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Let's Get Rid of the Term "Hard Wired"

  • Published27 Mar 2014
  • Author John Kubie
  • Source BrainFacts/SfN

The phrase "hard wired for..." is increasingly popular. "Hard wired" is science fiction and should be abandoned. A quick Google search of "hard wired for" results in a confusing list of "hard wired" behaviors:

Table of beliefs and behaviors

The list is disconcerting. How can both "love" and "hate" be hard wired? "Empathy" and "greed"? "Optimism" and "negative news"? Something is fishy. More Internet sleuthing, via ngram, shows that the term "hard wired for" is new and trendy.

Frequency of 'hard wired' 1960-2006

My complaint is that the term "hard wired" has connotations that are misleading and inaccurate. "Hard wired for" is used to mean "has a biological predisposition for". I have no gripe with the latter phrase. Perfectly OK to say something like, "humans have a biological predisposition for cooperation" or most of the entries on the list above. What this means to me is roughly,

The human genome is a set of potential developmental rules. Given: 1. the normal environmental conditions for development, and 2. a set of learning experiences common to our society, the instruction set of DNA, along with the activity of the nervous system, will form a brain predisposed to a certain behavior.

...where DNA/genome = biological constraints.

"Hard-wired", on the other hand, suggests a rigid set of construction rules to make something like this:

When someone writes something like "the brain is hardwired for love", my thought is "show me the wires". Impossible for two reasons. First, in none of the cases above is the information processing understood. Second, the writer is proposing a model of the brain that is false.

While the nervous system is composed of neurons connected to other neurons, the hard-wired diagram is a canard, a false, simplistic model that leads to wrong-thinking. It's an easy model, one in our electronics-filled world that is a ready metaphor. But, in borrowed words,* the model is so bad it's not even wrong.

*Wolfgang Pauli



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