Trust and the Man Machine
210 reasons for the fall of Rome...
FEW THINGS in recorded history have triggered more curiosity on the part
of subsequent generations than
the collapse of the Roman Empire, says Tim Price at Price Value
Partners.
Bryan Ward-Perkins in 'The Fall of Rome and the End of
Civilisation' lists no fewer than 210 concepts that have been suggested by historians to account for it.
His own thesis – to which we
are highly sympathetic – is that fiscal decline collided with an over-stretched army which led in turn
to civil wars, a doom spiral of
withering resources, and ultimately to defeat by 'barbarians', leading to a catastrophic final
civilisational collapse.
Perhaps someone could buy a copy for the Biden administration.
The
fall of Rome is also one of
the many topics discussed in one of the most intriguing books we have ever read, namely Iain
McGilchrist's 'The Master and his
Emissary'. Antonia Filmer summarises the book as follows:
"In a simplistic
nutshell Dr.McGilchrist's
hypothesis is, apart from its motor functions, each side of the brain has its own specific expertise.
The left side absorbs detail,
data, statistics (the purely mechanical, rather than creative, side of maths, physics, science), it
focuses on categorisation,
predictability, systems, and the right side appreciates intangibles, humour, the sound of music, the
flow of time, emotion, beauty,
subtlety, nuance, language, syntax, expression, virtues, values, judgement, danger, experience and
metaphor; proper understanding and
imagination requires both hemispheres to work together and share their findings.
"Through the corpus callosum
the right gives context and meaning to the left. Without both sides operating harmoniously together
McGilchrist posits Western society
as we know it is at risk. He believes that presently we are in thrall to the left hemisphere which has
evolved and exaggerated itself
largely eclipsing the right.
"McGilchrist explains the right hemisphere has
first take on everything, it is
attentive and vigilant to the world all around, the left selects and focusses on the details; reason and
knowledge are no substitute
for wisdom and intuition. Thus, we have an inability to see and understand the whole picture and to make
strategies
accordingly.
"The book title is a metaphor about a powerful master whose
appointed emissary is supposed to
carry his message across the world, in the absence of the master the emissary becomes deluded, does not
recognise the value of the
master and thinks he knows it all, and because he did not have the master's big picture, the community
began to decline.
"McGilchrist examines the rise and downfall of the Greek and Roman Civilisations, and the
Renaissance; all three go
through a time when the left and right hemispheres are in the proper balance and everything flourishes.
Then to maintain control and
administer an empire the thinking shifts to the left hemisphere, to the present and to the explicit, it
becomes rationalistic, linear
and analytical but it cannot interpret or manipulate the information leading to inevitable
collapse."
McGilchrist recently presented at the Darwin College Lecture Series in Cambridge. His lecture is quite
simply one of the most
impressive and articulate displays of scholarship we have seen. Over to Dr McGilchrist:
"Today I'm going to
be talking about the Hemisphere Theory as a way of understanding what we call the meta-crisis, the
various groups of problems of
considerable severity that bedevil us these days. I believe that by understanding more about how the
brain works we can see these
disparate elements of the so-called meta-crisis as coherent and in some sense as inevitable consequences
of our espousal of a very
strange way of thinking about and looking at ourselves and the world to which we belong..
"Carved into the
stone of the Ancient Temple of Apollo at Deli was the injunction to 'know thyself'. Without such
knowledge we are tossed this way and
that by forces we neither suspect nor understand. Knowing ourselves helps explain our predicament and
doing so is greatly aided by
understanding an aspect of the way in which the brain constructs the world. I believe we've adopted a
limited vision of a very
particular type and precisely because it is limited we cannot see that it is limited. We no longer seem
to recognize what it is. We do
not know what our way of being in the world is pushing out of our lives and out of our world. To
understand what is going on we need a
breadth of view that is increasingly rare..
"Each hemisphere has evolved for
classical Darwinian reasons to
pay a different kind of attention to the world. The left hemisphere has evolved to pay 'narrow beam'
attention focused on the detail
that we already know and desire and are intent on grabbing and getting whether it be something to eat or
to use in some other way. In
a word the left hemisphere exists in the service of manipulation; the right hemisphere meanwhile is on
the lookout for everything else
that's going on.. the right hemisphere is in the service of understanding the contextual whole which is
nothing less than the world –
and context changes everything..
"As A.N.Whitehead, one of my intellectual
heroes, observed, a culture is in
its finest flower before it begins to analyse itself. Once our lives become very largely mediated by
self-reflexive language and
discourse (as in our postmodern world they are) the explicit stands forward and the implicit retires,
yet almost everything that
really matters to us – the beauty of nature, poetry, music, art, narrative, drama, myth, ritual, sex,
love – the sense of the sacred
must remain implicit if we're not to destroy their nature..
"The left
hemisphere never doubts that it is
right. It is never wrong and never at fault; someone else is always to blame. Furthermore, in what I
take to be the four important
onward paths to truth – science, reason, intuition and imagination – though both hemispheres contribute,
the crucial part in each case
including in science and reason is played by the right hemisphere not the left. Our predicament is that
we now live in a world where
the understanding of which is largely limited to that of the inferior left hemisphere.
"Some signs of this
include our inability to see the broader picture both in space and in time the way in which wisdom has
been lost, understanding
reduced to mere knowledge, and knowledge replaced by information...[we have also seen] the reduction of
justice to mere equality; a
loss of the sense of the uniqueness of all things; the supplanting of quality by quantity; the
abandonment of nuance in favour of
simplistic either/or positions; the loss of reasonableness which is replaced by rationalization; a
complete disregard for common
sense; the design of systems not for humans but to maximize utility; a growth of paranoia and pervasive
mistrust, for if all is not
under its control the left hemisphere becomes anxious and protects its anxiety outwards onto
others..
"In the
second part of 'The Master and his Emissary' I track the main turning points in the history of ideas in
the West and conclude that
three times we have seen enacted a certain pattern: first there is a sudden efflorescence of everything
that comes from the proper
working together of the two hemispheres in harmony. Then follows a stable period for a few hundred years
at most and soon a decline
after which the civilization eventually crumbles under its own weight..
"Since
the Industrial Revolution and
particularly in the last 50 years we have created a world around us which in contrast to the natural
world reflects the left
hemisphere's properties and its vision. What we see around us now looking out of the metaphorical window
is rectilinear, man-made,
utilitarian...each thing ripped from the context in which it alone has meaning and for many the
two-dimensional representations
provided by TV screens and computers have come largely to supplant direct face-to-face experience of
three-dimensional life in all its
complexity..
"My worry is not that machines will become like people – an
impossibility – but that people are
already becoming more like machines.
"I believe it is the left hemispheric view
of the world intellectually
and morally bankrupt as it is that has resulted in what has been called The Meta Crisis: not just the
odd crisis here and there but
the despoliation of the natural world; the decline of species on a colossal scale.. the destruction of
the way of life of indigenous
people; the fragmentation and polarization of a once civilized society with escalating not diminishing
resentments on all sides; an
escalating not diminishing gap between rich and poor; a surge in mental illness, not the promised
increase in happiness; a
proliferation of laws but a rise in crime; the abandonment of civil discourse; a betrayal of standards
in our major institutions –
Government, the BBC, the police, our hospitals, schools and universities, once rightly admired all over
the world – which have all
become vastly overweighted with bureaucracy, inflexible and obsessed with enforcement of a world view
that is in flat contradiction to
reality and isn't their job to enforce, and the looming menace of totalitarian control through
AI..
"As so
many have predicted since the time of Goethe, we cannot say we were not warned. Even physics now teaches
us that the mechanical model
of the universe is mistaken but because of our success in making machines we still imagine that the
machine is the best model for
understanding everything we come across. We ourselves, our brains and minds, our society and the living
world are now supposed to be
explained by the metaphor of the machine yet only the tiniest handful of things in the entire known
universe are at all like a machine
– namely the machines we made in the last few hundred years..
"We neglect the
importance of context. We
believe we are right and that one size fits all justifying the imposition of vast global bureaucratic
structures not to say wars so as
to impose our thinking on cultures far different from our own. Equally we arrogantly critique our
ancestors for not sharing the
idiosyncratic view of the world we've generated in the last 20 years and which we believe must now be
forced on all, whatever their
reasonable misgivings; and we treat people not as unique living beings but as exemplars of a
category.
"One
aspect of this is the virtual machine known as bureaucracy. Famously Hannah Ahrendt referred to the
"banality of evil". One of the
most disquieting aspects of the Nazi regime was its chilling bureaucracy. Mind-numbing evil was
committed by people who were for the
most part not conventional monsters but were simply following the ordained procedures. Real people and
real life had been almost
wholly obscured by pieces of paper and the recording of numbers.
"Once the
integrity founded in an intuitive
moral sense is lost, a society becomes like a building that has lost its integrity and needs to be
shored up with ever more
scaffolding. Now there has to be a law for everything, yet crime escalates.
"I
see widespread evidence
of...'sustained incoherence' in corporations; governments; health systems and education – everywhere
that management culture holds
sway...
"One cannot have trust in a society where no one is speaking the truth
and one cannot be true to a
society where there is no trust. As Confucius told one of his disciples, for a stable Society a ruler
needs three things: weapons,
food and trust. If he cannot hold all three he should forego weapons first, and food next, for 'without
trust we cannot
stand'."
Without trust we cannot stand. A lesson that some of us learnt during
the Global Financial Crisis 16
years ago – and which the rest of the entire western establishment seems to be learning for the first
time today.