immigrants.

It is easier to project onto others and pretend one isn’t a part of the problem. It is easier to ridicule others than to try to understand. It is easier to blame than to help. Our laughter has a nervous edge to it, as we all realize the problem points back to all of us. It’s the kind of humor people distract themselves with.

Instead, why don’t we simply deal with the problem?

More Words

I’ve written so often about knowledge and ignorance, truth and denialism. My mind ever returns to the topic, because it is impossible to ignore in this media-saturated modern world. There are worthy things to debate and criticize, but it is rare to come across much of worth amidst all the noise, all the opinionating and outrage.

I don’t want to just dismiss it all. I don’t want to ignore it and live blissfully in my own private reality or my own narrow media bubble. I feel compelled to understand the world around me. I actually do care about what makes people tick, not just to better persuade them to my own view, but more importantly to understand humanity itself.

Still, noble aspirations aside, it can be frustrating and I often let it show. Why do we make everything so hard? Why do we fight tooth and nail against being forced to face reality? Humans are strange creatures.

At some point, yet more argument seems pointless. No amount of data and evidence will change anything. We can’t deal with even relatively minor problems. Hope seems like an act of desperation in face of the more immense global challenges. Humanity will change when we are forced to change, when maintaining the status quo becomes impossible.

It is irrational to expect most humans to be rational about almost anything of significance. But that doesn’t mean speaking out doesn’t matter.

I considered offering some detailed thoughts and observations, but I already expressed my self a bit in another post. Instead, I’ll just point to a somewhat random selection of what others have already written, a few books and articles I’ve come across recently—my main focus has been climate change:

Apocalypse Soon: Has Civilization Passed the Environmental Point of No Return?
By Madhusree Mukerjee

It’s the End of the World as We Know It . . . and He Feels Fine
By Daniel Smith

Learning to Die in the Antrhopocene: Reflections on the End of a Civilization
By Roy Scranton

Reason in a Dark Time: Why the Struggle Against Climate Change Failed – And What it Means for Our Future
By Dale Jamieson

Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World
By Timothy Morton

Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor
By Rob Nixon

The Culture of Make Believe
By Derrick Jensen

The Elephant in the Room: Silence and Denial in Everyday Life
By Eviatar Zerubavel

States of Denial: Knowing about Atrocities and Suffering
By Stanley Cohen

Living in Denial: Climate Change, Emotions, and Everyday Life
By Kari Marie Norgaard

Don’t Even Think About It: Why Our Brains Are Wired to Ignore Climate Change
By George Marshall

What We Think About When We Try Not To Think About Global Warming: Toward a New Psychology of Climate Action
by Per EspenStoknes

How Culture Shapes the Climate Change Debate
By Andrew Hoffman

The Republican War on Science
By Chris Mooney

Reality Check: How Science Deniers Threaten Our Future
By Donald R. Prothero

Climate Change Denial: Heads in the Sand
By Haydn Washington

Climate Cover-Up: The Crusade to Deny Global Warming
By James Hoggan

Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming
By Naomi Oreskes & Erik M. Conway

The man who studies the spread of ignorance
By Georgina Kenyon

This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate
By Naomi Klein

Climate Change, Capitalism, and Corporations: Process of Creative Self-Destruction
By Christopher Wright & Daniel Nyberg

Exxon: The Road Not Taken
By Neela Banerjee

Poison Spring: The Secret History of Pollution and the EPA
By E.G. Vallianatos

Carbon Democracy: Political Power in the Age of Oil
By Timothy Mitchell

Democracy Inc.: How Members Of Congress Have Cashed In On Their Jobs
By The Washington Post, David S. Fallis, Scott Higham (Author), Dan Keating, & Kimberly Kindy

Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism
By Sheldon S. Wolin

Just How Stupid is the Intellectual Elite?

I came across an article recently, as linked to in a comment, that is about a topic of great interest to me: ignorance. The article piqued my curiosity because it was a thoughtful analysis of various data and examples, including an insightful view of how geographic location plays into how we prioritize (or not) knowledge of the larger world.

The author begins by discussing Rick Shenkman’s 2008 book, Just How Stupid Are We? Facing the Truth about the American Voter. It’s a provocative title meant to catch one’s attention. It probably was the publisher, rather than the author, that chose the title. I decided to get the book and have since read it.

I was disappointed and underwhelmed. The book ended up being too much like the title. Maybe I should have paid closer attention to the negative reviews. My curiosity got the better of me and my curiosity remains unsated. Shenkman touches on many worthy issues, but never takes it very far. It felt more like a magazine opinion piece stretched out into a book.

He complains about the stupidity of the American public, going on and on about the failure of “The People”, both in actuality and as a concept. He almost goes so far as to blame democracy itself, with an argument that questions whether The People are worthy of democracy. His discussion is a bit more complex than that, but it does come off as expressing intellectual snobbery and class disconnect. I didn’t get the feeling that he actually knew what he was talking about. His knowledge seemed narrow, and his understanding of many issues, from democracy to liberalism, seemed superficial.

I came to the conclusion that the author is a part of the problem. He is a member of the clueless intellectual elite. He wants to be a public intellectual and so presents himself as an expert, in his role as a professional historian, writer, and tv talking head. Maybe this book wasn’t his best work… I don’t know, but I was unimpressed. His being a historian, I’d have expected more depth to his analysis. He demonstrated even less knowledge about demographics and social science.

I’ve read some great books these past years. There are several that cover the study of ignorance, agnotology, a topic that has often come up in relation to racial prejudice and biases. Another more recent book I’ve looked at focuses the idea and the history of “The People” in great detail. Shenkman’s book doesn’t hold a candle to any of these.

There is nothing I consider more important than the public intellectual. The failure of democracy is directly connected to the failure of public intellectuals, which isn’t identical to just the intellectual elite, but the broader intellectual engagement across class lines. A good example of a newer work by a working class public intellectual is Hand to Mouth by Linda Tirado. I’m a big fan of the working class public intellectual, a role that goes back to the revolutionary generation, involving such great writers as Thomas Paine. Even so, I also appreciate the insight that sometimes comes out of academia, such as Michelle Alexander.

There is an important difference between academics like Shenkman and Alexander. He presents his argument as coming from on high, looking down upon “The People”. You never get the sense that he is entirely including himself as part of the general public. He is self-consciously an intellectual elite. As for Alexander, instead of complaining about the disenfranchized and disadvantaged, she seeks to speak for them and to offer genuine sympathetic understanding. Even in terms of pure scholarship, Shenkman just isn’t playing on the same level. Alexander backs her opinions with immense data, something Shenkman doesn’t do nearly as well. What he offers seems mostly to be cherrypicked factoids lacking much in the way of larger context and probing insight.

I almost feel bad for being so critical. Ignorance is a serious problem. For certain, I’m not dismissing the concern. I just don’t think the challenge was well met by Shenkman. If anything, he didn’t take his project seriously enough. This is an issue that shakes our society to its foundation, whether or not we have and are capable of having a functioning democracy.

What relevance does “The People” even have in a supposed representative democracy when it isn’t clear anyone is actually representing them? Who is there to give voice to the voiceless, to offer sympathetic understanding to those lost in a system of enforced ignorance? What does it mean to be a public intellectual at a time when the intellectual elite often seem more clueless than the uneducated and miseducated masses?