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Thursday, 16 February 2023

His ability in quibbling



To spend his life quibbling over trifles with other lawyers was not what he wanted. To have his place in life fixed by his ability in quibbling seemed to him hideous.

Sherwood Anderson - Marching Men (1917)


There are many people in the public sector with a significant quibbling role. Most of the rules and regulations creeping around our lives were honed and developed via quibbling. What steers people towards a career in quibbling though?

I’m a retired analytical chemist of the environmental variety and I occasionally wonder what steered me towards chemistry. The answer seems to be simple enough. From school onwards I found I liked chemistry and could do it fairly easily. The two are of course connected - liking it and being able to do it. Similar influences must apply to quibbling.

No doubt something similar also applies to many of us, perhaps most of us. We end up doing whatever we can and are able to endure for years or decades. Sticking with chemistry as an example, did I have a need to believe in the scientific method in order to do chemistry?

It helps, but no – it’s a matter of learning what works within the discipline. Chemistry teachers foster that via approval and disapproval. Some of it also comes from experience at the bench, such as not trying to pipette concentrated sulphuric acid by mouth.

Here’s a similar question – do politicians believe political doctrines? No – politicians find they have the ability to do politics and enjoy doing it. The doctrines are tools, not beliefs. They may have roots in certain political traditions, but that is the exploratory phase – finding their political tastes, aptitudes and backers. Also finding where the political approval and disapproval come from.

We do what we do to earn a crust if we can endure doing it for years and have enough ability to do it to a certain standard. This would be a standard which merits more approval than disapproval from the workplace and our social surroundings. It even applies to quibbling – do it well and it can be a career asset. Standard stimulus, response, reinforcement – we do not need to go further to understand such things.

We do not believe in what we do, the notion of belief is redundant. We do it because works in the sense that it attracts approval, including our own approval. Minimal approval perhaps, barely more than disapproval perhaps, but at least a residue of approval. A large part of approval is employment and pay so it’s very simple –

Can do it. Like it. Paid to do it. Do it.

Orthodox climate scientists do not believe in what they do, they do it because they can, because they are paid and because peer approval far outweighs sceptical disapproval. In this case, peer approval is supplemented by media, political and social approval. Engineered approval designed to outweigh sceptical disapproval.

Engineered approval is common, as elites, politicians, celebrities, media, advertisers and PR outfits demonstrate on a daily basis. Engineered approval tells us that orthodox climate science is a political activity. No scientific method, no experimental confirmation, no successful predictions, no belief. None of it is necessary. They must find quibbling useful too.

6 comments:

dearieme said...

Here's a quibble. At the suggestion of a chum I've just spent an hour or two online looking into a shingles vaccine.

In 2017 the relevant German outfit concluded "The German Standing Committee on Vaccination does not recommend the administration of the live attenuated herpes zoster vaccine as a standard vaccination for the prevention of herpes zoster and its complications in the elderly."

It was, however, the standard vaccine at the time in the USA until it was rejected and replaced in 2020.

It is currently the standard vaccine in the UK; the NHS badgers codgers to take it.

So, three contradictory policies for three different advanced nations. What's a guy to do?

https://www.rki.de/EN/Content/infections/Vaccination/recommandations/Background_paper_herpes_zoster.pdf?__blob=publicationFile

A K Haart said...

dearieme - my wife's cousin who lives nearby had such a bad dose of shingles that we both pushed for vaccination even though we weren't nagged about it by the GP.

This was before doubts about pandemic vaccines became more prominent and before I'd seen the flu vaccine link you passed on. I don't know if I'd push for shingles vaccination now, but my wife's cousin had to put up with the effects for months and these things exert an influence.

DiscoveredJoys said...

Those that can, do.
Those that can't, teach.
Those that can neither do or teach become Directors responsible for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.

Sam Vega said...

Yes, we can earn a living by doing what we get a battery of rewards from, and there is no need to hypothesise any ideals underpinning what most of us do.

Two interesting points here. The first is that some occupations, although rewarded in exactly the same ways as others, almost seem to require a recitation and profession of ideals. Politics is the obvious one: a politician who claims merely to be good at the trade of politics but claiming to have no lofty ideals would be treated with suspicion. Yet Angela Rayner is clearly just an argumentative gobby woman with a talent for ridicule and invective - no different from hundreds of barmaids and cleaning women. And I was struck by the line in the video about psychopaths where a priest said he had no belief in God, but was just good at doing the job. Again, very dodgy. Conversely, nobody expects heating engineers and plumbers to have ideals. But they are literally saviours, and are far more useful than politicians.

And the other point is that there is a very subtle social change behind the process which determines whether people get rewarded for doing something. Thirty years ago, being knowledgeable about the climate, or alternative power sources, or the tribulations of trans people, would just have marked you out as an eccentric hobbyist. But now, it has been decided that there are rewards to be had...

James Higham said...

“the NHS badgers codgers to take it”

And not only that one.

A K Haart said...

DJ - yes that's where inclusion comes in, the need to include those that can neither do or teach.

Sam - although I retired years ago, my impression of the public sector is that it now leans quite strongly towards a recitation and profession of ideals.

Angela Rayner is an interesting character. As you say she an argumentative gobby woman with a talent for ridicule and invective. Yet smart enough to spot a very lucrative niche she can occupy with conviction. I think your subtle social change is partly the decay of defensive prejudice against such people as Rayner. With hindsight it was a healthy prejudice.

James - and not only vaccinations. Blood pressure, scans, mass medications etc.