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Friday, January 25, 2008 | Science : Economics | print version Print | Comments

Document Shermer's 'Mind of the Market' Reviewed in L.A. Times

by LATimes.com

Reposted from:
http://www.calendarlive.com/books/la-et-book25jan25,0,1864564.story

Man's true nature meets market economics.

Back in the 17th and 18th centuries, philosophers typically began political treatises with an exploration into the "state of nature," the premise being that the ideal form of governance should follow logically from mankind's true condition. But what is mankind's true nature? Good or bad? Thomas Hobbes took a famously dour view: Life is "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short," at least without the rule of a Leviathan. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, however, justified direct democracy by claiming that man is naturally compassionate, "born free, and everywhere he is in chains."

Oh, pity these thinkers! For they were writing before armies of social scientists learned to coax subjects into rooms with half-silvered mirrors and into high-tech brain-scanning machines, generating reams of data on what people are "really" like.

But would any of this have changed our dead philosophers' minds about human nature? After all, the evidence remains decidedly mixed -- at best, we are a wondrously complicated mess of contradictions and stunningly silly tendencies. And one of those silly tendencies is the "confirmation bias" -- that is, people tend to believe only the evidence that confirms what they already think.

Such is the pleasure and frustration of the new book "The Mind of the Market: Compassionate Apes, Competitive Humans, and Other Tales From Evolutionary Economics." On one hand, we have author Michael Shermer, founder and director of the Skeptics Society, captivating raconteur of all the greatest hits of behavioral, evolutionary and neuropsychology, provider of wonderful cocktail party material, like the one about 50% of an audience challenged to count the number of completed basketball passes failing to notice the gorilla walking across the crowded court. But we also have Shermer, the tendentious libertarian, doing logical back-flips unbecoming a self-proclaimed skeptic to marshal human nature's unruly contradictions into a political program of minimal government and extreme market capitalism.

Interestingly, Shermer's first target is the very neoclassical economics on which so much free market fundamentalism has been built. He has a legitimate beef with the discipline's fundamental assumption that people can be reduced to nothing more than rational, self-interested utility maximizers. Rather, he contends, whether we are selfish or altruistic depends on the context: "We evolved to display within-group amity and between-group enmity."

But it's more than just a matter of intention, he says: It's in our genes. Or, more colorfully: "We cooperate for the same reason we copulate -- because it feels good." Even trust is a chemical reaction brought on by close contact, which triggers the release of the hormone oxytocin in all but the 2% of us who are classified as sociopaths. And "mirror neurons" in our brain help us feel empathy. This makes sense evolutionarily too, Shermer argues, because "more often than not the most adaptable thing you can do to survive and reproduce is to be cooperative and altruistic."

So what about the bad traits? Fear and anger, Shermer asserts, evolved to help us to avoid and defend against danger. Only in the wrong environment, like, say, the corporate culture of Enron, does evil actually proliferate. But, he insists, Enron is the exception, not the rule, and that if most people behaved this way, market capitalism "would have collapsed centuries ago." (In fact, the modern invention of market capitalism has almost collapsed multiple times and would have but for repeated interventions by governments.) Citing research showing that autonomy and self-reliance make people happiest, clearly, he concludes, "if you want happiness and freedom, you have to minimize government interference." (Conveniently, since people are naturally altruistic, there's no need for government interference anyway!)

So why doesn't everyone see this as clearly? Well, that's easy, Shermer says: It's because "our brains evolved to deal with a world that bears only slight resemblance to the vast, messy crowds of information in the modern marketplace." As he entertainingly recounts, experiments show that humans are irrationally risk-averse, terrible at making guesses and remembering things properly, highly susceptible to group-think and so on, until it's clear: Yup, we're really dumb. And, wouldn't you know it? We also have this vestigial "folk economic propensity" to think anything as complex as capitalism must be run by a government acting as God. And so any trade protectionism we feel is just a lingering byproduct of "our evolved social psychology of group loyalty."

Wait a second! Isn't this the same psychology of group loyalty on which Shermer has built his whole people-are-basically-good foundation that justifies minimal government? This group loyalty is now bad because it undermines trade and support for a market economy? Which is it?

Call it Shermer's paradox -- a helpful reminder of just how challenging and quixotic it remains to build a coherent political philosophy upon the sands of our conflicted and chimerical natures, even with all the great advances we have made in fascinating cocktail party tidbits.

Lee Drutman is co-author of "The People's Business: Controlling Corporations and Restoring Democracy."

The Mind of the Market Compassionate Apes, Competitive Humans, and Other Tales From Evolutionary Economics Michael Shermer Times Books: 310 pp., $26

Comments 1 - 22 of 22 |

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1. Comment #116078 by mcadamsdj on January 25, 2008 at 1:02 pm

 avatarAlready ordered the book from his website. It looks excellent. Very cool that he is offering autographed copies if you request them!

(Hey first post!)

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2. Comment #116082 by rnortman on January 25, 2008 at 1:12 pm

Speaking of confirmation bias, the author of this review himself wrote a book about how free markets are broken and government regulation is required. This review doesn't read like a carefully considered rebuttal, but rather an incensed rant. Not that I'm defending Shermer's book, as I haven't read it and I happen to believe that sometimes free markets might need a little push here and there, but this review just doesn't seem credible.

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3. Comment #116095 by HarryHUK on January 25, 2008 at 1:29 pm

How does this all fit with something like man made global warming?

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4. Comment #116113 by Zzyx1170 on January 25, 2008 at 2:09 pm

I placed an mp3 of Michael Shermer being interviewed on KGO radio as part of his book tour on RapidShare at:
http://rapidshare.com/files/86612295/Michael-Shermer-on-KGO-2008-01-25.mp3

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5. Comment #116133 by Andrew Stich on January 25, 2008 at 3:26 pm

I don't think the review seems so unreasonable (although I haven't read the work either). It's pretty well a synopsis of the book with a pinch of sarcasm and logical fallacy thrown in.

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6. Comment #116143 by rnortman on January 25, 2008 at 3:47 pm

I don't think the review seems so unreasonable (although I haven't read the work either). It's pretty well a synopsis of the book with a pinch of sarcasm and logical fallacy thrown in.


Whether the logical fallacies he tosses in there are justified depends on whether (a) he understood the book, and (b) isn't cherry-picking and taking stuff out of context. Neither of us have read the book ourselves, so we don't really know. But given the general tone of the review, I'm guessing that there's a little bit of misapprehension and misrepresentation going on.

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7. Comment #116168 by notsobad on January 25, 2008 at 5:08 pm

 avatarThis seems like a biased review.

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8. Comment #116169 by cyris8400 on January 25, 2008 at 5:13 pm

BTW, has anyone else noticed that Shermer's new book has a positive blurb from Dinesh D'Souza on the back cover?

Apparently, Shermer also gave a positive blurb for D'Souza's "What's So Great About Christianity".

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9. Comment #116198 by jackdavis on January 25, 2008 at 7:58 pm

I'm skeptical of claims that the free market is so wonderful, having experienced the short end of market economics a many mediocre jobs. Only because it's written by someone I admire will I read it.

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10. Comment #116237 by Jamougha on January 26, 2008 at 12:07 am

I'm biased against Shermer's position, but the review still seems biased to me.

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11. Comment #116270 by weel on January 26, 2008 at 5:33 am

Here's a very different review of the same book by Tyler Cowen in the Washington Post:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/01/23/AR2008012303386.html

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12. Comment #116332 by Bookman on January 26, 2008 at 8:56 am

Just because Shermer is a good skeptic doesn't mean his political views have to be accepted. To believe that there is a "Free market" requires one hell of a lot of faith, and I've never been impressed with the arguments of libertarianism -- at all. It strikes me as a philosophy founded on confirmation bias.

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13. Comment #116675 by aoratos philos on January 27, 2008 at 3:47 am

To believe that there is a "Free market" requires one hell of a lot of faith, and I've never been impressed with the arguments of libertarianism -- at all


I'm reminded of Ghandi's reply when asked what he thought of Western civilization.

I would use the same reply if asked what I thought of the free-market.

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14. Comment #116686 by Bloodknok on January 27, 2008 at 5:40 am

I've just finished reading Shermer's book "Why Darwin Matters". He has real incisiveness in his writing style, he just cuts through all the garbage from the ID brigade and presents it in a way that is really convincing, and gives me ammunition to shut up the blowhards. He's a hero.

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15. Comment #116840 by trevor.ochocki on January 27, 2008 at 3:06 pm

 avatarAs someone who currently considers himself a libertarian socialist, I would like to second Bookmans comments. I would also note the sharp distinction between a libertarian socialist and a libertarian capitalist like Shermer. In any case, I do look forward to reading the book.

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16. Comment #116889 by al-rawandi on January 27, 2008 at 5:51 pm

 avatarrevor.ochoki,


Hey. Me too, I consider myself a progressive or left libertarian.

I have a facebook group called "Left Libertarians" if you are interested. The numbers are dwindling thus far. I will send a private message as well.

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17. Comment #116892 by al-rawandi on January 27, 2008 at 5:52 pm

 avatarBookman,


That doesn't mean a free market, with just and equitable practices is not something to strive for. This is why I remain a libertarian. The fruits of man's labors are his own.

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18. Comment #116934 by nathan_forst on January 27, 2008 at 8:23 pm

Interesting. When I get back from my holiday I will take a gander at the book at my local store. It looks like an interesting read.

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19. Comment #116974 by asupcb on January 27, 2008 at 11:45 pm

I'm interested in reading this book but I already partially feel this way anyway and I would just be adding it to my list of books to read. Maybe one day...

As for those who want to understand Shermer's economics better may I suggest the following books:

"Whatever Happened to Penny Candy" by Richard Maybury (Short Jr. High level economics book)

"Economics in One Lesson" by Henry Hazlitt

"Human Action" by Ludwig von Mises (available for free online at mises.org)

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20. Comment #116980 by 35bluejacket on January 28, 2008 at 12:30 am

As for some experience in self-reliability, I built my 35 foot wooden sailboat and am a long distance single-handed bluewater sailor and hang with the same crowd. Shermer makes good sense, but "research has shown that autonomy and self-reliance make people happiest" blows my mind. That maybe true for us waterdogs but for the average person...they are in another world and will most of time ignore and sometimes fight knowledge (reality), believing that they were born with intuitive wisdom. Reality is the (and a) Mother of all Teachers, the best and not very forgiving. She is the pure Truth and you gotta love her and her surprise tests, because she will never let you down or deceive you (so much for free-will :). I talk as if she has human qualities, but she doesn't, she is far above that; the brain-mush of humans. She has no intelligence, no conscience, no will or purpose, just result. (Robert G. Ingersoll)

By-the-way, the true nature of man is; he seeks meaning, but fights enlightment at every step.

Of all the crap in the world going on that we think is important, 30,000 inocent children, under the age of five, die each day needlessly.


In the gizmo-comfort-money-religious-world, I don't see much hope for humanity. Even E.O. Wilson's ants have more sense of self-preservation than humans.

Just my opinion.



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21. Comment #117771 by King Boogey on January 29, 2008 at 3:11 pm

It's amazing just how smug socialists are. They don't seem to realize that what we have in America is NOT a free market, but an economic oligarchy. Corporatists get involved in government, & thereby pull the strings, thus our economy is really a controlled one since it's moved by the coercive forces of government, & not by the invisible hand of the market. As well, the "Robber Barons" of 19th Century America acquired their power via government manipulation.

Something else which surprises me is how easily self-proclaimed skeptics accept the broken logic of Statism. Because humans are flawed, we must, according to Statist thought, use human institutions to tame humans.

Socialists should really read up on their economics before they off-handedly reject Libertarianism.

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22. Comment #118605 by MaxD on January 30, 2008 at 7:34 pm

 avatarI find myself fine with capitalism in regulated form. I think the unregulated form was tried and it benefitted the wealthy and the powerful enourmously while ensuring that the common folk got totally fucked. People paid in company script and getting screwed left and right. Strike breakers and Pinkertons.
I am anxious to read Shermer's book, I loved his last foray into ethics (The Science of Good and Evil). However I am anxios to see what he thinks about these issues of the past. In part because I think he hasn't examined the idea that humans employ our behavioural strategies on various contingincies. WOuld we normally cheat? Probably not, but in a world in which anonymity is so common regulations have to take the place of tribal reciprocity.

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