Why Human Reason Didn’t “Evolve”
David Klinghoffer | @d_klinghoffer
The indispensable neuroscientist Michael Egnor, writing at Mind Matters, applies some needed intellectual rigor in disciplining atheist philosopher Justin E.H. Smith. In a new book, Irrationality: A History of the Dark Side of Reason, Professor Smith “argues that reason is inferior to the non-rational behavior of animals.” Egnor: “Think of the irony: a professor of philosophy, who is paid only to reason, uses reason to argue against reason. Welcome to the bowels of atheist metaphysics.”
According to Smith, writing at Aeon,
“Philosophers and cognitive scientists today generally comprehend the
domain of reason as a certain power of making inferences, confined to
the thoughts and actions of human beings alone.” Well, not exactly.
Reason, as Dr. Egnor reminds him, is nothing more or less than the ability to think abstractly, as opposed to thinking about physical objects.
A Clever Dog
An example of the latter would be thinking about how to get out of
your doggie play pen. Our family is currently testing out a puppy (long
story) who has surprised me repeatedly when I wasn’t looking by somehow
escaping from a closed play pen. It took me a while to figure out how he
was doing it, since the pen is about twice his height. Even then I had
to catch him in the act. Clever dog! But he wasn’t engaging in the
activity of reasoning by, let’s say, contemplating the idea of freedom.
Egnor:
Only man thinks abstractly; that is the ability to reason. No animal, no matter how clever, can think abstractly or reason. Animals can be very clever but their cleverness is always about concrete things — about the bone they are playing with, or about the stranger they are barking at. They don’t think about “play” or “threat” as abstract concepts.
Tough to Explain
Smith says, “Like echolocation in bats or photosynthesis in plants,
reason is an evolved power.” But if reason is unique to humans, and
exists nowhere else in life, did it indeed “evolve” from lower animals?
That’s a tough question. In fact, Egnor explains why it didn’t, at least
not by any purely material mechanism like the Darwinian one:
Reason is a power characteristic of man, to be sure, but it is not “an evolved power.” It didn’t “evolve.” The ability to reason didn’t evolve because it’s not a material power of the mind. Reason is an immaterial power of the mind — it is abstracted from particular things, and cannot logically be produced by a material thing.
A purely material process can’t “evolve” a spiritual power. Egnor is, as I said, indispensable. Read the read as Mind Matters.
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