Is there an
evolutionary advantage to being a good novelist? Yes, argues Jennifer Vanderbes
in The
Atlantic. In fact, the ability to tell stories vividly (and to read
them sensitively) offers a number of advantages:
Let’s look first at survival: Among the many things that set
humans apart from other animals is our capacity for counterfactual thinking. At
its most basic level, this means we can hypothesize what might happen if we run
out of milk; in its most elaborate form—we get War and Peace. Stories, then, are complex counterfactual
explorations of possible outcomes: What
would happen if I killed my landlady? What would happen if I had an affair with
Count Vronsky? How do I avoid a water buffalo? According to Denis
Dutton, these “low-cost, low-risk” surrogate experiences build up our knowledge
stores and help us adapt to new situations. (“Mirror neuron” research
indicates that our brains process lived and read experiences almost
identically.) A good “cautionary tale," for example, might help us
avert disaster. Stories can also provide useful historical, scientific,
cultural and geographical information. Bruce Chatwin’s Songlines illustrates this on two tiers: In
armchair-travel fashion, the book acquaints readers with the Australian
Outback, while simultaneously describing how Aboriginals sang stories walking at a specific
pace so that geographical markers within the story would guide their journey.
In addition to travelogues, stories also offer nuanced thought maps.
An imaginative foray into another person’s mind can foster both empathy and
self-awareness. This heightened emotional intelligence might, in turn,
prove useful when forming friendships, sniffing out duplicity, or partaking in
the elaborate psychological dance of courtship ...
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