UNLIMITED

New Zealand Listener

LET’S BE RATIONAL

Maybe we’re just not thinking clearly. Maybe the problems in our lives and the chaos of the world have the same root cause: ignorance, folly, a global pandemic of unreason. And maybe the cure to all this foolishness lies within our own minds. Maybe we can heal ourselves, and everything will come right if we stop and think things through calmly, logically and rationally.

Back in 2011, Steven Pinker, Harvard psychologist and the eminent author of many bestselling books on language and the mind, swerved out of his academic lane to write The Better Angels of Our Nature, a polemical work of interdisciplinary social science. It argued that although many of us believed the world was growing ever more violent and dangerous, if you looked at the data the reverse was true: people living in developed nations enjoyed a level of peace that was unprecedented in human history. He cited archaeological studies showing that most pre-modern societies were characterised by constant warfare and endemic violence.

We were wrong about the past, Pinker argued, wrong about the modern world and wrong about the future, which would be utopian rather than dystopian. And, he explained, our safe and happy lives were all thanks to the modern state, free-market capitalism, increased literacy and scientific rationalism.

Pinker’s new work is slightly less

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener3 min read
Mind Your Language
Cross-channel rivalry is ancient and entrenched, but for now, France must yield to Britain when it comes to hardline policing of mere words. In France, it can be legally actionable not to use the language in writing as prescribed by the official dict
New Zealand Listener3 min read
Reading The Fine Print
There’s always someone who’ll tell you you’re fussing about nothing. While you’re grimly contemplating the next Trump presidency, the sanguine voices pipe up. You’re being hysterical. He’s not so bad. He’ll make us money. He’s great. Pardon him! Who
New Zealand Listener2 min read
Peace With The Past
A one-liner to describe Memory might be “he can’t remember but she can’t forget” – but the ideas in this well-written, award-winning indie film are much more intricate. It concerns social worker Sylvia (Oscarwinner Jessica Chastain), a recovering alc

Related Books & Audiobooks