Here’s an article on the neurological foundations of fundamentalist thinking (via AL Daily). Is it saying something interesting, or is it just crudely reductionist?

It’s based on the convergent/divergent distinction, where convergent thinking involves working towards a solution using familiar problem-solving methods – a doctor, say, reaching a diagnosis by checking through the symptoms – while divergent thinking requires a creative break from the usual methods, the ability to, as the phrase goes, think outside the box. Crudely, it’s the difference between intelligence and creativity.

It’s been established that people with frontal lobe damage perform poorly in tests for divergent thinking. They’re fine as long as they stick to familiar patterns, but find it difficult to change in response to altered circumstances. The application to fundamentalist thinking is fairly obvious:

Do extremism and an unconditional adherence to religious dogma result from a failure of a portion of the frontal lobe to fully develop or, if fully developed, to activate? Studies suggest that faithful adherence to a single reasoning strategy on tests such as the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test means that parts of the frontal lobes are inactive, have failed to fully develop, or have even been damaged. Thus, unqualified disdain for divergent beliefs,for personal interpretation, and for creative theories like Darwin’s theory of evolution, may indeed have, at least a partial, biological explanation: a reduced utilization of that section of the brain which has played such a vital role in humanity’s creative advances—the frontal lobes. By unconditionally obeying religious tenets—or any dogma—some people may be relying on the phylo-genetically older, more posterior portions of the brain that store knowledge and enable consistent or stable behaviors and, unknowingly, circumventing the portion which has been gifted to humans alone through evolution.

So – fundamentalists have poorly functioning frontal lobes? It doesn’t get much more crudely reductionist than that. On the other hand it can’t be denied that fundamentalists insist on an education that encourages rote learning and obedience, and discourages questioning. And perhaps such crude forms of indoctrination do in fact adversely affect the development of certain parts of the brain, such as the frontal lobes. Somehow, though, it’s hard to escape the feeling that this is an argument in favour of open liberal questioning cultures – an argument, of course, with which we can all concur – that’s thrown in a few neurological terms in an attempt to give it some scientific credibility. Drop the frontal lobes stuff and you’ve got the entirely uncontentious view that poor education discourages open creative thinking.

What we are suggesting is that being stuck in a doctrinal belief system which is intolerant of one’s own or another’s personal interpretation, or one which dispels science and foments intolerance of others while setting its followers apart as elite and uniquely special, is a move away from our full potential and from the kind of reasoning that has brought humanity its marvelous advances: that it is good to question the status quo, to remain open to creative new ideas, and to apply wisdom to their use. Moreover, when someone is stuck in a belief, we are suggesting that they might try to explore their capability to question and consider their own personal interpretations—to practice our evolved capacity for divergent thinking…

Children raised in environments which consistently reward convergent reasoning and strict adherence but punish divergent reasoning, could conceivably grow into adults who are prone to getting stuck in various beliefs or ideologies. Might our current preoccupation with strict religious fundamentalism be creating obstacles to resolving the complex dilemmas we face in the world today? If we continue to insist that children around the world unfailingly adhere to the tenets of religious fundamentalism which promote intolerance, are we doomed to repeat the past simply because we have nurtured a world of thinkers who will not diverge from what they are told?

Well yes. Obviously. There’s nothing here to disagree with. But I can’t quite buy the idea that, contrary to what the authors want us to believe, they’ve come up with anything other than the bleeding obvious.

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4 responses to “Front Lobe Fundamentalism”

  1. P. Froward Avatar
    P. Froward

    Among people who “diverge from what they are told”, we find: Anybody who joins a cult in adulthood (including any fundamentalist who wasn’t raised that way (which is probably most)), new age “floaty blah” crystal-rubbers, homeopaths, reflexologists, breatharians, Scientologists, Western Holocaust deniers, 9/11 conspiracy theorists, FEMA-watchers, UFO loons, British Israelites, Pyramid Power clowns, ancient astronaut experts, William S. Burroughs, Terence McKenna, and just about every other flavor of idiot, nutcase, and whackjob under the sun.
    And, of course, a few counterexamples like Albert Einstein.
    But let’s face it, a willingness to invent new explanations for what you observe doesn’t imply an ability to invent explanations that make any damn sense. Questioning authority is great and all, but if the authority is smarter than you and has better information, you’re liable to be pissing in the wind.
    Fortunately, most non-geniuses have better things to do with their time.

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  2. dearieme Avatar
    dearieme

    It’s decades since I read Liam Hudson’s book on the convergent/divergent distinction, but I do remember guffawing when I realised he’d changed his definitions half way through. Very divergent.

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  3. TDK Avatar
    TDK

    “What we are suggesting is that being stuck in a doctrinal belief system which is intolerant of one’s own or another’s personal interpretation, or one which dispels science and foments intolerance of others while setting its followers apart as elite and uniquely special, is a move away from our full potential and from the kind of reasoning that has brought humanity its marvelous advances: that it is good to question the status quo, to remain open to creative new ideas.”
    The above statement is fairly apolitical, yet other sections clearly link doctrinal thinking to religious belief. Let’s turn this around; does the same apply for doctrinal thinking on on leftist ideas. For example, it is now uncontentious that government control of industry doesn’t work. (Substitute another leftist canard if required). The fact is that many on the far left still adhere to this disproved notion. I don’t see any acknowledgement within this essay.
    “Recall our eventual acceptance (against initially unyielding church doctrine) of Copernicus’s unfathomable idea that the Sun, and not the Earth, was at the center of our solar system, or Einstein’s affront to the known laws of physics with his concept that matter and energy are different forms of the same thing.”
    It seems to me that both displaced ideas seemed to be common sense in their day and took a generation to be displaced. This wasn’t solely due to religious opposition, Einstein’s theories were rejected by several scientists of his day. Whilst part of this may well be due to an inability to understand or accept the change, part must be due to an establishment naturally defending their ideas. I would imagine that the established scientists who initially rejected Einstein were equally capable of accepting ideas at a different time in their lives or accepting different new ideas then.
    It seems the essay has limited views of what constitute divergent thining:
    “finding an alternative to war in a tense geopolitical situation”
    Was Churchill divergent or was Chamberlain? It seems that the authors have labelled approved behaviour as divergent.
    “Children raised in environments which consistently reward convergent reasoning and strict adherence but punish divergent reasoning, could conceivably grow into adults who are prone to getting stuck in various beliefs or ideologies.”
    This sentence describes to a ‘T’ the way my children are taught environmentalism! “Thou shalt recycle”.
    Another in the series “Why Right Wingers are thick”.

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  4. James Hamilton Avatar
    James Hamilton

    This also reflects the different approaches taken by those researchers who are emotionally attached to the idea of the brain as a fixed system and those who regard it as more plastic and adaptive. As a psychotherapist, I’m of the latter school (otherwise I might as well pack up and go home).
    These here are fixed-brain ideas. My best guess is that, although the conclusions are undoubtedly interesting, it’s far too early in our understanding of the brain to know all that much about why they are interesting.
    In other words, no, I don’t believe simple lesion or malfunction or development failure in the frontal lobe can reliably take responsibilty for fundamentalism or similar modes of thinking (and even without any of that, they haven’t really defined their terms properly, as Dearieme points out. Philosophical laziness typical of psychological research, sadly).

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