- The Ghost in the Machine
Infobox Book
name = The Ghost in the Machine
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author =Arthur Koestler
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subject =non-fiction
genre =Philosophy ,psychiatry
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release_date = 1967
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media_type = Print (Paperback )
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followed_by ="The Ghost in the Machine" is a
1967 non-fiction work byArthur Koestler . The title is referring to the British philosopherGilbert Ryle 's negative description ofRené Descartes ' mind-body dualism. While himself rejecting what he refers as "crass dualism", Koestler is using a different approach, aiming at a more general explanatory principle, the hierarchical organization of life and the adaptability of living forms through a continuous exchange of energy and information. Following this principle down to its consequences, the book gets to a theme which has somehow never ceased to be of actuality, man's tendency towards self-destruction, which is reaching the height of its potential of expression in thenuclear arms arena.The book is particularly critical of B. F. Skinner's Behaviorist theory of
psychology .One of the book's central concepts is that as the human
brain has grown, it has built upon earlier, more primitive brain structures, and that these are the "ghost in the machine" of the title. Koestler's theory is that at times these structures can overpower cognitive logic, and are responsible forhate ,anger and other such impulses.Criticism of the book's theories
Koestler's central assumption is that humanity's
atavistic brain areas will lead it to self-destruction. However, the same areas responsible forhate andanger are also responsible for certain other emotions, such aslove andhappiness , which tend to be viewed more positively, although they can in themselves foster or lead to certain destructive urges on an individual level. Certain narcotics, for example, create what may be viewed as "positive emotions", despite their harmful long term effects.However, Koestler was not a proponent of an emotionless humanity, in fact, he argued against it in "
The Sleepwalkers ", "The Act of Creation" (1966), and other works.Popular culture
The Police named their 1981 album, "Ghost in the Machine " after this book.Masamune Shirow borrowed from Koestler's book the "ghost" concept that figures prominently in his 1991 "Ghost in the Shell "manga and later related works.Publication details
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