93
DOMINATION
Conventional wisdom would attribute his survival at sea to “run-
ning on adrenaline.” In fact, the opposite was true. He wasn’t run-
ning on adrenaline; he was running on dopamine. During the intense
moments when he saved the boat, dopamine
was in control and adren-
aline (called norepinephrine when it is inside the brain) was suppressed.
In the eighteenth century, Samuel Johnson summarized the situa-
tion like this: “When a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it
concentrates his mind wonderfully.” A more recent doctor, Dr. David
Caldicott, an emergency room physician at Calvary Hospital in Can-
berra, Australia, expressed it this way: “Emergency medicine is like
flying a plane. Hours of mundanity punctuated by moments of sheer
terror. If you’re
worth your salt, you’re not scared, though. Just focused.”
IT’S EASIER TO KILL FROM A DISTANCE
In the science fiction classic
Dune, by Frank Herbert, the hero has to
prove he is human by suppressing his animal instinct to act in the here
and now. His hand is placed in a diabolical contraption, a black box
that creates unimaginable pain. If he
pulls his hand out of the box, the
old woman administering the test will pierce his neck with a poison nee-
dle, and he will die. She tells him, “You’ve heard of animals chewing off
a leg to escape a trap? That’s an animal kind of trick. A human would
remain in the trap, endure the pain, feigning death that he might kill
the trapper and remove a threat to his kind.”
Some people are naturally better at suppressing emotion than oth-
ers. In fact, they’re born that way, in part because
of the number and
nature of their dopamine receptors, molecules in the brain that react
when dopamine is released. They differ based on genetics. Researchers
measured the density of dopamine receptors (how many there are, and
how closely they crowd together) in the brains of a variety of people,
and compared the results to tests that measured the person’s “emo-
tional detachment.”
The detachment test measured traits such as the tendency to avoid
sharing personal information and to become involved with other people.
94
THE MOLECULE OF MORE
The scientists found a direct relationship between
receptor density and
personal engagement. High density was associated with a high level of
emotional detachment. In a separate study, people who had the highest
detachment scores described themselves as “cold, socially aloof, and vin-
dictive in their relationships.” By contrast, those with the lowest detach-
ment scores described themselves as “overly nurturing and exploitable.”
Most people have personalities that fall somewhere between the
highest and lowest scores on the detachment scale. We’re neither aloof
nor overly nurturing. How we react depends on the circumstances.
If we’re engaged with the peripersonal—up close,
in direct contact,
focused on the present moment—H&N circuits are activated, and the
warm, emotional aspects of our personality come out. When we’re
engaged in the extrapersonal—at a distance, thinking abstractly,
focused on the future—the rational, emotionless parts of our personal-
ity are more likely to be seen. These two different ways of thinking are
illustrated by the ethics dilemma called “the trolley problem”:
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