Introduction: An Argument That Refuses to Die
Few ideas in contemporary psychology are as energetically denounced as the “blank slate”. It is invoked as a grave theoretical error, a political temptation, even a moral danger. We are told—repeatedly—that humans are not infinitely malleable, that biology matters, that culture cannot write anything it pleases upon an empty mind.
And yet, something curious is going on. The blank slate is attacked with an intensity wildly disproportionate to its actual presence in contemporary theory. It is dismantled again and again, long after it has ceased to function as a serious position in psychology, anthropology, or philosophy of mind.
This post asks a simple question:
Why does evolutionary psychology need the blank slate so badly?
The answer is not empirical. It is ontological.
1. The Blank Slate That Nobody Holds
In its classical form, the blank slate is a seventeenth‑century metaphor. Whatever its historical merits, it is not the position of modern social science. Few, if any, contemporary theorists believe that humans are born without constraints, tendencies, or capacities.
Yet in evolutionary psychology—and in popular defences of it—the blank slate persists as a foil. It is routinely characterised as the belief that:
all behaviour is socially constructed,
culture can shape humans without limit,
biology is irrelevant to psychology.
This caricature performs important rhetorical work. It creates a stark opposition:
Either the mind is blank, or biology must explain behaviour.
Once framed this way, evolutionary psychology appears not as one theory among others, but as the only scientifically respectable alternative.
The first thing to notice, then, is that the blank slate functions less as a theory and more as a stabilising contrast.
2. From “Not Blank” to “Biologically Written”
Steven Pinker’s arguments against the blank slate are, in themselves, largely uncontroversial. Humans are not infinitely plastic. Development is constrained. History matters.
The problem arises in what follows.
Pinker’s critique quietly slides from:
the rejection of infinite malleability,
into:
the assumption that whatever structure exists must be biologically evolved and internally specified.
This slide is rarely argued for. It is treated as obvious.
But ontologically, it is anything but.
To reject the blank slate is not to endorse evolutionary psychology. It is merely to acknowledge constraint. And constraint alone explains nothing.
3. The Missing Middle: Relation
What disappears in the blank‑slate versus EP framing is the possibility that structure is neither absent nor pre‑written, but relationally constituted.
From a relational ontology:
systems are theories of possible instances,
instantiation is a perspectival cut,
phenomena do not exist prior to their construal.
On this view, human capacities are not inscriptions waiting to be read, nor absences waiting to be filled. They are potentials actualised in relation.
They are mirror‑image errors.
4. Why Evolutionary Psychology Needs the Strawman
Evolutionary psychology requires the blank slate for three reasons.
a) To License Biology as Constitution
By positioning the blank slate as the only alternative, EP is able to treat biological history not as a constraint on meaning, but as its source.
Selection pressures are quietly promoted from background condition to explanatory primitive.
b) To Over‑Close Explanation
Once a behaviour is labelled an adaptation, inquiry stops. The question of how that behaviour is presently constituted—socially, symbolically, institutionally—drops out of view.
The blank slate makes this closure feel responsible rather than premature.
c) To Stabilise Ontology Without Arguing for It
The stark contrast allows EP to inherit ontological authority by default. No alternative needs to be articulated, because the only alternative on offer has already been discredited.
5. Boundary‑Policing Disguised as Science
The persistence of the blank slate tells us something important: the argument is not primarily about evidence. It is about containing a perceived threat.
That threat is not error, but excess:
excessive social engineering,
excessive plasticity,
excessive responsibility placed on institutions rather than individuals.
The blank slate names that anxiety. Evolutionary psychology calms it.
Conclusion: Clearing the Ground
This series does not defend the blank slate. It rejects it.
But it rejects it for a different reason.
Both errors arise from the same mistake: treating relation as secondary.
Until that mistake is corrected, the blank slate will keep returning—not because it is true, but because evolutionary psychology needs something to push against.
In the next post, we will turn to the core ontological error itself: what happens when constraints are mistaken for causes.
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