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Sunday, 25 October 2020

The professional simpleton



But no English school-boy is ever taught to tell the truth, for the very simple reason that he is never taught to desire the truth. From the very first he is taught to be totally careless about whether a fact is a fact; he is taught to care only whether the fact can be used on his “side” when he is engaged in “playing the game.”

G K Chesterton - What's Wrong with the World (1910)

It seems obvious enough that we could divide the political arena into simple and complex rather than left and right. It would be much the same as a political and apolitical division where we acknowledge that political ideas are based on oversimplified pictures of reality.

Suppose we follow this idea and consider an imaginary political initiative designed to appeal to about 80% of the population. This would necessarily include a substantial number of people with little interest in abstract analysis. In other words our imaginary political initiative must be sold via a narrative so simple that it is likely to be impractical. Quite possibly stupid too. Passing national laws to influence the global climate for example.

Political initiatives designed for wide popular acceptance cannot easily acknowledge complex issues such as the do nothing option, practical boundaries or uncertainties. Otherwise mass acceptance is compromised because our imaginary political position is not simple enough. It is insufficiently misleading.

It gets worse though, because we attract political actors who are effectively professional simpletons. They are comfortable promoting hopelessly implausible but simple goals even if those goals are ridiculed by everyone who understands the rough edges of real life. Practical people don’t usually aspire to be professional simpletons. Apart from climate scientists. And epidemiologists.

Unless the political class has enough integrity to develop pragmatic politics and eschew the politics of the professional simpleton we have a problem. Unless voters vote against professional simpletons we have a problem.

We have a problem.

5 comments:

James Higham said...

“It gets worse though, because we attract political actors who are effectively professional simpletons. They are comfortable promoting hopelessly implausible but simple goals even if those goals are ridiculed by everyone who understands the rough edges of real life.”

In one, dear sir.

The Jannie said...

James H - I give you HS2.

Sam Vega said...

In Greta, we have the apotheosis of the idea. She has actually been clinically certified as a simpleton, yet her word carries enormous weight.

Tammly said...

And look what a mess has been made by the professional simpletons, of our Secondary School Education System since the late 1960s, with the idea of academic education for all children, in the name of equal opportunity; despite the fact that great swathes of the population have no interest in it; are not intellectually equipped for it and are utilitarian in outlook.

A K Haart said...

James - thanks dear sir :)

Jannie - years of cost overruns to look forward to with that one.

Sam - weirdly medieval to my mind.

Tammly - I'm sure it was implemented to stop bright kids from poorer families taking grammar school places away from the children of posher families.