Scientific American, May 8, 2013
For more than 25 years, I’ve been
telling participants in my classes and workshops that our brains are designed to generate stories – that’s
why writing on the spot from a random prompt works. It’s nice to see that
science has gotten around to confirming this. (And thanks to Kathrine Byrnell for bringing this article to my attention.) – Brian
It is in our nature to need stories. They are our earliest sciences, a
kind of people-physics. Their logic is how we naturally think. They configure
our biology, and how we feel, in ways long essential for our survival.
Like
our language instinct, a story drive—an inborn hunger for story hearing and
story making—emerges untutored universally in healthy children. Every culture
bathes their children in stories to explain how the world works and to engage
and educate their emotions. Perhaps story patterns could be considered another
higher layer of language. A sort of meta-grammar shaped by and shaping
conventions of character types, plots, and social-rule dilemmas prevalent in
our culture.
“Stories the
world over are almost always about people with problems,” writes Jonathan Gottschall in The
Story-telling Animal. They display “a deep pattern of heroes
confronting trouble and struggling to overcome.” So a possible formula for
a story = character(s) + predicament(s) + attempted extrication(s). This
pattern transmits social rules and norms, describing what counts as violations
and approved reactions. Stories offer “feelings we don’t have to pay [full cost] for.” They are
simulated experiments in people-physics, freeing us from the limits of our own
direct experience.
The “human
mind is a story processor, not a logic processor,” says Jonathan Haidt.
Certainly we
use logic inside stories better than we do outside. Leda Cosmides and John
Tooby have shown that the Wason Selection Test can be solved by fewer than 10%
as a logic puzzle, but by 70-90% when presented as a story involving
detection of social-rule cheating.
Such
social-rule monitoring was evolutionarily crucial because as Alison Gopnik
notes “other people are the most important part of our environment.” In our
ultra-social species, social acceptance matters as much as food. Indeed violating
social rules can exclude you from group benefits, including shared food.
Darwin
understood how our biology is fitted to the stories in our social environments,
noting, “Many a Hindoo…has been stirred to the bottom of his soul by having
partaken of unclean food.” The same thing eaten unknowingly would cause no
reaction, so the story of the food, not the food itself, causes the “the soul shaking feeling of remorse.” Stories configure
contextual triggers and the expected emotional reactions of our culture—perhaps
defining a sort of emotional grammar.
Any story we
tell of our species, any science of human nature, that leaves out much of what
and how we feel is false. Nature shaped us to be ultra-social, and hence to be
sharply attentive to character and plot. We are adapted to physiologically
interact with stories. They are a key way in which our ruly culture configures our nature.
Previously
in this series:
Jag Bhalla is an entrepreneur and writer. His current project is Errors We Live By, a series of short exoteric essays
exposing errors in the big ideas running our lives, details here.
His last book was I'm Not Hanging Noodles On Your Ears,
a surreptitious science gift book from National Geographic Books, details here.
See Brian Henry's schedule here, including writing workshops and creative writing courses in
Kingston, Peterborough, Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, Georgetown, Milton,
Oakville, Burlington, St. Catharines, Hamilton, Dundas, Kitchener, Guelph,
London, Woodstock, Orangeville, Newmarket, Barrie, Orillia, Gravenhurst,
Sudbury, Muskoka, Peel, Halton, the GTA, Ontario and beyond.
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