Reading Daniel Dennett ‘s Intuition Pumps

By Dr. Emmy van Deurzen
Visiting Professor Middlesex University
Principal New School of Psychotherapy and Counselling, London.

Background

I have followed Daniel Dennett’s work with considerable interest over the past decades, not just because he is one of the few contemporary Anglo-Saxon philosophers whose work is relevant to continental philosophy, but because his words are often provocative enough to trigger new insights into human existence. I studied philosophy in France in the early seventies, at Montpellier University with Michel Henry and did a doctorate on Heidegger’s theory of self-deception at City University, London with Alfons Grieder. I am a committed existential phenomenologist who retrained early on as a clinical psychologist and worked in psychiatry for many years, living and working in mental hospitals and therapeutic communities, especially with suicidal and schizophrenic people. Additionally trained in psychotherapy, with Lacanian, group analytic, psycho-dramatic and humanistic methods, I have worked with people’s life problems for over forty years and have developed my own school of existential psychotherapy, counselling psychology and coaching, founding several training colleges and being active in research with my doctoral students.

I was eager to get my copy of Dennett’s latest book ‘Intuition Pumps’, which is a kind of summary of his work as I was hoping it would make a good introductory book for my doctoral students in psychotherapy and counselling psychology. I committed to reading it carefully rather than casually, as I wanted to make up my mind about the importance of Dennett’s contribution once and for all. Reading it I made constant notes to keep track of what appeared to be sound and not so sound in his thought process. My touchstone at all times was whether what he said would make sense to my therapy clients and help my students become better therapists. So, the test in my mind was whether the book would help therapists and their clients in understanding human reality better. In other words, I kept asking the question: ‘does this way of computing existence improve our ability to live in the real world?’ My initial response, as per usual with Dennett, who is a formidable author and thinker by any standard, was to be impressed with his clear exposure of ideas and charmed by his many carefully crafted examples and anecdotes. I was immediately intrigued by his choices and felt some mild irritation at his use of the term ‘Intuition Pumps’, when what he is actually proposing are ‘Cognition Pumps’. His distortion of the term intuition to suit him is disturbing to someone who is more familiar with Brentano’s, Husserl’s and Jaspers’ views on the matter. The other thing that grated was to feel patronized by his professorial tone, which assumed a readership of undergraduate first year philosophy students, whose knowledge of the history of philosophy would be minimal enough to present it as a series of errors to them. We clearly have not been reading the same history of philosophy: the wisdom that I find in the pages of the classics to this day is summarily and flippantly dismissed by Dennett and is reduced to very little, all in the spirit of banter and humour but nevertheless with an eye on point scoring. His disdain of the history of philosophy is an example of his sharp and determined focus on his own, actually rather idiosyncratic, way of doing philosophy, in a manner so focused that the wider perspective and breadth of the discipline are lost from sight.

First impressions

The book is certainly not a treatise on intuition, as one might wrongly expect from the title. It stubbornly avoids dealing with human topics such as individuality, subjectivity, purpose, aspiration, understanding, empathy, love, choice, freedom, death and suffering. While there is a lot of slow and patient thinking and an exhibition of useful and valuable information, the overall thesis of the book is more about the mechanics of the pumping mind than about the intuitions or insights that might result. There is an underlying assumption that human beings are quite a lot like very sophisticated computers and that it is most important to understand the practice of these thinking machines, pinning down the underlying technology of the process. This leaves out the human capacity for creativity, empathy, transformation and brilliance almost entirely. Consciousness has not improved very much in Dennett’s estimation since his earlier work and he is, as always, eager to stick to the facts and deal in tight argumentation, except when it suits him. You will find no messing with magic, transcendence, morphic resonance or metaphysics here, as he points out. If you follow his path you will not fail to get his message. Though the title may conjure up the promise of a plethora of intuitive insights, streaming freely from a freshly pumped flow of consciousness, my experience was one of being confronted with a great drought caused by his desert like clarity in sticking to the facts of prosaic cognitive patterns. The concept of intuition is effectively redefined as a process of stepwise, rational, logical, scientific or intelligent thinking. Nothing wrong with that and the book will definitely sharpen and tighten your thinking and can be recommended for that reason. It provides a number of thinking tools to help you avoid wishful or sloppy thinking. But don’t expect a full toolbox. Dennett’s display of thought instruments is always very narrowly defined and highly idiosyncratic, reserved for his own interpretations of well known and age-old strategies, which are sometimes renamed and given a twist. There is no explanation or exposition of basic principles of logic, dialectics, hermeneutics, phenomenological reductions, heuristic devices or other classic instruments of thinking. Any form of discursive, creative or poetic thought is discouraged. Anything remotely related to the meaning of life, spirituality or even human emotions has been carefully cleared out of sight and eliminated.

In spite of this the book is well worth reading, as Dennett will frustrate your tendency to think too freely and he will teach you discipline in questioning your assumptions. I would certainly recommend it to readers capable of critical assessment, as long as they are strong minded and able enough to remain critical of Dennett’s views. If you are too prone to being dazzled or brain washed and are green to logical thinking, I would recommend you read some more general books on thinking first before tackling this book, because Dennett can be very convincing and persistent with his opinions, which are often hard to trace as such, as they are well hidden beneath a veneer of objectivity. He is very persuasive about his two dimensional worldview and will sell you his own beliefs, packaged up as apparently self-evident certainties. You really have to keep your wits about you to remain unperturbed. Reading Dennett is far more like playing a game of chess with a chess master than it is like doing philosophy. A critical read of the book will help you think about what the discipline of philosophy is up against if it is to tackle and equal in strength this kind of Anglo-Saxon contemporary science-based discoursing that calls itself philosophy, but is as far removed from the love of wisdom as a discussion with your accountant is removed from talking about emotional well being.  I would like to call such philosophy by its better-known subspecialist name of the science of knowledge, which is classically represented by the branch of epistemology and logic. I am not even sure that it is philosophy of mind, for as a psychologist I do not recognize a serious enough discourse about neuroscience or psychology in these pages either. In terms of philosophy of science it doesn’t quite do the trick as it does not grasp the nettle of critiquing scientific method, but takes this for granted as the standard. The book is a strong testimony to and example of the cultural tendency towards a mechanical discourse and it would be most useful to those who want to get better at philosophical argumentation along those lines. The strangely abstract atmosphere it creates in the mind of the reader is very much like the experience of being in a math class. It stretches the mind, but also creates a certain sense of personal alienation, which needs to be counteracted by reengagement with the real world, relationships, values and emotions. When science is the new divinity to which we turn for all insight, it soon begins to dictate our entire pattern of philosophical thinking so that our ideas become fused with it and our experience becomes straightjacketed by it. Dennett so accepts this premise of science’s monopoly on truth that his consequent fear of falling foul of this framework pervades his work and lends it a kind of cramped severity, where playfulness and freedom are sadly lacking in spite of his attempts at humour and joviality. These basic assumptions about the dangers of free roaming creative thinking are well hidden and perhaps not in his awareness. Strange for someone who called one of his books ‘Elbow room’, which is a term used to translate Heidegger’s concept of ‘Spielraum’, or play space, that imaginative place in our minds which is so easily squashed by technology. As a psychotherapist I wanted to invite him to step out of the mental straight jacket to take a look at the issues that ordinary folk are preoccupied with and to allow himself to study how folk psychology actually operates in people, rather than being so judgemental and dismissive about it.

Philosophy is best rooted in what is actually the case rather than in what we think ought to be the case. I would like to have a down to earth discussion with Dennett about some of the aspects of human reality he so carefully ignores and neglects. I remember my own sobering dismay when in 1971 I first entered into a psychiatric hospital where I had to translate my philosophical training into words that made sense to others and were helpful in promoting sanity and clarity of understanding in people who were confused in their minds. I think Dennett’s writing would be much improved by such experience, but I am sure he would not be interested, as he has claimed the high ground of cognitive prowess rather than immersing himself in the daily struggles of ordinary human thought. I worry about the plausibility and sensibility of his writing and the effects it might have on the teaching of philosophy, leading to a further loss of the freedom of thought. It is not hard to see how American culture will be grateful for this hard edged science based model of philosophy, that does away with any mention of morality, values or virtues and turns learning and understanding into a game of minds, where those who do not make the mark of clever bantering are disregarded. The tight mental framework would be easy to compute and could translate into a program to teach ‘right thinking’ without too much difficulty, exactly because it does not allow for the straying of minds necessary for creativity. What will be the societal impact of seeking to describe and summarize human beings as sophisticated thinking machines whose thoughts and actions can be so predictable that human existence can be captured in an algorithm? I will not be the only person having a horrible feeling of déjà vu, as pictures of Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orwell’s 1984 are conjured up. If you want your thoughts to be tidied up and weeded clear of the errors and illusions that lend them both confusion and creativity, this is indeed essential reading. If you want to think again and dare to say what you actually believe and you are not afraid to be dismissed as a folk psychologist or a naïve and deluded person, you will have to come to this book with a well enough trained mind that you can stand up to the astute and forced-choice arguments which are presented to you as puzzles to solve, as tests of your ability, when they are actually carefully placed stepping stones towards Dennett’s point of view and way of life. It is often enticing and compelling to follow his path and forget the roads not taken. Dennett is a clever opponent indeed in the game he invites you to play with him. He is a master at direction and misdirection, a real magician of the art of thinking and a true strategist. If you like your philosophy to be collaborative, dialogic and dialectic and you like the focus to be on life wisdom, you will feel strangely homeless, wrong footed and forlorn in these pages.

Tools or experience: start of the journey

At the start of the book Dennett invites you onto a difficult journey and he certainly inspires confidence as he says: ‘Thinking is hard’ (page 1). We can all agree with that. Thinking for yourself is hardest of all but even thinking along the lines suggested in this book can be taxing. Dennett promises to provide us with the tools to do the job. And it is true that we need thinking tools. So we immediately get drawn in and wish to learn to use our tools a bit better and open up to Dennett’s master class with enthusiasm. But we soon discover that Dennett’s toolkit is devoid of some of the most enlightening and fascinating thinking tools human kind has come up with. He has chosen for you which way to bend your mind. Much of his trickery will make you mistrust your own judgement and may lead you into following his example as you feel disorientated a result.

For anyone who seeks to learn the tools of the trade of philosophy, I would rather recommend the excellent Baggini and Fosl (2010) ‘The Philosopher’s Took Kit’ or for total beginners, Nigel Warburton’s (2007) little book ‘Thinking from A to Z’, each of which give greater access to the broad range of tools available for the job, providing a more comprehensive overview of how they are used by a range of philosophers. Even then I would plead caution, for tool kits are much too tempting and distracting for philosophers who want their profession to remain an art rather than a technology. There is much to be gained from systematic investigations of real world problems whilst employing critical dialogue and argumentation. Tools are not the objective of the exercise of philosophy if it is insight and truth and the love of wisdom you are after. Too often philosophers get mesmerized by their own tools and by their technical prowess, in a desire to seem clever and capable of competing with the pseudo-certainties of scientists.

And so it is with Dennett’s book: he can rival with the best. He lists many of his favourite thinking tools and explains them very carefully and colourfully, with his usual vivid examples and intellectual acumen. He mentions labels, examples, analogies, metaphors, staging, thought experiments and intuition pumps and many others and it is not difficult to walk along and find it all very fascinating. But already we have allowed ourselves to lose track of what we may have been after: tools have taken centre stage and dominate the scene. The search for knowledge, truth and wisdom has been obscured, if not entirely lost from sight.

Even as Dennett refers to ancient ways of doing wisdom, such as when he mentions Aesop’s fables, he conflates this with the idea of using intuition pumps, which is inaccurate. Fables, like myths and dramas, are illustrations of folk truth in action, they are moral tales and admonitions to stay on the right path. They are therefore not very much like Dennett’s intuition pumps at all, since these are typically designed to make you grasp some cognitive principle. Fables are explorations, thought experiments, intuitive leaps into new ways of life and invitations to empathy and imagination. They are therefore in a very different category to the intuition pumps favoured in this volume. Why claim kinship with a device so different to what intuition pumps set out to do? Plato’s allegory of the Cave and Descartes’ Evil Demon are also mentioned and similarly claimed as intuition pumps, but they too are moral tales that enable people to rethink the ethical and existential truths of their lives. They are allegories, similes or metaphors. They are exploratory devices inviting you into new areas of existence, new levels of awareness and experience. In philosophy it is important not just to define your terms carefully but also to respect the usual meanings accorded to them, even though it is tempting to reclaim old devices as examples of your own procedures in order to claim continuity and expand the significance of your personal contribution.

Dennett says that making mistakes is important and I could not agree more. We can only proceed by trial and error and making mistakes in that process is part of the creative exploration. But making mistakes by misattributing things or claiming meanings that belong somewhere else, is not part of the fruitful exploratory mistakes we make and learn from for the sake of progress. These seem more like deliberate and intentional distortions in order to claim territory that belongs elsewhere.  Dennett (page 19) makes it sound as if we study the history of philosophy because it ‘is in large measure the history of very smart people making very tempting mistakes’. This is not only an erroneous and misleading statement that does not do anything for the reputation of philosophy, it is also a throw away remark that illustrates rather well how little Dennett is actually prepared to engage with philosophical traditions. This is a shame for there is much to learn from the history of philosophy, both in terms of what thinkers got wrong and in terms of what they got right. Sometimes we learn from their mistakes, sometimes we learn from what they intuited. Their ideas always help us exercise our minds and often enable us to understand something in a new way. Re-reading the classics after many years can be surprisingly revealing of thoughts we did not remember had been there when we first visited. The sheer variety of philosophies helps us claim a wider range for our thinking and imagination, in the same way in which the study of classic schools of painting help us explore the wide range of art that has been explored by humanity over the centuries. It is ludicrous to tell art students they only need to study the classic masters to spot their forebears’ mistakes. Anyone who is training to even approach the level of skill of old masters is going to have to concentrate and work very hard indeed. Only when we have come to a similar level of mastery can we aspire to begin to use our own imagination and create something original and new. It is the same with philosophy: you neglect the classics at your peril as you will deprive yourself of a myriad of amazing ideas. Different philosophers create different mind-sets and mentalities and with it lend a different flavour to the universe. Visiting these different representations of human existence is fascinating and enlightening and teaches us to be broadminded, giving us freedom to roam in our minds. It is like learning to be an explorer of the psyche. We follow the paths made by our predecessors to travel to regions each of us has to get to know before becoming sure footed enough to set out on our own philosophical explorations, trials and tribulations. But one way or another we always cross back over some philosopher’s lines and may follow the paths they have trodden before us for a bit here and there. Each path has its drawbacks, traps and obstacles for sure, but we learn to travel by treading down them, following in the footsteps of early trailblazers, learning about road-signs and highways versus low ways as well as learning about making choices and following directions when we get to forks in the road. It is the learning to roam that matters, learning to recognize each blockage and impasse, each kind of precipice and crossroads, admiring each new vista exposed. The errors are not all that important. It is the learning to way-fare that matters most of all.  All of this Dennett is deliberately diminishing and dismissing as he proceeds to make a claim to a much more narrow interpretation of the discipline that does not do justice to its full potential at all.

The equipment with which we do our philosophical explorations has been much improved over the centuries and we do not fall into the most obvious traps after some initial training, but we have not really improved all that much on the difficulties we have to face underway, nor have we really added many interesting new destinations. The cognitive objective of sharpening our thinking tools is no different now than it ever was. The subjects we can think about are still pretty much limited by the range of human experiences we know about. Of course each time the data of science are different and more advanced and we need to take such facts into account. It is certainly helpful to have been trained in a specialism of science and have practised in that area yourself. I strongly recommend it. But that does not mean letting the facts overshadow our philosophizing: they are merely the material facts informing our thoughts. To put the human prowess of philosophers into perspective: our epistemology and logic have improved over the years but our ethics and aesthetics and general philosophy have not really gone much beyond what we had some centuries ago. I don’t think Dennett’s thinking outsmarts that of Socrates or Spinoza or Kierkegaard on moral or human issues, though of course Dennett’s knowledge of technology, physics and biology is far greater than that of any philosophers of the past. So the more is the pity that he sticks to the narrow confines of talking about only those issues rather than drawing conclusions for the philosophical areas that remain so deprived.

In terms of the wayfaring metaphor: to describe philosophers as mistake specialists is the equivalent of describing geographers as road menders. It is useful to improve our roads, for sure, but this is hardly the point of geography. Focusing so much on the technology distracts from the purpose of philosophy, which last time I checked my dictionary definition still meant the love of wisdom rather than the study of techniques, i.e. technology. Philosophers need to do the job of truth finding so as to enable us to understand human existence better so that we can become wiser at living our lives. Philosophy in Dennett’s book commits a category error: he is a particular kind of practitioner of cognitive science, but does not do much justice to being a philosopher at all.

This is not to say that such cognitive astuteness as he brings to bear cannot sharpen minds: it can enable thinking in all areas and Dennett’s contribution is invaluable in terms of general cognitive skill building, but not exclusively so for philosophers. I fear it might entice them into becoming too urbanized and far too used to easy transport systems of thought, not exercising their own legs, or their map and compass reading skills, losing their sense of perspective and capacity for meta thinking. They might certainly lose their desire to find value in creative and imaginative leaps of intuition that enable us to rise to new levels of insight and new possibilities.

Early challenges

Dennett’s invitation to intelligent undergraduates to grit their teeth and face mistakes and to learn the basics of computer programming to grasp binary thinking are all to the good as these are current and relevant tools for thinking. Ditto with the evolutionary science model, which he champions so consistently as his preferred blueprint: undoubtedly these frameworks are important models to master. But where is the novelty in that? This has been done for well over a century. The challenge is not so much to teach evolutionary models (though perhaps I underestimate how much this continues to be a challenge in the USA), but to integrate them with human intuitions about meaning and purpose, with the more recent developments in epigenetic research and with the knowledge we have gathered in psychology and interpersonal disciplines like sociology or psychotherapy.

Although Rapoport’s rules of critical commentary (p.33) are useful they bear all the stigma of trickery that must be avoided in doing good philosophy through dialogue. It is astonishing to me that philosophers like Dennett do not study the writings and research findings in the field of psychotherapy or communication studies where human interactions have been debated for many decades, providing us with better models than that.  Any therapist will recognize something akin to the person-centred protocol in the rules provided and will see the holes in the argument. They will notice the glaring lack of attention that is being paid to the process of connecting with the other. What we see here instead is an interpersonal method that has been transmuted into a cynical and manipulative interactional scheme for winning an argument. Where is truth finding in all that? Where is the respect for human relational reality? Sound philosophical dialogue is not a contest, it is not a board game, it is a mutual exercise in bringing two minds and two perspectives together to work your way through a problem, dialectically, with the advantage of plural and multiple points of view, adding on to each other in good old dialogical effort and phenomenological investigating through team work. If you insist on doing philosophy in an I-It mode, you will never capture the problems that only come to light from an I-Thou perspective. This is crucial, since philosophies create realities as well as describing them. Following a purely adversarial perspective we exclude and thus may preclude the possibility of a more interwoven reality.

Sturgeon’s Law (p. 36) that ‘ninety per cent of everything is crap’ is a joke that does not do much to create confidence in these methods either. Why have such nonsense when psychology has a fairer statistical model to catch the same principle with the idea of the standard deviation? The Gaussian curve of a normal distribution, where there is a narrow band of below par elements at one end of the spectrum and a narrow band of above average elements at the other end with a huge bulge of mediocre, or rather middle of the road elements in the middle will allow us to discuss this notion much more sensibly. It helps us understand the idea that findings when classified tend to fall into categories, which can help us distinguish the chaff from the wheat. The statistical model needs to be taken with a pinch of salt as well, but at least it is based in reality rather than in a desire to dismiss ninety percent of data out of hand. As we know the concept of statistic normality raises all kinds of interesting value issues, which have to be tackled in considering the outcome of a piece of psychological research. But at least it does not afford us the sloppiness of the unchecked value judgment that 90% is crap. The problems with statistical models are a whole other issue, which Dennett does not tackle and if he had he might have had something of interest to say about the statistical focus on the middle band, the bulge of normality or the average.  Dennett seems to suggest that the only thing that is of interest to him is the 10% that is above average. In fact experience tells me there is much to learn at all ends of the spectrum. One of the great strength of philosophy, as opposed to psychology, is that it can pick up the exceptions and learn from them, arguing for societal change. Philosophers are free to explore new models even if they are outrageous, if this can liberate us to get away from our mediocre pedestrian thinking in the confined middle. I fear that Dennett’s drift is towards the top of a particular tree. He seems to want to educate the averagely intelligent mind to follow a cognitive path that is acceptable to current assumptions about cognitive prowess. At all times his contention is that binary computer thinking is essential to understanding and that the evolutionary model of interpretation of life on earth is the only correct one. No wonder that Dennett is often so surprisingly kind to Dawkins, himself a non philosopher who has evolved from evolutionary cell biologist to would be metaphysician, extrapolating from one narrow specialism to morality and beyond to cosmology.  Neither of them is too bothered with the study of the traditions of ethics and metaphysics or the psychology of religion. Both believe that science and good reasoning about scientific facts are enough. The trouble is that they are so convincing in their methodical narrowness that their condemnation of others who take a different approach can have devastating effects. Their lack of openness is clear when you watch them in the battle with differently thinking folk where they show their exasperation with to them inferior points of view. Good and productive thinking does not work this way. It has to be done with people who disagree and who have different views on the basis of mutual respect for different perspectives. Out of this conversation come new ideas and possibilities rather than confirmation of what one already knew and is holding on to. This is precisely why I am putting myself through the trouble of learning from reading Dennett’s work with as much respect as I can muster, allowing myself to consider his views and formulate my own objections. Ideally this would lead to some debate, though it is highly doubtful that this would happen.

Easy pickings and low blows.

Occam’s razor, on page 39, is well explained as the canon of parsimony.  It is now more generally known as the principle of simplicity, encouraging us to find the lowest common denominator explanation for any phenomenon, as long as the explanation does justice to all the issues under consideration, all other things being equal (ceteris paribus). Somehow Dennett misses that latter all important point and uses his entry as an excuse for challenging creationist theories instead, which is very easy pickings.

While it seemed a bit pedestrian to hear him summarising established ideas, I found Dennett’s invention of an Occam’s broom interesting, as this is about whisking unpleasant or unwelcome facts out of the way, which is something all of us do at various points. It was unfortunate that he used the idea to deal a low and unfair blow to Thomas Nagel (page 40), accusing him of a public gaffe in supporting the wrong person. It would have been much more admirable had Dennett turned his new instrument on himself than to expose a respect worthy colleague and rival in contemporary philosophy. It would have been more impressive to see him scrutinizing his own thinking for the sweeping under the carpet of unpleasant realities that one does not want to have to deal with. As there are plenty of these in his work a little bit of self-reflection would improve Dennett’s credibility greatly. Indeed sweeping things under the carpet is something Dennett’s work does excellently. On this particular occasion, for instance, he neglects to mention various traditions in philosophy that aim to remedy the sad habit of sweeping evidence under the carpet (a habit incidentally as widespread in science as everywhere else). Dennett does not mention the notion of verification in phenomenology or the concept of falsifiability in Popper, both of which would be relevant. What about the view from infinity in Spinoza or even Kant’s categorical imperative? So many philosophers have tried to find ways of not sweeping things under the carpet by various means and it is important to acknowledge this when discussing the problem. What is so worrying in this book is that the tools we are shown are not given in the spirit of teaching the discipline of philosophy, but in the spirit of argumentation and the showing of superiority. While arguing is undoubtedly an important aspect of philosophical exchange its intention, to my mind, should always be to further understanding, regardless of who argues best. It is not like a game of chess that should be won. There are no winners and losers as it is not a game but an investigation or rather a joint research project to which all contributions are welcome. The outcome of a good philosophy debate should be some new learning for all participants. Philosophers who focus so much on philosophical cognitive prowess give philosophy a bad name as they make it look as if it is all about the clever fighting and the winning. Dennett’s idea of philosophy seems to be about taking as many scalps as possible: a hero’s warfare rather than the slavery and painstaking work of thinking slowly and surely. Good philosophy, to my mind, is typified by listening as well as argumentation. Following Dennett is a bit like going on a clinical ward round in psychiatry, hearing doctors getting caught up in arguing over diagnoses rather than trying to understand what ails a person or engage their intelligence in finding a cure in the interest of the patient.

I just don’t get this derivative kind of philosophizing that brandies about terminology as if it is the creation of neologies that matters. It creates the sense that philosophers are in the business of beating or outsmarting their opponents and it feels very much like blood sport at times. Perhaps by critiquing Dennett’s work in the way I am doing, I am falling into that very same trap, trying to beat him at his own game, rather than concentrating on the dialogue. I would much rather have a constructive debate and certainly value the clarity of his exposition, trying to learn from it. His definition of his terms and honest demonstration of his beliefs and methods is certainly conducive to clarifying my own position. I am aware though that it has drawn me further into the competitive mode of operating more than I am usually comfortable with. I much prefer a mutual engagement with the task of understanding human existence.

At any rate I do take the view that Occam’s broom, which Dennett claims is hard to find examples of is amply exemplified by his own work and that of others like him, for instance Dawkins and Harris, both of whom are equally inclined to narrow analyses of human phenomena they have not sufficiently studied. These authors conveniently abstract themselves from the deeply felt experiences of ordinary folk and ignore the wealth of information available on the issues they struggle with. At least Dennett is respectful of his undergraduates’ mistakes and flashes of insight, while of course always carefully showing his own superior grasp of the matter. In my own experience students often remind me of things I have started taking for granted (for instance that ordinary people find it mostly difficult to describe their experience without making judgements about it, or that feelings are rarely experienced with the refinement therapists have acquired and take for granted). The reality of these concrete facts of the life of ordinary consciousness has been taken out of the picture entirely. Instead we are led down the path of ‘right’ thinking as conceived by our mentor, Dennett. Jootsing, as described on page 45, as a term of Douglas Hofstadter’s, is a useful tool that could enlighten many a darkened reductionist argument. I would be inclined to refer to this phenomenon simply by the name of imagination or creativity, experimentation or playful exploration and would recommend it wholeheartedly. I wish Dennett allowed himself to play with it more often.

Why should such habits as thinking of consciousness as a special medium like ether be ‘broken’? It might be well worth trying out these imaginative models so powerfully present in folk psychology before disdainfully dismissing them. Many new ideas and insights have come from just such strange notions. Just because the evolutionary-cognitive and mathematical models of the mind are the most currently popular is no proof that we have got it right! There is ample room to reconsider, discover and experiment with new angles. The brain needs to warm up and allow emotions to bring our creativity to life, before new intuitions make an entrance. There are interesting traditions in the fields of management and leadership that have drawn on such playful realities.

Soon after this statement we finally approach something like a real philosophical question: ‘Why is there something rather than nothing?’ To my great relief Dennett admits it is a deep question in need of an answer. But then he immediately brushes it away by stating: ‘I admit that my calling them pseudo problems not worth anybody’s attention is not very satisfying, but that doesn’t show that I’m wrong.’ (45)

It does not show he is wrong, because we have not even begun to consider the question, but not considering the question does not show you are right either. Judging by the number of people I have worked with who were preoccupied with that self same question it is a problem we need to wrestle with. We need to help people find temporary answers that are more satisfying than ‘it is a pseudo problem’ or worse ‘it is a problem that shows you are ‘introverted-depressive-schizophrenic’. None of us is currently in possession of the right answers, neither theologists, physicists or biologists have any final truths on offer. It is for philosophers to grasp that nettle and debate the issue sensibly and show the way forward rather than begging the question and leave people in despair.

The concept of ‘rathering’ on page 49 is somewhat interesting, though in my experience the term ‘rather’ can be used as a device to show both truth and untruth. It is by no means a sure fire way of finding some one out at cheating as Dennett claims. It is certainly possible to employ the phrase as a sleight of hand, but that does not mean it always indicates a sleight of hand, rather that it does so sometimes, as indeed is the case for many other semantic structures. I think there is a lot of generalizing and overstating going on that whilst charming, is not warranted!

Rhetoric is a complex art and Dennett is doing us a favour by debunking it and showing it up for its misleading qualities. The trouble is that he seems to teach the art as much as he exposes it. I have personally found it more useful to go beyond rhetoric by seeking to connect to the essence of what someone is trying to say, in good faith and in the hope they may be able to say it more plainly and thus often more accurately when I take a stab at summarizing it, prepared to get it wrong and be put right. All too often philosophers turn out to be more concerned to make an impact with the cleverness of their remarks than to want to establish the bottom line of a particular question. They are rarely interested in the genuine intentions or meanings behind the words employed, favouring the age-old game of semantic bantering and word-meanings warfare.

When I ask myself what are Dennett’s intentions in this book, I find multiple objectives. Some of these seem admirable, I.e. putting in ordinary language what others try to grab on to and mystify. That is good and informative for students of philosophy and lay people alike. There is also his attempt to develop further thinking tools and even though I stick with the view that the concept of intuition pumps is a misnomer, this objective too is sound and helpful to all who engage in theory building. But his underlying, implicit, project seems less likeable and less conducive to openness, learning and progress. There seems to me an underlying project of steering young minds towards a cognitive and evolutionary model of human consciousness and human experience, without any critical appraisal of this intention or acknowledgement of other views available or mention of the limited scope of the toolbox provided. I would again invite the interested reader to check out the Baggini and Fosl book to make up their own minds about which of these books is more fair and complete in its provision of methods for thinking.

On page 53, the interestingly named ‘surely operator’ could well come in handy here: surely Dennett does not expect everyone who thinks for a living to agree with him? And yes, in accordance with his hypothesis, I admit to a mental block here, as it seems to me reading the book that this is in fact what Dennett would expect. I get the exact same feeling when I read Dawkins or Harris. These authors have taken up positions so strongly held and so aggressively and well defended, that they are in danger of coming across as far too mighty and lofty for their own good. Their tone is authoritative and at risk of coming across as authoritarian. They are consistently dismissive of other views and impatient about misunderstandings. They already know they are in the right and others are in the wrong.  When faced with such a defined position it becomes difficult to engage in debate and one is pushed into polemics instead. I find myself in fighting mode reading these books and it feels as if I have to muster all my arguments in order to make a small breach in the mighty fortress that has been presented to me. I rebel against such established might and feel like my objections will go unheard and unheeded. These guys are not doing philosophy: they are building new doctrines and strongholds. When I say: ‘surely that is not the right attitude to take in philosophy’, I don’t think it shows up a mental block in me, but rather a block that I am faced with in the opposition. It demonstrates me coming up against the denigration of a value I hold dear: that of fairness in the search for truth and that of remaining open to doubt and learning from those that disagree.

Remaining open

Of course it is hard to remain open in this way and it gets harder as one’s voice is louder and more audible to an increasingly wider public. Fortunately as a therapist and psychologist philosopher I have to keep learning to suspend my own belief. The ordinary people I work with constantly challenge me and point out that I do not know what they think and experience. I have learnt to take other people’s views not only seriously but deeply to heart until I can be on their side as well as on my own. This is an exercise of other based thinking and empathy that is ultimately very conducive to reflective challenge, forcing you to keep rethinking and to remember that you never own the truth. Truth is something beyond us all and we are merely trying to piece it together, each in our own modest manner. Some with more light than others, perhaps, but it can only rarely be said that anyone is entirely in the wrong or anyone entirely in the right at any time. When someone shines a blinding light into someone else’s eyes I become suspicious of their motives and their right to fight quite so hard or be so dominant.

To claim that we can ignore fundamental questions that ordinary people ask and get perturbed by is to me a sign that philosophy is not doing what it says on the tin it comes in: it is not furthering the science of wisdom, but the science of cognition and even on the latter score is proceeding along a particular line.  When cartographers create a map, they are obliged to be careful not to mislead and not to expect some other cartographer to make an alternative map showing the rivers and mountains conveniently missed out on their map because they wanted to show up some tracks only. Reading Dennett I get the image of him creating a map of human thinking muscles: leaving out the flesh, the organs and the very possibility of inner life itself.

The book shows interesting pathways towards thinking, but it hasn’t even begun the task of sketching out what we know about human existence, nor has it made an effort to record the totality of existing roads on the map. It leaves out imagination and creativity, memory, emotion and the complexity of trauma, conflict, ambiguity and meaning and a lot more besides. While I relished being put through my paces as if I were once again a young undergraduate who could be indoctrinated to think in a particular way, there was too much elbowroom for misunderstanding and misdirection.

The book is well written and humorous, if you like that kind of dry and cynical humour that young people often relish when they feel somewhat overwhelmed by the seriousness of adult life. It is a helpful and clear resource for thinking about thinking. I would recommend it for that reason alone, but I was taken aback by the lack of depth of this philosophy. Here is a philosophy that cheerfully disregards the evidence of real human beings living their lives and that is prepared to work from the hypothesis that life can be reduced to binary and competitive principles and that the future lies in artificial intelligence rather than in greater human understanding. Or perhaps I am being too harsh and underestimate the faith Dennett has in the possibility of true human artificial intelligence coming together with deep understanding.

All of this is far too close to a Brave New World dystopia to satisfy my internal test of rightness or morality. A worldview that can ride rough shod over people’s feelings, intuitions, aspirations and spirituality and has no room for doubt or modesty runs the risk of getting out of hand and losing track of the values that have mattered to people for many centuries. There is danger lurking in the underbrush of such worldviews as history has shown us. Lets be careful not to put our faith too much in Dennett’s understanding of what really is the case in the world of women and men.

I think his limited grasp of depth of thought is illustrated quite well by his example of a ‘deepity’, which he defines as a proposition that seems profound but is actually ambiguous, which is what we would normally refer to as a pseudo-profundity. As an illustration he provides Dawkins’ quote of Rowan Williams, then Archbishop of Canterbury, as having stated his faith to be a ‘silent waiting on the truth, pure sitting and breathing in the presence of the question mark’, which is by Christian standards a rather enlightened statement of openness to doubt, but is dismissed by Dennett as ‘I leave the analysis of this as an exercise for you’, implying condemnation and ridicule. I would call this an ad hominem attack, something not discussed by Dennett. It simply demonstrates a lack of serious consideration for a different way of thinking.  We may disagree with Christian dogma, but Williams is not claiming some special wisdom or direct communication with God on this occasion. To my mind this is a fair enough statement by someone who is obviously struggling to come to formulate his position with some care to the terms he uses. I am no fan of the Church of England or any other church for that matter, but in my view the modesty and cautious patience expressed in Williams’ statement is highly commendable by comparison with the frequent bluster and semi-certainty of church statements. Though I have some trouble with the passivity of his position, I have sympathy with Williams’ attempt at sticking with truth and struggle with uncertainty. If this is an example of ‘deepity’ I would recommend that philosophers like Dennett return to experience more ‘deepity’ and learn to dig a little deeper.

I got hopeful and excited when I got to the summary on page 58 which stated that we would next be confronting ‘meaning, evolution, consciousness and especially free will’. I was right with Dennett when he stated that ‘people really care about whether they have free will or not, about how their minds can reside in their bodies and about how-and even whether- there can be meaning in a world composed of nothing but atoms and molecules, photons and Higgs bosons. People should care.’ Indeed, now we are talking about what ordinary people are concerned about and need clarity on from philosophers. But somehow the promise wasn’t fulfilled and we went right back to thinking tools again.

In what follows in part III of the book meaning is immediately defined as content and explored at the semantic level. Of course definitions and language are all important, but they are not what ordinary people care about. They care about the meaning of their life and the meaning of the universe, rather than the meaning of the words we use to discuss them, they care about the very deepities Dennett has such trouble with. He gives us linguistics 101 instead, which lacks the necessary depth or reality to engage the minds of even the least upset of our clients in therapy.

In spite of some interesting excursions into mentalese, which is, I think, a great and useful concept and in spite of nice descriptions of the different ways in which each brain stores its own information, it is clear very rapidly that this will not lead to understanding the deep meanings we share, but rather to how mentalese can be computed in an AI context. Interesting stuff if you are interested in human beings as hard and soft ware based robots. But it is not such good news for your searchers of deeper meanings.

As always there are good things along the way, in spite of the lack of depth. The ‘sorta’ ways in which we compute things hold importance, for they guide us towards understanding something about the messiness and complexity and also the diversity of human thought, which in this are actually very different to the minds of computers, which are exact and specific. When he talks about a child ‘sorta’ believing her dad is a doctor, but learning to put more and more meaning to this statement as she learns more about life, this is a promising introduction to an exploration of subjective and saturated meaning, but actually Dennett sticks with this only to the extent that he establishes that the little girl ‘sorta’ believes this, without getting into the complexity of what the full definition or understanding would be that the most aware person or the most truthful person would aspire to achieving on this score. The reality is of course that this would bring us up against multiple constructions of the same concept, which gets really far too messy for cognitive science. The thrust of the argument is to move us forward towards separating out impressionistic and scientific ways of considering things.  And as you have guessed by now impressions are always bad and science is good.

Visits to continental philosophy so that reductionism may triumph

Again I felt briefly hopeful when the discussion moved to von Uexkull’s concept of Umwelt, for this is a concept that was helpful in grasping the contextual and interactional shape of intelligence in animals, who selectively address certain marks in their world, which can be shown to be different for each species, so that we can distinguish the different Merkwelt of each animal. It is an illustration of Husserl’s concept of intentionality and leads to the insight that intelligence and consciousness are not so much located in the brain as in between ourselves and the world, in connectivity. It led to the idea of Mitwelt, the social and cultural context for humans, in which we relate to others around us in specific and set ways in which we affect each other. It also leads to the idea of the Eigenwelt, the inner world we create to make sense of our world, which we own as our personal world and in which we move with an emotional resonance that affects our processing and perception of reality. I have argued that this extends into an Uberwelt, an ideological conceptual world in which we form ideas that connect us to the invisible realm of concepts, values, meanings and ideals, which is often inhabited or taken over by religion, but is also the realm for thoughts about morality and other forms of metaphysical or spiritual experience. In Dennett’s book the Uberwelt is wholly inhabited by scientific ideology and morality, which are a poor substitute for the dogma of religion, even when based on such intelligent heuristic devices as cognitive science, computer technology, evolutionary theory and artificial intelligence. These models of understanding provide cultural memes and conceptual icons that seem to have the capacity to erode alternative explanations and new investigations of human reality drastically. They overtake and obstruct other possible meanings and discourses and seek to supplant these. Dennett is so blind to alternative models that when he briefly introduces them he skips away without really applying his thoughts to them. The notion of Umwelt remains on the page in all its unexplored potential as so much else in this very rich volume.

It was interesting, at this point to be led through Dennett’s definition of folk psychology and the intentional stance once more. His summary made it so clear that far from seeking to learn from folk psychology and the intuitions that it sometimes holds, folk psychology continues to be something to remain aloof from. Similarly any illusions that the intentional stance might take on board some of Husserl’s insights into intentionality were crushed early on. I did enjoy his disagreement with Theory of Mind, as being too grand and abstract a concept for referring to a person’s ability to have beliefs, goals and desires, but Dennett completely fudged the important research that has been done in this area, in autism in particular, showing that an ability to form ideas similar to those of the people around you is an important part of socialization and that the inability to empathise with the other or to merge with a particular social habit could hamper your progress immensely. I do wonder whether this very ability is not lacking from the theories of Dennett and Dawkins and whether this makes both for their success, which comes from them sounding so detached and self confident, but will eventually show up their weaknesses as people realize that these theories fail to connect to their everyday experience and their deepest feelings about what matters and about what is true and false and right and wrong in reality.

I found it very interesting that Dennett can so easily dismiss our ‘agent detector’ capacities as inaccurate and misleading, rather than leaving open the possibility that indeed some people pick up agency in objects and organisms around them. Such conclusions are led from position taking rather than from careful elimination of possibilities and studying of the facts. For someone who is used to listening to people who have delusions and ideas that are out of touch with social reality, Dennett’s trivializing manoeuvre is way too quick and way too self-assured to satisfy me.

But unafraid to carry on regardless of my growing dissatisfaction, I put myself through the trouble of sticking with Dennett’s argument and I even made myself read the tedious chapters on IT 101 that followed for several chapters afterwards, teaching me nothing I had not known for quite a while now.

On page 148 Dennett says: ‘for hundreds of years we have had plenty of evidence that the brain is somehow the seat of the soul’, which shocked me back into paying proper attention. This is another sleight of hand, or perhaps just a demonstration of how he has decided to compact mind and soul. We may have agreed that the brain is the seat of the mind, mind and soul are quite different entities. Just because Dennett does not believe in the soul and is not interested in it does not afford him the right to conflate the two. It is certainly true that people have long suspected that the brain is the mechanical infrastructure of the operations of the mind but not even this is entirely correct anymore. We now know that memory for instance is place sensitive and could very well be embedded in the connection between our mind and the environment rather than just in our brain. Equally the sensitivity of the bowels as a further extension of the mind, has now been well established. So, while we have to take the equation of mind and brain with a pinch of salt, we can certainly not jump over the divide between brain and soul. At no point has Dennett discussed the soul and the long tradition of its debate in philosophy and religion. Not even Dennett can, at a stroke, decide there is no need to consider this concept. It is far more complex than that. The overlap between the concepts of soul/self/ego/mentality/embodied presence and many other expressions of the centre of human reality should be discussed for starters.

If all human existence is to be reduced to a mere biological operating mechanism or organism and we are to conclude that we will be able to summarize it in future as an algorithm, we need at least to deal with the established concepts that have previously been used to make sense of these things. To summarily dismiss them, leaves the argument hanging. Philosophy can do better than dictating this rule bound and narrow minded outlook.  Fortunately the problem is a lot more complex than Dennett makes it seem.

Bring in the artists, the creators, the brilliant imaginations that will give us new ideas and new horizons. Widen the scope of our minds rather than reducing them to this crazed obsession with mechanical distortion of what folk psychology feels in its bones: that there is a lot more to mankind and to life itself than what the small minds of cognitive science envisage for us. These assumptions need debunking and checking, most carefully.

In the next section Dennett provides some interesting challenges, such as solving a puzzle that has several equally good solutions but he does not notice that looking at a problem from many sides and discovering that there are often various solutions possible, is exactly the idea that phenomenology introduced and why Husserl thought it was important to challenge the linear approach of mathematics with a new form of human thinking. I do think Dennett would do well to read some more Husserl.

The evolutionary path

In his summary on page 197 Dennett asks if the 12 intuition pumps he has presented have worked. If they have, he states, they will have blocked the tempting paths of error. If only life and thinking were that simple! As we know error tends to rear its head wherever we tread, no matter what our instruments. Neither does Dennett consider the possibility that his pumps may pump so hard that they flood and obstruct the fertile path of imagination. Even so he is fair and modest in his evaluation of what has been achieved, and to his credit establishes that ‘sorta’ thinking (what I would personally call loose, imaginative or creative thinking) is necessary for consciousness and that this is different to binary thinking. He accepts he has not provided a theory of meaning yet, but goes on with great bravado to the next section, promising much.

From section VI we are on a roll. Now we are going full steam ahead towards evolutionary thinking. He immediately boldly states that Darwin’s idea was the best anybody has ever had, referring back to his earlier work, but in my view overstating the case and proselytizing. But he has a good go at trying to win us over. His Babel allegory and his tree of life metaphor are helpful to those who didn’t really get their heads around evolutionary theory the first time around. For those who did it feels like perseveration. It is as if Dennett has to keep reminding himself of the truth of that single idea, even when he acknowledges that the issue about evolution versus intelligent design might not actually be an issue, if we accept that evolution is a process that is bursting with intelligence. He actually says: ‘the biosphere is utterly saturated with design, with purpose, with reasons’ and then goes on to show that this is somehow the result of a random process that has no bearing on intelligence. I find it always surprising that evolutionists fail to notice that the intelligence of the system they are commenting in is far superior to the human intelligence commenting on it. Why deny that system the same purposefulness accorded to a much less clever human intelligence? Is not the system itself the greater intelligence and are we not a tiny speck of intelligence by comparison? Why always place humans at the top end of the evolutionary cycle when the whole of evolution itself is so much greater than that? I think that the divide between religious people and evolutionary theory could be more easily bridged if we could state more clearly how intelligence is manifest in the operations and regularities of the universe. Though this intelligence is undoubtedly self-propelling and evolutionary rather than creationist in nature it clearly develops and evolves in ways we have not fathomed out yet.

Dennett sticks to the classic interpretation and quickly brings in the notion of there being design without an intelligent designer. Somehow he omits the possibility that the design process itself demonstrates intelligence in its self-designing mode of operating and that there is a possibility that there is a case of purposeful intelligence at work. This is certainly not something we can omit to consider and I welcomed Nagel’s brave attempt to tackle this issue in his recent book Mind and Cosmos (2012) even though fellow philosophers shamefully attacked him as a result. Dennett interestingly expresses his respect for the intelligence of the universe, but then sounds terribly worried lest he is accused of believing in an intelligent designer behind it. Why though should we have to fear that there is a puppeteer when life is so spectacularly self evolving and self propelling that it is clearly not engineered by some person-like entity but is an autonomous process in its own right in a different category, shining forth in all its amazing complexity?  The problem as always is the lack of imagination in those who are scientifically minded and their fear of being confounded by religiosity and naïve beliefs. We can do intelligent thinking about this other kind of intelligence.

Dennetts gets similarly nervous around words like ‘magic’ or ‘morphic resonance’ as if the unexplained aspects of life must not be called with words indicating our surprise and lack of knowledge and as if we cannot try to coin new concepts in order to grasp and study the phenomena better. Darwin had a good idea, but that does not stop us from going beyond it. I think there is a strange phobia of religion and creationism in the United States, which has led to intelligent people fearing that there are only two options: you are either an atheist who believes in evolutionary theory, or you are a moron who believes in God. Wouldn’t it be liberating to allow for some more alternatives and come up with multiple models until we are a little surer about what it is we are trying to describe?

The idea that Absolute Ignorance is the driving force of evolution is nothing new: we can find such statements in many ancient texts including the ‘ex nihil ens creatum’ in the Kabbalah. But such incursions into spirituality are definitely not on Dennett’s agenda. He hastens to remind us that natural selection does not have a mind. Well may one ask what his definition of mind is in that case? The confusion is over the dualism: natural selection and nature in general almost certainly do not have a mind, but they certainly look a lot like mind in action. Is that enough for them to have their intelligence acknowledged, an intelligence so formidable that it overawes anyone who explores it?

I find the certainty with which Dennett asserts that termites have no idea about the purpose of what they are creating, or any purpose in the shapes they are making somewhat disturbing. His lack of respect for the animal kingdom and the hidden but different forms of intelligence operating in it, are astounding. How does he know that we are the first minds who can represent the reasons that account for the success of animal strategies and arrangements? The phrase ‘many more examples of evolution’s mathematical competence -without -comprehension could be cited’ is undoubtedly true, but is saturated with value judgement nevertheless.

Soon after getting to this part of the book I came across Steven Rose’s review of Dennett’s book in the Guardian (http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2013/may/15/intuition-pumps-tools-dennett-review) and felt uplifted by his critical appraisal of Dennett’s excessive emphasis on evolutionary theory and his lack of awareness of epigenetic studies and other more complex models of human nature. I would add that Dennett’s apparent ignorance of ethology and the study of animal communication is staggering. It all feels very reductionist and one sided, even two-dimensional. Rose’s comment is that ‘Blind-sighted by his reductionism, he (Dennett) cannot see that consciousness demands not only an embodied brain but an embedded body, emerging through the interchanges of individual humans with each other and the worlds we inhabit and create.’ I felt very gratified in finding I was not the only one struggling with Dennett’s worldview and finding it wanting.

Evolution and beyond

It became increasingly hard to persist with my reading in the second half of the book, where I baulked at his persistent assumption that human experience can only be explained by reference to evolutionary thought, only to find that evolutionary theory is described in the most basic of biological ways, without any reference to the social-psychological-emotional and spiritual complexity of human living. Evolutionary psychologists have gone beyond Dennett’s model, so why does he not draw on their work? How can we take his philosophy seriously when it stops so short of providing a credible basis for our work with people in the helping professions? None of these speculations about our origins help us any further in making sense of human existence or of the obstacles on people’s paths or how they might enhance their consciousness. Dennett’s theory is firmly based in a discourse of the past and forgets to look around itself at the reality of human living in the present and in the future. Do we want to evolve in a way that draws us closer to the intelligence of computers, or do we want to involve in the direction of the intelligent universe around us? Human evolution as it is happening outstrips Dennett’s thinking and he fails to pay any attention to the need for future direction. Biology and biologically based extrapolations are not the only path available. There is a lot more to human experience than biology. Understanding meaning, purpose and the idea of intentionality as described in phenomenology, together with the notion of inter-subjectivity, are necessary if we want to progress in ways that are more attractive than the options a purely technological future can offer us.

Dennett comes back down to earth a bit when he starts talking about the cycles of nature, diurnal, yearly and Krebs. He makes the important point that repetition is the secret of manufacture, since this and most cycles work by the slow accumulation of imperceptible increments.  Quite a useful observation as it is this repetition that creates the virtuous circle of progression. In socio-cultural terms this is usually referred to as learning, but Dennett does not really go there as he is far more preoccupied with computations and algorithms. He fails to tackle the unspoken issue of the infinite regress of algorithms, which lead to ever greater and more complex algorithms; perhaps even to some kind of overarching algorithm of life that generates the patterns. Even if this is a self-propelling, apparently random and mechanistic process it still deserves further thought. Dennett stays with the Darwinian principle that all life evolves by the differential survival of replicating entities. So be it. But he neglects to note the difference in quality between replicating memes that are objects or organisms and those that are ideas. In the latter case it might be more enlightening to name them icons, as these are actually shaped, picked and chosen as especially important and representative concepts, rather than being generated randomly and automatically multiplied: even when Dawkins’ idea of the selfish gene goes viral, this is not a random process generated by nature: it is the result of a carefully honed strategy of drawing attention and signalling importance, sucking other minds into a path that has been carefully designed and chosen. Dennett sticks to the most reduced possible observations and is allergic to any models that may heighten our expectations of consciousness as something too magical, too metaphysical or even transformational or transmuting of the physical into the mental. There is no talk of meanings or values at all.  Perhaps this would get us to close to the realization that meanings can be carefully manipulated by those in the know.

Instead Dennett invites us to think about zombies and zimboes at this point, which seems fitting, as people are being treated as if they are zombies or zimboes by Dennett. The latter particularly seem to be what Dennett appears to believe human beings are: zombies with the additional power to monitor their own activities. This seems a very extreme way of removing all ideas of pre-reflective and reflective consciousness.  Now all we are left with is the power to self-monitor, which is hardly the same as reflecting on life or on one’s own role in it. A computer self monitors, but that is still only a mechanical quality and does not create insight and meaning, or sudden moments where pennies drop and the whole picture is altered. I am not sure that Dennett distinguishes between humans and zimboes or whether he is willing to accept that our consciousness and self consciousness vary in intensity but have a purpose, which is that of creating or grasping meanings and values in the world in order to guide our actions. He just seems so reluctant to talk about meaning and value, that it is worrying. What kind of universe does Dennett live in? What does he do with the pre-frontal lobes of the cortex? Of course this is the moment for Dennett to introduce his old enemy: the qualia, in other words: the way things seem to us, which is the closest to meanings we will ever get, and even these are anathema to Dennett. His dismissive recounting of Louis Armstrong’s reply to someone who asked him what jazz was sums it up nicely. Armstrong said: ‘If you have to ask, you ain’t never gonna get to know’ and that does seem a rather effective and pithy way of putting it. Dennett however calls this an ‘amusing tactic’ which expresses ‘the presumption that is his target’. This presumption, I presume, is that of Louis Armstrong’s reference to jazz as possessing a magical quality of vitality, which requires active engagement with experiencing and experimenting. What Armstrong refers to is the fact that those standing on the outside of that experience and who are trying to get inside of it by asking questions about it, will need to plunge in, if they want to find out. Now this is true for most experiences, as experience by definition is something you have to do rather than to talk about. And indeed to anyone who is into the arts or jazz such a presumption is pretty much self-evident. And it is equally self evident that there are people, sometimes called philistines, many of them scientists, who fail to appreciate such experiences and do not lend their bodies and brains, let alone their selves, to visiting these unknown lands to have these experiences. It is very telling that Dennett thinks that Armstrong uses a mere ‘tactic’, when it seems far more likely that Armstrong was speaking from the heart and with a sincere expression of the challenge he wanted to make to the alienation he could guess in his interlocutor: an alienation very much felt in this book, throughout. In the next chapter the example of qualia is that of the vim in the dollar bill. This is getting worrying for those who do not share the enthusiasm for dollar bills taken for granted by Dennett. He appears to describe some kind of objective quality instead of being aware of the complete subjectivity of his statements. He does not even mention the way in which dollar bills might be experienced by Europeans as monopoly money, or by unfriendly nations as a symbol of abuse of power and hegemony. Vim indeed. So, subjectivity slips in under the net nevertheless, but then, is obviously not captured fully nor described very carefully to make sense of its cultural bias and multiple perspectives.

Can we be deceived by our senses? Yes, of course, there are many studies showing this. It has been well established for over a century. Can we self deceive? Ditto. Can we be confused? Of course. Can we be deficient? Yes. But none of this proves that there is no such thing as qualia or essences of experience. It just means these experiences are unreliable and volatile and need to be studied most carefully. I would suggest that the very volatility and fluidity of meanings is what allows for our evolution of consciousness. But that is a different matter, not discussed by Dennett.

Dennett goes on a different tack or attack, introducing Chalmers’ distinction between easy and hard problems of consciousness. Of course he dismisses the idea there can be a hard problem out of hand. The hard problem as defined by Chalmers is the problem of the actual experience of consciousness, as opposed to the easy problems of consciousness, which are problems of hardware and wiring. Dennett refuses this distinction, which is probably quite evident to most of us as a sensible and useful line to draw. Dennett falters and fails at this point as he struggles to maintain his views in the face of such a gap in his mind set. He begins to use quasi-masterful language like: ‘that there is a hard problem is simply a mistake’. This is not argumentation, but statement. Nothing about this lack of distinction between easy and hard problems of consciousness is being demonstrated. In order to make his point he compares the idea of believing in the experience of consciousness to that of the experience of those taken in by stage magic, when people swear that something amazing just happened. The two events are only connected in Dennett’s mind, perhaps because he himself uses the tactics of persuasion, misdirection and sleight of hand often to such good effect. Questioning the reality of the human experience of consciousness will take a lot more argumentation than that! I would like Dennett to sit in on some therapy sessions and think about this again after observing the facts.

The problem is not that Dennett explains consciousness away or that he denies it exists, the problem is that he equates it with awareness. What he forgets, in his world of focused thought and diminished emotionality and in the midst of his refusal to allow for deepity and spirituality and creativity and meaning is that consciousness is actually so much more to many other people than it is to him. He has chosen to live in a world devoid of this capacity, which is sad to observe, but that does not give him the ability to claim it does not exist for other people either. He is now definitely overstating his case, keen to remain to the facts of the human brain that are computable within his own system. I would be curious to hear what Dennett has to say about Sartre’s distinction between reflective and non-reflective consciousness or what he makes of reading Proust. It seems to me that he does not even get close to considering the idea of self-reflection at any point. It is interesting in this context that he goes so deeply into the example of the tuned deck card trick. For attunement, in the Heideggerian sense, is what is sadly missing. The idea that we can resonate with a world and that consciousness brings to light what we resonate with as much as what is resonating inside is clearly alien to Dennett and nevertheless the card trick is built around such a capacity. When Dennett starts denying things he knows nothing about it is hard to stay with him. Like Leibniz once said, he is often right about what he asserts but wrong about what he denies and he denies more as the book progresses towards its conclusion.

Dennett now brings in Searles’ Chinese Room thought experiment, which argued that if a person is locked in a room with a computer that helps them send messages to the outside world in Chinese, this does not make them a Chinese speaker, since they still have not learnt the language. It has always seemed to me a very good point and interesting demonstration, since comprehension of language is not at all the same as seeming to be able to handle linguistic concepts. As a trilingual person myself I know this problem well. I speak mentalese much better than any language I have ever learnt. My comprehension of meanings has improved greatly by having to translate back and forth all my life, but my actual handling of any particular language always falls short of my much deeper inner comprehension, which draws on multiple perspectives and can never be fully expressed, ever. When Dennett shows how intelligent Turing machines are, he fails to see that though they are good at handling the appearance of intelligence (the concepts and words) they fail to have the mentalese, inner comprehension. Once again Dennett overestimates mechanical processing and underestimates the value of intuition, experience, and depth of comprehension and valuing of understanding.

Similarly I don’t think his dismissal as ‘gratuitous’ of the act of a human hand acknowledging a piece of paper does justice to the value attributed by such an act, it reveals his continuous undervaluing of the links created between people and the chains of meaning that create a different relationship between us and with ourselves.

Fortunately this was followed by his chapter on Narrative Gravity, which is one of his concepts I like best and have actually used in my own work to help other people understand the flexibility and fluidity of the self they create and can constantly rebalance. But even here Dennett steers clear of the idea that we create a sense of authenticity and authority when establishing such a dynamic narrative centre of gravity. He also disavows the importance of us needing a bodily sense of gravity as much as a social, a personal and an ideological one. At each of these levels people may lose their inner clarity and freedom and at each of these levels the balancing act is an important one. What a shame Dennett does not move into these areas.

Phenomenology scorned

Now we come to hetero-phenomenology and I am perturbed there is so little understanding or explanation of what phenomenology has been used to signify and produce over the centuries. Obviously Dennett’s famous idea of the intentional stance owes very little to Husserl’s intentionality. Intentionality is about the dynamic and active nature of consciousness and the genius of Brentano’s insight was that human consciousness is always directional and connective to something outside of itself. It is never caught in its internal world and never solipsistic. It makes constant links and is, like light, a process rather than a thing. To become reflective about that process (rather than to attend to subjectivity as Dennett wrongly states) is the goal of phenomenology, because it allows us to base our computations on how things actually take place in our minds, which are the (current) measure of all things on this earth. It is quite another matter to become deliberate about directionality and connectivity of our minds and we need to account for this further level of complexity.

Doing phenomenology is to deliberately use conscious experience in a systematic way and describe it so carefully that it is accurately considered and contemplated. It can be looked at from different angles, going round the houses to examine its reality and appearance, preferably coming to it from different perspectives as per descriptions from different observers. Thus we derive an essence of the phenomena we observe and describe, delivering some little bit of further understanding. The hetero bit is already part of phenomenology and does not have to be added on, as Dennett feels to be necessary. All of these important aspects of phenomenological practice are nicely swept under the carpet, not so much with Occam’s broom, which would suggest it had been done intentionally, but rather by omission and through lack of consideration of those aspects of reality or that particular method in philosophy, which is studiously ignored and omitted. I would term this: having blinds spots because of one’s intellectual predilections. It is a kind of disavowal rather than a tactic. We all pick and choose and we all have blind spots, but it is not good practice to make it sound that we are exempt and that we are above it and hold the truth when we have simply not bothered to find out what other views there are on the subject.

His claim that Husserlian phenomenology is auto-phenomenology is quite absurd and shows he is no expert on the many varied phenomenological reductions that Husserl has described. It would indeed seem that Dennett is ill informed of the Husserlian project to find a new basis for science by coming to each object of our intentionality through a process of clearing and widening of our own narrow perspective. He makes the classic beginners’ mistake of thinking that phenomenology is an introspective method, which it is definitely not, notwithstanding the subjective investigations of the transcendental reduction. Phenomenology is a descriptive method and a very careful one, which takes multiple perspectives into account.

He dismisses Levine’s sensible statement that it is our conscious experiences rather than our verbal statements about them that matter out of hand, as ‘this can’t be right’. Surely this way of proceeding can’t be right! I don’t think Dennett even shows that he has correctly understood what Levine means. After this we go into sensory illusions and this is so lacking in up to date psychology data, that I would not pass it in a post-graduate paper. If Dennett wishes to draw on psychology he will need to muster his facts a lot more and get better quality information to build on. Merleau Ponty fifty years ago did better than that and there have been thousands of relevant studies since then expanding our understanding of human perception.

By this time my attention was definitely flagging, but I got far more engaged again when a whole section on Free Will was promised. However this section goes wrong from the very first sentence as he posits an imaginary opposition between manifest image and scientific image. These are not necessarily opposites and there are many other images possible, such as a hidden of implicit image for instance. Indeed there are many different scientific disciplines that come up with different images of the same phenomenon. To want to get a hold of what something ‘really’ is, is the opposite of wanting to do magic. It is to want to grasp the nettle and get to the essence. This is not always best achieved by a scientific explanation that analyses and pulls apart the phenomena under observation. Nowhere is this more true than in psychology, where an objective analysis of a person’s experience will almost certainly miss some of the really important factors at work. To come to a true picture of the complexity of what is going on in a human being, we need to be prepared to look many times and in many different ways at what is happening. It is rather like doing cinema, where we approximate reality by taking many different shots of the same object and then weave these together to create an impression capable of rendering the essence of what we are trying to capture. Magic is of course precisely possible because we can have this capacity for shifting or collapsing our perspective and misrepresenting as well as presenting it to the best of our abilities. Truth is possible because we can stack up different perspectives until we really begin to see something in its global reality. Dennett deals with the magic by quickly moving on to the pleasant fallacy of the hard wiring of the brain, something neuroscience is increasingly and rapidly moving away from. It is so tempting to think of the brain as a machine and to assign certain functions to certain areas or clusters of neurones, but this does not match the reality of human experience or the plasticity we observe when people lose part of their brain function and manage to replace it with a different way of doing the job. People are more malleable and indeed more suggestive than Dennett’s account allows for. In fairness to Dennett he does at one point question the idea of right and wrong wiring of the brain, so often taken for granted (p.358).

Nevertheless he now moves onto the terrain of showing how programming goes on in the brain and how we may improve on this. He uses game theory and does introduce the observation that some actions that may seem irrational are actually pragmatically intelligent as they work (like stotting in gazelles keeps the predators at bay), they are in some way, I would say, creative and inventive. However Dennett has no truck with that idea, but carries on showing how we can gain competence without comprehension, even though highlighting this as an issue earlier on (p.372). He tells us that most philosophers have claimed that unpredictability is a necessary condition for free will and that he sees this differently. He fails to note that Spinoza’s account of freedom is very much interlinked with an understanding of necessity, as is indeed the account of freedom in Camus, the later Sartre and de Beauvoir. There are striking and shocking gaps in Dennett’s history of continental philosophy, allowing him to put his own ideas forward as new and ground breaking when they are not. Sometimes it sounds as if Dennett is fed up with his own straight jacket and is looking to escape, but wrongly assumes he is the only one astute enough to formulate such ideas. I would recommend he spends some time reading existential authors as well as psychology, as he will undoubtedly gain a lot from it and engage with it creatively for the benefit of all. It might make him rethink his assumption that life is very much like a lottery.

Dennett’s work as always is stimulating and thought provoking but it cannot be considered to be as ground breaking or revolutionary as one might expect from the reputation he has established. The paths he invites us to tread are not the paths that I would like to use for my own practice of psychotherapy or philosophy. There is very little in this book that will help me be a better therapist or help me show the way to other human beings with more insight or understanding of the human condition and its many pitfalls. What a shame that someone so eminent and accomplished and clearly so clever should stand in the way of his own brightness, throwing so many shadows and so little light.

Dennett, D. (2013) Intuition Pumps and other Tools for Thinking, London: Penguin Books.

Baggini J and Fosl, P.S. (2010) The Philosopher’s Toolkit: A Compendium of Philosophical Concepts and Methods, 2nd edition, Chichester:Wiley.

Nagel, T. (2012) Mind and Cosmos, New York: Oxford University Press.

Warburton N. (2007) Thinking from A to Z, 3d edition, London:Routledge.

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