Difference between revisions of "Book reviews: Curiosity, by F.H. Buckley"

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If we think we're weak-willed, we might make rules to remove temptation from our path. For example, we might think that it would be a good thing to give up desserts and then back this up with a New Year's resolution.  That way, when we have dessert in February, we'll have committed a double wrong: we'll have eaten the forbidden pie, and we'll have confessed to ourselves that we're too weak willed to stick to the resolution. We'll have shamed ourselves,  and the fear of doing so might help keep us dessert-free.  
 
If we think we're weak-willed, we might make rules to remove temptation from our path. For example, we might think that it would be a good thing to give up desserts and then back this up with a New Year's resolution.  That way, when we have dessert in February, we'll have committed a double wrong: we'll have eaten the forbidden pie, and we'll have confessed to ourselves that we're too weak willed to stick to the resolution. We'll have shamed ourselves,  and the fear of doing so might help keep us dessert-free.  
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Making the rule is a confession that you're weak willed. It's a second-best strategy, and with greater strength of will the problem drinker could take a single drink and let it go at that.
 
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And then Professor Buckley concludes the little section by saying that he  personally finds rules useful for this reason. He cites economist George Stigler's maxim that anyone who's never been too late and missed his plane is arriving at airports too often, and says that he himself  arrives too early--- but because if he didn't have such a rule, he'd miss his plane not occasionally, but often.
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Revision as of 05:01, 10 May 2021

The great thing about Buckley books is that they're such a mix of wisdom and foolishness. The value of the wisdom is obvious: you learn stuff. The value of the foolishness is that it isn't your everyday foolishness of the fashionable woke or the old-fashioned just-plain-dumb variety: it's outrageous foolishness that has enough possibility of being right that you feel a need to argue with it.

That's why I feel like writing a book review even though I've only read to page 4 so far. I'm cheating a bit-- the preface is 20 pages long, and worth the price of admission by itself-- but I have to stop now and argue with Professor Buckley about his first rule: "Don't Make Rules."

I don't object to the contradiction. "The exception proves the rule," and this is an apt example. The meaning of that maxim is that when you come across an exception to a rule, the surprising validity of the exception in that particular special context makes us realize even more how valid the rule is almost everywhere else. When you understand how special the forces of an atomic explosion must be to violate the law of conservation of matter, you realize how reliable the law is in ordinary situations. When you understand how large the size of the income effect must be to violate the law of downward sloping demand curves and create a Giffen good, you realize how reliable is the law that people demand less when the price is higher. So we must not object to a rule saying "Don't Make Rules."

The meaning here is "Don't Make Rules for Yourself." Buckley is not opposing rules to enforce an orderly society: he is saying that rules for yourself make your life too rigid and stupid, in opposition to the book's praise of the Life of Curiosity.

So far, so good. But now we come to the first reason for making rules, "To bind ourselves when we think we'd otherwise succumb to temptation." Buckley admirably "steel-mans" adversarial arguments, and he lay out this one well, with examples as a good writer should (see my comment on Sir David Cox's good statistical writing at xxx).

If we think we're weak-willed, we might make rules to remove temptation from our path. For example, we might think that it would be a good thing to give up desserts and then back this up with a New Year's resolution. That way, when we have dessert in February, we'll have committed a double wrong: we'll have eaten the forbidden pie, and we'll have confessed to ourselves that we're too weak willed to stick to the resolution. We'll have shamed ourselves, and the fear of doing so might help keep us dessert-free.

Making the rule is a confession that you're weak willed. It's a second-best strategy, and with greater strength of will the problem drinker could take a single drink and let it go at that.

And then Professor Buckley concludes the little section by saying that he  personally finds rules useful for this reason. He cites economist George Stigler's maxim that anyone who's never been too late and missed his plane is arriving at airports too often, and says that he himself  arrives too early--- but because if he didn't have such a rule, he'd miss his plane not occasionally, but often.