Tony Codes
a digital garden derived from markdown notes

Talk 3: A Lesson on Elementary Worldly Wisdom

Given at Stanford Law School on 19th Apr 1996


Ideology will distort thinking where reality disagrees with the ideas

being totally sure on issues like that with a strong, violent ideology, in my opinion, turns you into a lousy thinker

what I'm against is being very confident and feeling that you know, for sure, that your particular intervention will do more good than hard, given that you're dealing with highly complex systems wherein everything is interacting with everything else

even highly credentialed experts can be extremely biased by ideology and we must have the confidence to challenge that type of thinking regardless of the source.

Extreme ideology leads to poor thinking.


Believing what one wishes to be true is a deep, pervasive psychological tendency that is underemphasized in academia, partly because of the ethical issues of experimenting on stress.

the mind will sometimes flip so that the wish becomes the belief


Use checklist routines.


morality and psychology are deeply connected


It's very hard to stop slop and moral failure if you let it run for a while

we don't leap seven-foot fences. Instead, we look for one-foot fences with big rewards on the other side


People that always have an answer will generate confusion because of an unwillingness to admit ignorance

to the extent you become a person who thinks correctly, you can add great value. to the extend you've learned it so well that you have enough confidence to intervene where it takes a little courage, you can add great value.

<<< if you would persuade, appeal to interst, not to reason <<<