Having started this blog 2 years ago, and not made much progress since, I have finally been inspired with an idea for a new post - this might have to become a biennial tradition of making a post on Christmas Eve, even if
it is probably the worst time of year to get people to read it!
It's been an interesting couple of
years since my original post:
http://goodwillpursuivance.blogspot.co.uk/2014/12/goodwill-and-peace-to-all-men.htmlWhat I said then still seems to me to be just as relevant, if indeed not more so.
It has been particularly dismaying
for me to see the way in which Remainers dismiss those who voted Leave in this
year's referendum as xenophobes and "low information voters". Does it really take such effort to understand other people's viewpoints? It is such a shame that more people are not aware of John Stuart Mill:
"I'd like to suggest that the
failures of progressive liberal democracy to capture the public imagination
around the world can be blamed at least partly on the perils of knowing you're
right.
The danger of knowing you're right is
that it can relieve you of the responsibility to argue your point of view. If
you're right, then surely you just have to state your position clearly enough
and people will realise it's the correct one. It would be unseemly or even
dishonest to have to resort to selling your point of view to the public.
More dangerously, if you're so
obviously right, then any reasonable person would agree with you. A corollary
is that anybody holding an opposing view must be either evil or stupid; so
there's no need to try to understand their viewpoint, let alone engage in any
kind of debate. So you can sit in your Facebook echo chamber, sharing stories
about how nasty the other lot are and feeling smug that they are wrong and you
are right.
Unfortunately, voters do not take
kindly to being told they are stupid. When vast numbers of citizens decide that
their interests are best represented by populist right-wing politicians and
start voting in droves for Brexit and UKIP (or Trump or Wilders), it is not
good enough to dismiss those politicians as simply evil and, by implication,
dismiss their voters as mean, selfish or half-witted. To do so merely confirms
to those voters their view that the "liberal elite" is totally out of
touch with their lives. Of course, no one person can directly understand the
experiences of everybody in a country: we all live in our bubbles of varying
sizes. But the least we can do is to acknowledge that other people's bubbles
look very different from our own, and what seems an obvious choice to us does
not necessarily seem obvious to everybody.
This is not to say that being right
isn't important: it is vitally important, but it is no longer enough."
I heartily agree with this, but I'd like to amplify on it - and take it in a slightly different direction.
Knowing that you are right is in no
way a good thing.
It is, of course, a ridiculous point
of view. It is simply impossible to be sure – the world is far too complicated
a place for anyone to be able to have anything even approaching sufficient
knowledge; you only need to look at complete inability of macro-economists to
predict the future to see that.
In fact, the sensation of knowing
that you are right is a trick that your brain plays on you – we are all
psychologically predisposed to believe in our own righteousness. To make
matters worse, we are all subject to confirmation bias – we interpret facts so
that they are consistent with what we already believe, and then ignore the
inconvenient ones that conflict.
In my view, this actually means that those people
who believe they are right are more likely to be wrong – they stop questioning
their underlying assumptions, which might well prove to be erroneous. Idealists
are particularly bad in this regard – you are more likely to arrive at the
truth by being pragmatic.
Unfortunately, it seems that people
want to be proved to be right much more strongly than wanting to arrive at the
truth – which is why we have such current problems in political discourse,
which I guess is the point that the author of the text I've quoted above is
trying to make.
My own theory is that things are getting
worse as Western society becomes more and more post-Christian – those with a
Christian upbringing are admonished against self-righteousness, and are thus
more inclined to be able to see the points of view of others, and being able to
do so makes the world a much more civilised place!
On that note, I'd like to wish all my
readers Peace and Goodwill - not to mention merriment - this Christmas and a
hope that New Year will see more people behave pleasantly towards those with
whom they disagree.
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