File spoon-archives/habermas.archive/habermas_2002/habermas.0207, message 16


Date: Wed, 24 Jul 2002 12:47:20 -0700
Subject: Re: HAB: Brain Research and the Return of Universal Human Nature?


Mmm, not rubish at all, David.  From the standpoint of naturalizing
rationality and/or solving the problem of social order, it's definitely
provocative.  You might consider the parallel with Habermas's (and
Parson's) argument that strategic action is parasitic on social
cooperation.  It would be quite interesting if the logical priority of
cooperation were mimicked by evolution.

For a fuller account of "what this has to do with Habermas," you might read
chap. 2 of Joe Heath's _Communicative Action and Rational Choice_.

Best,

Kevin


>First of all, this is rubbish.  Secondly, what does it have to do with
>Habermas?
>
>Cheers,
>
>David Hawkes
>
>Thomas McDonald wrote:
>
>> The New York Times
>> July 23, 2002
>>
>> Why We're So Nice: We're Wired to Cooperate
>> By Natalie Angier
>>
>> What feels as good as chocolate on the tongue or money in the bank
>> but won't make you fat or risk a subpoena from the Securities and
>> Exchange Commission?
>>
>> Hard as it may be to believe in these days of infectious greed and
>> sabers unsheathed, scientists have discovered that the small, brave
>> act of cooperating with another person, of choosing trust over
>> cynicism, generosity over selfishness, makes the brain light up with
>> quiet joy.
>>
>> Studying neural activity in young women who were playing a classic
>> laboratory game called the Prisoner's Dilemma, in which participants
>> can select from a number of greedy or cooperative strategies as they
>> pursue financial gain, researchers found that when the women chose
>> mutualism over "me-ism," the mental circuitry normally associated
>> with reward-seeking behavior swelled to life.
>>
>> And the longer the women engaged in a cooperative strategy, the more
>> strongly flowed the blood to the pathways of pleasure.
>>
>> The researchers, performing their work at Emory University in
>> Atlanta, used magnetic resonance imaging to take what might be called
>> portraits of the brain on hugs.
>>
>> http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/23/health/psychology/23COOP.html
>>
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>
>
>
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