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    <title>Notebooks   </title>
    <link>http://bactra.org/notebooks</link>
    <description>Cosma's Notebooks</description>
    <language>en</language>

  <item>
    <title>Universal Images and Cultural Universals</title>
    <link>http://bactra.org/notebooks/1995/03/22#universal-images</link>
    <description>




Universal images first.  Are there any?  If so, what?  Where did they come
from?  How effective (affective?) are they?  Are they hardwired, or the
result of common, unbiased human smarts acting on common bits of the
environment (so that they could be changed if the environment changed), or
what?

&lt;P&gt;One possibility: human learning is not unbiased; certain representations
and habits are easier for us to acquire than others.  This is certainly
the case with many animals, and it is sometimes claimed that, e.g., it is
much easier for people to learn to fear snakes, big cats, and other traditional
predators than it is for us to learn to fear, let us say, rabbits.  I haven't
looked at this literature in any detail, to have an opinion as to whether or
not it's bogus, but it certainly &lt;em&gt;sounds&lt;/em&gt; plausible.

&lt;P&gt;Even if there aren't strictly universal images, are there significant
commonalities across all human cultures?  If so, are they at all shared with
other primates?  (That is: if, say, it does turn out that, as the Victorians
believed, red aids the digestion, does this also work for chimpanzees?)  Other
mammals?  Other vertebrates?

&lt;blockquote&gt;Just at that point the &lt;em&gt;subenmadchen&lt;/em&gt; trod on the cat's
tail, and the cat let fly a frenzy of cat-profanity.  I asked, with caution:
	&lt;br&gt;``Is a cat's opinion about pain valuable?''
	&lt;br&gt;``A cat has no opinion; opinions proceed from mind only; the lower
animals, being eternally perishable, have not been granted mind; without mind,
opinion is impossible.''
	&lt;br&gt;``She merely &lt;em&gt;imagined&lt;/em&gt; she felt a pain --- the cat?''
	&lt;br&gt;``She cannot imagine a pain, for imagining is an effect of mind;
without mind, there is no imagination.  A cat has no imagination.''
	&lt;br&gt;``Then she had a &lt;em&gt;real&lt;/em&gt; pain?''
	&lt;br&gt;``I have already told you there is no such thing as real pain.''
&lt;br&gt;``It is strange and interesting.  I do wonder what was the matter with the cat.''

&lt;P&gt;---Mark Twain, &lt;cite&gt;Christian Science&lt;/cite&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;

How do we know the cat is in pain?  My answer, based on comparative neurology,
the evolutionary history of the placental mammals, and the communicative needs
of social animals, is, ``Because she's screaming like a thousand banshees.''
But I admit this doesn't get us very far on the road to aesthetics.

&lt;P&gt;In his translation of the &lt;cite&gt;Analects,&lt;/cite&gt; Arthur Waley claims that
all gestures of making oneself small denote respect, or subsmission, or
inferiority --- to bow, curtesy, genuflect, prostrate, kneel, crouch or
otherwise ``abase.''  Query: does there anywhere exist a contracting gesture
denoting superiority?  (There are signs of inferiority which do not involve
contraction: blinking, avoiding or breaking off eye-contact, flushing.  Staring
at your feet is ambiguous.)  Does there anywhere exist an expansive gesture
denoting inferiority?  (Yes: C. Niswander reminds me that Europeans are
supposed to stand when their betters enter the room, presumably so as to forgoe
the pleasures of sitting.)

&lt;P&gt;Body language has perhaps the best candidates for universal signs.
Presumably the genetic component would not extend beyond very general templates
or schemata, which would be focused (or even allowed to lapse?) by education
--- recall the chicks and hawk-shadows.  (You don't know the story?  Well.
Newly-hatched chicks will run for cover when they see the shadow of a bird
moving on the ground.  As they grow older, they become used to the more common
types of shadows, and ignore them, but predators are necessarily rare, so they
don't habituate to predator-shadows, and still run from them.  A neat hack.
--- Has anyone done the experiment of raising chicks, under mesh, near a nest
of hawks, but isolating them from sparrows, and then letting sparrows fly over
the cage?)  --- Presumably the human mechanism would be the reverse of the
chicks', so that we respond more strongly to gestures we've seen repeatedly,
gradually becoming numb to strange ones of the same genus.  This would rule out
any ``archetypal form'' of the gesture; and even if you extracted what was
common to all gestures descending from the same template, it should be very
weak!

&lt;P&gt;Vocal tricks.  Cantonese (to be frank) always sounds a bit like an argument;
can non-Cantonese speakers distinguish arguing from amorous Cantonese?  What
about Australian aborigines?

&lt;P&gt;See also:
	&lt;a href=&quot;evol-psych.html&quot;&gt;Evolutionary Psychology&lt;/a&gt;

&lt;ul&gt;See:
	&lt;li&gt;Daniel &lt;a href=&quot;dennett.html&quot;&gt;Dennett&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;cite&gt;Darwin's Dangerous
Idea&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;Ian McDonald, &lt;cite&gt;Scissors Cut Paper Wrap Stone&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;Steven Pinker, &lt;citE&gt;How the Mind Works&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;Walter Jon Williams, &lt;cite&gt;Aristoi&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;/ul&gt;

&lt;ul&gt;To read:
	&lt;li&gt;Scott Atran, &quot;Folk Biology and the Anthropology of Science:
Cognitive Universals and Cultural Particulars&quot;, &lt;cite&gt;Behavioral and Brain
Sciences&lt;/cite&gt; [&lt;a
href=&quot;http://www.bbsonline.org/documents/a/00/00/04/23/&quot;&gt;preprint&lt;/a&gt;]
	&lt;li&gt;Donald Brown, &lt;cite&gt;Human Universals&lt;/cite&gt; [The Post Office
has stolen my copy, damn them]
	&lt;li&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;darwin.html&quot;&gt;Darwin&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;cite&gt;The Expression of the
Emotions in Man and Animals&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;Patrick Colm Hogan, &lt;cite&gt;The Mind and Its Stories: Narrative
Universals and Human Emotion&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;Jones, &lt;cite&gt;An Instinct for Dragons&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;Charles Morris, &lt;cite&gt;Signs, language, and behavior&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;Frederick Turner, &lt;cite&gt;Natural Classicism&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;li&gt;Anna Wierzbicka, &lt;cite&gt;Semantics, Culture and Cognition: Universal
Human Concepts in Culture-Specific Configurations&lt;/cite&gt;
	&lt;/ul&gt;
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