Friday, 26 August 2022
A Problem Problem
It is not necessary to fathom the ground or the structure of everything in order to know what to make of it. Stones do not disconcert a builder because he may not happen to know what they are chemically; and so the unsolved problems of life and nature, and the Babel of society, need not disturb the genial observer, though he may be incapable of unravelling them. He may set these dark spots down in their places, like so many caves or wells in a landscape, without feeling bound to scrutinise their depths simply because their depths are obscure.
George Santayana - Winds Of Doctrine Studies in Contemporary Opinion (1913)
Wake up and smell the coffee - we’ve all heard that one, it’s too common to be anything but a cliché even though it encapsulates a problem we often have when arguing against conventional but blatantly dubious points of view. Sometimes conventional viewpoints seem to owe more to dreamlike fantasy than analysis, as if those who subscribe to them really should wake up and smell the metaphorical coffee.
We navigate through life by avoiding surprises because surprises have to be resolved and that involves effort and risk. Avoiding surprises is the low risk, low effort way to go. Also the most efficient in that we avoid unnecessary expenditure of energy, especially cerebral energy. What counts as a surprise though?
In one sense, a surprise is problem to be resolved, but here we seem to have a key difference in how people perceive certain social and political problems. Not a sharp difference with no overlap, but one of those fuzzy differences which are nevertheless real and important.
We could attempt to clarify this by saying that some people are reality-bound. They take reality as the ultimate arbiter of what counts as a problem. All problems are aspects of the real world and have to be defined as such even if they are social problems or problems of human behaviour. They navigate through life by avoiding inadequate descriptions of reality in favour of better ones. Frequently this requires us to acknowledge uncertainties without feeling bound to scrutinise their depths simply because their depths are obscure.
Others are more socially-bound, although everyone is of course both. But some people seem to sleepwalk into a social consensus they cannot analyse objectively. To do so would be deemed socially inappropriate even if uncertainties are an inescapable aspect of the problem. In these situations, socially appropriate equates to true – there is nothing beyond it. Socially inappropriate is to be ignored or made to go away.
Social hierarchies could be guided by real world problem-solvers but too often they are not. They are frequently guided by those who peddle socially appropriate answers which cannot be analysed objectively. The battle lines are drawn, the abuse begins and problem-solvers are left beyond the pale.
Then reality takes over.
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4 comments:
Well I heard the opinion of a caller to Mike Graham on Talk Radio today which made me pull up and listen. In essence, he said that prosperity and energy are inextricably linked and a huge block of Government Bonds are about to mature. If inflation is not curbed drastically and quickly,the realisation on payout will double and drive the country towards bankruptcy. To avoid this, green levies and spending on net zero must be cancelled, and fracking, gas and oil, maybe even new coal mines will have to be started hell for leather. An example of reality taking over, if you like.
I sincerely hope he's right, I would love it!
Tammly - I heard something similar from another source. Can't recall where, but he made a point about index-linked bonds.
It seems like the reality-based problem this winter is going to be how to stay warm and how to keep businesses going. There are a number of entirely practical potential solutions to that, and we ought to be making decisions based on similar previous problems and what logic suggests will work in the future.
Watch, however, those decisions get mangled and twisted by the pre-existing agendas people have. We won't be able to do things because they damage the environment, because they are suggested by Tory bastards, because the cause global warming, because they are racist, because women didn't think of them, because we have never done things like that before, and because we always do things like that.
Sam - yes there are a number of entirely practical potential solutions. Many people will find their own but others will just whine and their stories will reach the headlines.
You are right - at government level, decisions will get mangled and twisted by the pre-existing agendas people have. I hope enough people wake up to the need to be practical, but most of the people doing the mangling will survive well enough and may not wake up to their own silliness.
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