Laura recommended reading this book on the Forgotten Exodus thread:
The book is excellent, chock-full of fascinating insights into the function of dopamine in shaping evolution, our minds, our societies, and cultures. It's extremely detailed (I will give a general overview here) but still easy to read.
Previc's thesis is that dopamine plays a privileged role in the evolution of humanity's advanced intellect. His arguments boil down to the fact that:
However, Previc takes this birds eye view and brings it down to microscopic detail. The major dopamine systems have their origin in several different cell groups near the top of the mid brain in a region known as the tegmentum. The two primary systems he discusses are the ventromedial (through the limbic system) and the lateral prefrontal (connected to the prefrontal cortex). The latter are involved in strategic thinking, self control, and ordered action towards a goal, while the former are responsible more for our creative and instinctive/sexual urges. Previc writes:
At this point Previc introduces the idea of two distinct dopaminergic personalities - those more serious minded and those more creative/impulsive. Damage to the lateral/nigrostriatal system, which is deeply aligned with the prefrontal cortex, produces major damage to cognitive abilities. However, damage to the ventromedial system produces more OCD and substance abuse disorders, where there are dysfunctional motivational/reward/inhibition mechanisms. Hyper or hypodopaminergic personalities thus manifest disturbances in either of these two ways. Dopamine also inhibits seretonin, with leading to hyperdopaminergic personalities having 'cold' and 'distant' personality features.
Dopamine also mediates and enables motor behavior, specifically activity involved in:
As Eiriu Eolas practitioners may remember, when people look upward they can increase their focus while if they look downward they slow their thinking down. Well these systems, and the activation of dopamine pathways, is Previc's explanation why. Importantly, dopamine is involved in 'action' and 'focus' in the extrapersonal spheres and 'upper' space, where we must think, strategize, and order our behavior in order to gain a specific result. On page 42 Previc writes:
Here is a graph depicting the rise in dopamine over time:
Previc discusses the fact that no new genes have been found in the human genome which can account for this increase in dopamine over the course of history. However, he argues that maternal factors can account for the steady increase over time, specifically under the following pressures:
The dark side of increased dopamine: An increase in disorders involving dopamine dysfunction, including ADHD, workaholism, autism, Huntington's disease, Mania, OCD, Parkinson's disease, Phenylkentonuria, schizophrenia, and Tourette's syndrome.
Previc also writes about the 6 pillars of a hyperdopaminergic society. They are:
I also found it interesting that liberals have a D4 dopamine gene that differentiates them from conservatives:
A very thought-provoking book into how powerful one neurotransmitter, and its effects, can drastically shape the course of history.
I've finished "The Dopaminergic Mind" - another that is HIGHLY recommended because it is not too long, is explained simply, has fascinating data that you are unlikely to find assembled together as it is here, or even to find it easily. Now, if this guy had only read Wolpoff and Gribbin, I bet he would have refined his theory somewhat. Nevertheless, his discussion of what dopamine does in the brain and how it is associated with both culture building and culture destruction is great!
The book is excellent, chock-full of fascinating insights into the function of dopamine in shaping evolution, our minds, our societies, and cultures. It's extremely detailed (I will give a general overview here) but still easy to read.
Previc's thesis is that dopamine plays a privileged role in the evolution of humanity's advanced intellect. His arguments boil down to the fact that:
- Dopamine is highly concentrated in all nonhuman species with advanced intelligence;
- Only dopamine has expanded throughout primate and hominid evolution;
- Dopamine is especially rich in the prefrontal cortex
[T]he very hemispheres of the brain are adapted, right/left to the environmental or experiential permanence of chaos/order or unexplored/explored territory, with consciousness serving the Logos role of communicative explorer (a function related in one of its deepest manifestations to the function of the hypothalamically grounded dopaminergic systems).
However, Previc takes this birds eye view and brings it down to microscopic detail. The major dopamine systems have their origin in several different cell groups near the top of the mid brain in a region known as the tegmentum. The two primary systems he discusses are the ventromedial (through the limbic system) and the lateral prefrontal (connected to the prefrontal cortex). The latter are involved in strategic thinking, self control, and ordered action towards a goal, while the former are responsible more for our creative and instinctive/sexual urges. Previc writes:
In essence, ventromedial dopaminergic activation results in the “triumph” of extrapersonal brain activity over the body systems that anchor our self-concept and our body orientation as well as a triumph over the more “rational” executive intelligence maintained in the lateral dopaminergic systems. Conversely, the lateral (focal-extrapersonal) dopaminergic systems may be more responsible for the enormous power of the human intellect
At this point Previc introduces the idea of two distinct dopaminergic personalities - those more serious minded and those more creative/impulsive. Damage to the lateral/nigrostriatal system, which is deeply aligned with the prefrontal cortex, produces major damage to cognitive abilities. However, damage to the ventromedial system produces more OCD and substance abuse disorders, where there are dysfunctional motivational/reward/inhibition mechanisms. Hyper or hypodopaminergic personalities thus manifest disturbances in either of these two ways. Dopamine also inhibits seretonin, with leading to hyperdopaminergic personalities having 'cold' and 'distant' personality features.
Dopamine also mediates and enables motor behavior, specifically activity involved in:
- exploratory (seeking) behavior more than proximal social grooming;
- anticipatory behavior more than consummatory behavior (the 'I want' rather than 'feels good') ;
- sexual activity more than feeding;
- active male sexual behavior more than receptive female behavior (and also helps explain why the 'patriarchy' exists)
- saccadic (ballistic) eye movements more than smooth-pursuit eye movements; and
- upward movements more than downward ones.
As Eiriu Eolas practitioners may remember, when people look upward they can increase their focus while if they look downward they slow their thinking down. Well these systems, and the activation of dopamine pathways, is Previc's explanation why. Importantly, dopamine is involved in 'action' and 'focus' in the extrapersonal spheres and 'upper' space, where we must think, strategize, and order our behavior in order to gain a specific result. On page 42 Previc writes:
In rodents dopaminergically mediated whole-body locomotion and crude distal sensory systems such as olfaction are used to explore a distant world that can be defined by a few meters or tens of meters at most. Primates engage in mostly visual exploration of a greatly expanded distant environment using dopaminergically mediated saccadic eye movements, which are made at a rate of about two to three per second and can locate small food objects at over 25 meters in the distance. In humans, the concept of space goes beyond even the here-and-now, so as to include the ability to imagine even more distant worlds and concepts by means of off-line,abstract thinking and imagination
Here is a graph depicting the rise in dopamine over time:
Previc discusses the fact that no new genes have been found in the human genome which can account for this increase in dopamine over the course of history. However, he argues that maternal factors can account for the steady increase over time, specifically under the following pressures:
- a physiological adaptation to a thermally stressful environment(which requires dopamine to activate heat-loss mechanisms);
- increased meat and shellfish consumption (which led to greater supplies of dopamine precursors and conversion of them into dopamine);
- demographic pressures that increased competition for resources and rewarded dopaminergically mediated achievement-motivation;
- a switch to bipedalism,which led to asymmetric vestibular exposure in fetuses during maternal locomotion and resting and ultimately elevated dopamine in the left hemisphere of most humans
- major increases in the adaptive value of dopaminergic traits such as achievement,conquest,aggression, and masculinity beginning with late-Neolithic societies.
Previc also writes about the 6 pillars of a hyperdopaminergic society. They are:
- Masculine dominance
- Drive to explore
- Pursuit of wealth
- Glorification of military conquest
- Belief in the omnipotence of technology
- Predominance of anthropocentric and hierarchical religious institutions
Relinquishing the dopaminergic imperative will lead to a post-dopaminergic consciousness in which the key traits of the dopaminergic mind (e.g. far-sightedness, restlessness, detachment, exploitiveness, intense motivation for secondary goals such as wealth or abstract ideas) will be balanced or even replaced by their opposites.
It will involve creating a world in which the restlessness created by a future orientation is replaced by the contentedness of a presentorientation, in which masculine values no longer dominate over feminine ones, where enhancing mental health becomes more important than the pursuit of wealth, where sustainability is more highly valued than exploitability, where preserving the lushness of Earth ismore important than exploringthe desert of space, where a greater understanding and respect for our natural world and cosmos and their inherent mysteries replace both the ignorance of dogmatic religion and the arrogance of unrestrained science, where peacemakers are more valued than warriors, where nurturant emotional relationships are as important as abstract ideas and pursuits, where left-hemispheric activity no longer prevails over right-hemispheric activity, where embracing “the circle of life” is more important than following a linear “path to progress.”
It will not be easy for us to transition to a value system that predominated before the dopaminergic imperative reigned supreme,even as we attempt to retain much of our modern economic and technological infrastructure. However, the key message of this book is that the dopaminergic imperative can indeed be relinquished because it is not primarily part of our genetic inheritance. Just as our dopaminergic minds were forged by ecological forces and pressures such as thermal adaptation, diet, and exercise and later by the societal adoption of the dopaminergic imperative, so, too, can our minds be returned to a healthier balance over successive generations by altering our ideals and societies.
I also found it interesting that liberals have a D4 dopamine gene that differentiates them from conservatives:
While we know that it's impossible to say a gene 'causes' this or that, it would be interesting if further research revealed what role this gene was playing, especially given the powerful role dopamine plays in the construction of our character.Liberals may owe their political outlook partly to their genetic make-up, according to new research from the University of California, San Diego, and Harvard University. Ideology is affected not just by social factors, but also by a dopamine receptor gene called DRD4. The study’s authors say this is the first research to identify a specific gene that predisposes people to certain political views.
A very thought-provoking book into how powerful one neurotransmitter, and its effects, can drastically shape the course of history.