Monday, November 25, 2013

George Lakoff — The New York Times Uncovers Conservative Attacks and Then Prints One; Both Are on the Front Page

As the great linguist Charles Fillmore discovered in 1975, all words are cognitively defined relative to conceptual "frames" -- structures we all use to think all the time. Frames don't float in the air; they are neural circuits in our brains. Frames in politics are not neutral; they reflect an underlying value system. That means that language in politics is not neutral. Political words do not just pick out something in the world. They reflect value-based frames. If you successfully frame public discourse, you win the debate. 
A common neuroscience estimate is that about 98 percent of thought is unconscious and automatic, carried out by the neural system. Daniel Kahneman has since brought frame-based unconscious thought into the public arena in what he has called "System 1 thinking." Since frames carry value-based inferences with them, successfully framing public discourse means getting the public to adopt your values, and hence winning over the public by unconscious brain change, not by open discussion of the values inherent in the frames and the values that undergird the frames....
The reason that those of us in the cognitive and brain sciences write so passionately about framing issues is that unconscious thought and framing are not generally understood -- especially in progressive circles. Most progressives who went to college studied what is called Enlightenment reason, a theory of reason coming from Descartes around 1650 -- and which was historically important in 1650. The Cartesian theory of how reason works has since been largely disproved in the cognitive and brain sciences.
The Cartesian theory assumes that all thought is conscious, that it is literal (that is, it fits the world directly and uses no frame-based or metaphorical thought), that reason uses a form of mathematical logic (not frame-based logic or metaphorical logic), and that words are neutral and fit the world directly. Many liberal economists have been trained in this mode of thought and assume that the language used in economic theory is neutral and just fits the world as it is. They are usually not trained in frame semantics, cognitive linguistics, and related fields. The same is often true of liberal journalists as well. Both often miss the fact that conservatives have successfully reframed economic terms to fit their values, and that the economic terms in public discourse no longer mean what they do in economics classes.
Part of what the Cartesian theory of reason misses is the real brain mechanism that allows the conservative communication theory to be effective. By framing language to fit conservative values and by getting their framing of the language to dominate public debate, conservatives change the public's brains by the following mechanism. When a frame circuit is activated in the brain, its synapses are strengthened. This means that the probability of future activation is raised and probability of the frame becoming permanent in the brain is raised. Whenever a word defined by that frame is used, the frame is activated and strengthened. When conservatives successfully reframe a word in public discourse, that word activates conservative frames and with those frames, the conservative value system on which the frames are based. When progressives naively use conservatively reframed words, they help the conservative cause by strengthening the conservative value system in the brains of the public.
Liberals, in adhering to the old Cartesian theory of reason, will not be aware of their own unconscious values, will take then for granted, and will think that all they have to do is state the facts and the public will be convinced rationally. The facts are crucial, but they need to framed in moral terms to make moral sense and a moral impact....
The word at issue is "redistribution." The subject matter is the flow of wealth in the society and what it should be. This is a fundamentally moral issue, and the major political framings reflect two different moral views of democracy itself....
The Huffington Post
The New York Times Uncovers Conservative Attacks and Then Prints One; Both Are on the Front Page
George Lakoff | Goldman Distinguished Professor Of Cognitive Science and Linguistics at UC Berkeley

It used to be called "brainwashing" in the Fifties. Now it is called public relations and marketing & advertising.

4 comments:

Matt Franko said...

"When a frame circuit is activated in the brain, its synapses are strengthened. This means that the probability of future activation is raised and probability of the frame becoming permanent in the brain is raised."

I dont necessarily understand this metaphor...

But it seems like it jives with the concept of 'rote' learning where one just reads things over and over and memorizes it... like the old way they taught the multiplication tables...

"creative thinking" doesnt seem to work this way.... with that type of thinking nothing ever gets 'burned in"....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rote_learning

rsp,

Calgacus said...

Meh. Sure, such issues of framing etc blah blah blah are important. That's why philosophers have thought about them for centuries, for millennia. People usually think they invented sex when they are teenagers, too. :-) Myself included of course.

The Cartesian theory assumes that all thought is conscious, that it is literal (that is, it fits the world directly and uses no frame-based or metaphorical thought), that reason uses a form of mathematical logic (not frame-based logic or metaphorical logic), and that words are neutral and fit the world directly. Don't recall seeing a substantially more misleading, blinkered and unjust characterization of Descartes. Descartes was a very great philosopher (and mathematician and scientist). And no philosophy which deserves the name can be or ever has been refuted.

Tom:Now it is called public relations and marketing & advertising. And, in Lakoff's hands, "framing".

If you successfully frame public discourse, you win the debate. A recipe for self-destruction for MMTers, for good guys in general. Entering a lying competition with professional liars is a loser's game.

A great way to lie is to tell the truth in an unconvincing manner, which is what Lakoff's framings amount to. People aren't that stupid. They will see through transparent attempts to "frame" things. But then they won't have the time, energy or interest to notice that the cheesy wrapping actually concealed something of great and obvious value, which can sell itself.

Yves Smith, a kid who has been around the block - more so than Lakoff, I daresay, has his number with some occasional critical comments.

Matt Franko said...

Calg,

Dan seems a bit skeptical here too...

I dont really understand the point Lakoff is trying to make here ...

I think he uses the word 'circuit' here incorrectly, he needs a different word there or something...

Tom,

Perhaps some examples will help.

Lets take the 'framing' that 'we're borrowing from the Chinese' that Sarah Palin just doubled down on the other day quite successfully and can we analyze this frame from Lakoffs perspective here?

How can we 're-frame' this so this gets turned around for us?

How do we re-frame this?

rsp,

Tom Hickey said...

The Cartesian theory assumes that all thought is conscious, that it is literal (that is, it fits the world directly and uses no frame-based or metaphorical thought), that reason uses a form of mathematical logic (not frame-based logic or metaphorical logic), and that words are neutral and fit the world directly. Don't recall seeing a substantially more misleading, blinkered and unjust characterization of Descartes. Descartes was a very great philosopher (and mathematician and scientist). And no philosophy which deserves the name can be or ever has been refuted.

Not a natter of "refuting" Descartes. Every ideology, which is what a systematic philosophy is, is the attempt to articulate the framework of a world views. See for example the later Wittgenstein, and Randall Collins, The Sociology of Philosophies.

Descartes was and remains hugely important in in the history of thought not only for his thought per se but owing to its influence on the Western intellectual tradition and through its influence on education, on the population.

Beginning with the Presocratics, Western ancient thought asked the fundamental question, what is there really? It was an inquiry into first principles as real causes. Descartes shifted the inquiry to what can we know about what is. The next great shift came with analytic philosophy, which shifted the question to what can we say meaningfully about what is. In my view, these are the three great questions. The last must be answered before the second and the second before the first. We are still working on this.

Therefore Descartes is chiefly of note now owing to the shift he brought and which is still the predominant intellectual stance, one based on the Cartesian method of reason, especially mathematical reasoning. It characterizes conventional economics, for example, where the assumptions are based on introspection and the method is mathematical.

Lakoff is referring obliquely to Antonio Damasio's Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain. Here is the publisher's blurb:

Since Descartes famously proclaimed, "I think, therefore I am," science has often overlooked emotions as the source of a person's true being. Even modern neuroscience has tended, until recently, to concentrate on the cognitive aspects of brain function, disregarding emotions [affect]. This attitude began to change with the publication of Descartes' Error in 1995. Antonio Damasio — "one of the world's leading neurologists" (The New York Times) — challenged traditional ideas about the connection between emotions and rationality. In this wondrously engaging book, Damasio takes the reader on a journey of scientific discovery through a series of case studies, demonstrating what many of us have long suspected: emotions are not a luxury, they are essential to rational thinking and to normal social behavior.