Does Your Life Need Shaking Up?
I’ve been reading The Blank
Slate by Steven Pinker. It restates the case for the strength of the genetic
component of our personalities. Rightly or wrongly, reading Pinker’s
impassioned prose has made me even more nervous about my own free will. As if
to put a few more nails into the coffin, neuroscientists also claim to be able
to see the brain making our decisions about three-quarters of a second before
we are aware of doing so ourselves.
So perhaps it is time to break
out of ingrained patterns by following the advice of the protagonist of The
Dice Man by Luke Rhinehart. In the book he decides to make the major decisions
of his life by simply rolling a dice. A Guardian article explains how Cockcroft
[Rhinehart’s real name] was first inspired to write the book:
“At the time, Cockcroft was
studying and teaching psychology, and one summer he was leading a seminar on
freedom – Nietzsche and Sartre – and he asked his class at one point whether
perhaps the ultimate freedom was not to ‘get away from habit and causality and
make all your decisions by casting dice’. His students were either so appalled
or so intrigued by the idea that Cockcroft knew immediately that this was
something worth writing about.”
About the author
Psychologist, Jeremy Dean, PhD
is the founder and author of PsyBlog. He holds a doctorate in psychology from
University College London and two other advanced degrees in psychology.
He has been writing about
scientific research on PsyBlog since 2004. He is also the author of the book
“Making Habits, Breaking Habits” (Da Capo, 2003) and several ebooks:
Come on, why not? Let’s mix it
up, it’ll be fun.
SOURCE: PSYBLOG
SOURCE: PSYBLOG
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