Hey, The end of the year is approaching, which puts a man in a wistful mood. This attack of wist wasn't all bad - it resurfaced a long lost memory. I had a philosophy professor as an undergraduate who cultivated a great rapport with us students - using a radical technique where he treated them like human beings. Friends, even. Sometimes this led to oversharing. For example, one morning he was late and, by way of explanation, he said that he'd recently divorced from his wife. What he missed most from the breakup, he said, was his Sunday morning ritual of taking a long bath with the weekend papers. He complained that his emergency digs on campus were a little more Spartan - only possessing a shower rather than a bathtub - but with a flash of inspiration worthy of his great hero Archimedes, he came up with a solution. After purloining a plastic patio chair from the student bar, he got the departmental secretary to laminate his precious papers so he could read them - sitting comfortably - in the shower. Eureka! The point here isn't that a philosophy degree can have all sorts of ancillary benefits which aren't immediately obvious. This professor had more to share than bathing mishaps. One concept he spoke of was humans' ability to hold two contrary beliefs at the same time - sometimes referred to as "cognitive dissonance." (Before anyone hits Reply in anger, yes, cognitive dissonance more properly refers to the mental discomfort from holding contrary beliefs, or even more specifically from learning new information which contradicts a deeply held belief. But let's move on...) One of the paradoxes of moral philosophy all these ethical systems - developed by some of the brightest minds over the last few thousand years - is that nobody uses them. We make lots and lots of ethical decisions evey day. Many are minor or don't require much fretting. But some are more serious or difficult. Is there anyone who cracks open Plato or Kant when they're in a sticky moment? I suspect nearly everyone decides on gut, for good or ill. I further reckon that most people - even those of us with philosophy degrees - fall back on some maxim or quote or song lyric to determine how we should act. Or perhaps an example instead, from when someone like us was faced with a similar challenge. Often a... fictional example. The star in a movie, the hero in a book. The term "folk wisdom" is often used pejoratively by academics, which is funny because they all love folk music. One criticism is that it's often contradictory. Should you "seize the day?" Or would it be better to "look before you leap?" Because philosophers never contradict each other, LMAO. The other criticism levelled against folk wisdom is that it essentially operates as a "cognitive shortcut." Endless self-torment over a problem can simply be cut short with a gnomic aphorism like "that's life", or perhaps a truism like, "it is what it is." The thing is, sometimes we need a cognitive shortcut. Sometimes we don't need to figure everything out - certainly not right now. Sometimes we just need to Do The Thing. So whatever your maxim is, whatever quote you cherish, whatever stupid song lyric gets your blood moving, whatever bargain store motivational poster gets you to Do The Thing in 2024, I say more power to you. Turn the volume up, shout that chorus, Do The Thing. Make the Grand List of Things on Sunday, as our forefathers intended - if you like. Or... don't, if you prefer. As long as you Do The Thing. Write that story, craft your hero, be the inspiration for someone else's difficult moment next year. And another thing...Before I head off into 2024, a few days ahead of humanity to make sure all the canapés are ready, several people emailed to ask if they could share the true story of Rudolph - from last week. That story was just for my subscribers, so please don't post anywhere publicly, but if you have a friend who might enjoy it, please feel free to share this private link with them. Happy new year, Dave P. S. Party music this week is Plastic Bertrand and and Major Tom. |
Friday, December 29, 2023
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