This quote sounds somewhat trite, but its message is straightforward, clear, and coherent, and while one may disagree with the opinion it expresses, it is at the very least plausible prima facie. As with the Regan quote in the earlier comment, I am baffled as to what elements of irrationality you (and those who upvoted the comment) find in it, let alone what makes it so remarkable that it’s worth quoting years after it was said.
I am baffled as to what elements of irrationality you (and those who upvoted the comment) find in it
So you are baffled by both quotes.
I offer the hypothesis that the function of the repetition of these quotes down the years has been to signal tribal affiliation. This being the case, the fact that outsiders are baffled may be a strength, because this reveals them as non-tribe-members. The quotes then serve a function similar to that of an inside joke.
I offer the hypothesis that the function of the repetition of these quotes down the years has been to signal tribal affiliation.
Your hypothesis seems clearly true to me, and I have thought of it myself. However, with these quotes, I was really unable to figure out which exact bad-faith misinterpretation was being suggested. (Admittedly, as I note in my response to Joshua Z., my own original interpretation of the Bush quote may have been too favorable, though even in that case, it still requires a hostile over-stretching to make the quote a remarkable exhibit of irrationality.)
It seems that an implicit part of the quote is that having certainty is a good thing because it makes decisions easier even when they might be difficult. I am however worried by the prevalence of quotes (granted only two right now) of quotes from a specific end of the political spectrum. This is a thread that could easily go into mind-killing territory.
Hm… it is possible that my English comprehension has failed me.
I interpreted the phrase “which way the wind is blowing” to mean the prevailing fashion and majority opinion, so that the quote would contrast making decisions based on principled conviction with bowing down to momentary fashion and popular pressure. (This phrase, i.e. its literal translation, is commonly used in this sense in my native language.) However, looking it up, now I see that this is not its usual meaning in English, though such meaning is attested to some degree.
So the question is, did Bush actually use the phrase “which way the wind is blowing” with this somewhat unusual meaning? It’s hard for me to tell. (Even if this meaning is unusual or archaic, I can think of at least one other occasion when Bush was derided by many people for using what they thought was a bizarrely incorrect word, but the joke was in fact on them and their ignorance, since the word is nowadays unusual and archaic, but perfectly standard and well-attested. I have in mind the occasion when he referred to “Grecians.”)
In any case, even if Bush didn’t have this meaning in mind, the quote can be interpreted as making the assertion that in matters of politics firm and consistent principles provide a better guide for action than frantic and futile attempts to analyze each particular situation better than is actually possible, which leads to overthinking and indecisiveness. Whether or not one agrees with this, it’s certainly not something deserving of being included into a chrestomathy of human irrationality.
I interpreted the phrase “which way the wind is blowing” to mean the prevailing fashion and majority opinion, so that the quote would contrast making decisions based on principled conviction with bowing down to momentary fashion and popular pressure.
This is a major meaning of it in English as I know it. And I have a reference—see below.
(This phrase, i.e. its literal translation, is commonly used in this sense in my native language.)
Not surprising—they probably have a common historical origin, with somebody along the line translating the phrase.
However, looking it up, now I see that this is not its usual meaning in English, though such meaning is attested to some degree.
Whatever reference you consulted seems to have misled you. Here is a reference which explains:
The figurative sense of ‘the way the wind blows’, i.e. meaning the tide of opinion, was in use by the early 19th century. In November 1819...
So this meaning has been active for almost two centuries, if not longer. And since Bush is a politician, who ultimately succeeds or fails on the basis of the tide of opinion, this creates a strong presumption in favor of this meaning. If Bush were speaking as a sailor, it would be the other way around. But he wasn’t.
Yes, this is a plausible interpretation. It seems that the quote is just very ambiguous about what was intended. It is functioning more as an inkblot for us than anything else (and yes, I know that test actually doesn’t work but the point should be clear).
I looked for the context of the quote, and it was an impromptu answer to a question from the audience. Clearly, on such occasions it’s hard to expect anything else from a professional politician.
and yes, I know that test actually doesn’t work but the point should be clear
The general topic of the persistence of representations of outdated technology in speech and graphic symbols is one that has long interested me. Some still-used pictures of obsolete or becoming-obsolete technologies are: an old-style bell, an old-style metal key of a sort that has been obsolete for a very long time, old telephone or handset, paper envelope (e.g. to represent e-mail), a spherical black bomb, a boat anchor of a certain very old style which modern anchors don’t much resemble, a circular 12-hour clock face which used to be used because of how a clock worked, but which is now displayed (when it is) partly for familiarity. And the even older technology: the hourglass! Still used to represent time passing.
Hmm, good point: you need to take into account background knowledge about George W. Bush (such as that he is a person who believes that God talks to him.) If we take the quote to mean:
If you know what you believe (and you have sound reasons for having the beliefs that you do), decisions come pretty easy...
then the quote is actually pretty reasonable. If, on the other hand, you take it to mean
If you know what you believe (because careful reasoning and evidence are unimportant to you), decisions come pretty easy...
then the quote is clearly arational. Also, I interpreted his disparaging of people who are “always trying to figure out which way the wind is blowing” as him essentially saying “forget the territory, I’ve already got a map and that’s good enough for me”.
you need to take into account background knowledge about George W. Bush (such as that he is a person who believes that God talks to him.)
Oh good lord, this whole topic so far is two quotes from Republican Presidents, and the supposed irrationality of the quotes seems to be nothing more than strained readings of what they meant. Can people come up with any examples of irrational/arational quotes that aren’t just a labored attempt to ridicule the chieftain of the enemy tribe as a form of tribal affiliation signaling?
Is it hard to make decisions as President? Not really. If you know what you believe, decisions come pretty easy. If you’re one of these types of people that are always trying to figure out which way the wind is blowing, decision making can be difficult. But I find that—I know who I am. I know what I believe in, and I know where I want to lead the country. And most of the decisions come pretty easily for me, to be frank with you.
When we take into account further context that this was spoken to children in elementary school, I think the only strained reading is the one which sees this quote as reasonable. Hey kids, the only thing you need to make good decisions is to know what you already believe in! Reasoning is so much easier when you write the bottom line first.
You are reading Bush as saying he won’t update his priors on the evidence. But to me it is obvious that Bush is saying exactly what everybody says about themselves and about the people they support, which is that they won’t shift with the political winds.
Here’s an example of a person who follows Bush’s advice. He is an atheist and a Darwinist. He enters a Christian Creationist community. Around him everyone is a Christian and a Creationist. They make fun of him for being a Darwinist. He has two options:
A) He can make life easy for himself by seeing which way the wind is blowing and becoming a Creationist, so that people will accept him better socially.
B) He can remain steadfast in his Darwinism, because he realizes that the mass of opinion surrounding him is scant reason to update his priors, when the physical evidence and the reasoned arguments of Darwin and others speak so plainly.
Bush is saying he’s a B type.
Here’s a common expression which is used to chide someone who has shown signs of being an A type:
If all your friends jumped off a bridge then would you too?
Social pressure is not the same thing as evidence and argument. Someone who succumbs to social pressure is not being a good Bayesian rationalist.
How do I know that this is what Bush really means? Because it’s what pretty much every person prefers to say and think about himself. Everybody wants to think they have good reasons for what they do. Nobody wants to think they’re a weathervane, a leaf tossed around by the social winds. It’s a massively unremarkable statement. And it’s especially applicable to politicians, who are at extra pains to say that they are people of principle and reason, and don’t flipflop based on the latest popularity polls.
Bush says “I know what I believe in” instead of saying “I know what I know”, because the former is the way we have all been taught to talk. We have been taught to be non-confrontational, so we talk to each other about what we “believe”, what we “think”, instead of about what is real or about what is right, since discussion about what is real or right will quickly lead to arguments, which we are at pains to avoid. It’s not the right wing, by the way, that introduced this way of thinking, this relativism. It was not the right wing which taught us to stop saying “the truth” and start saying “my truth”.
This has nothing to do with any assessment of Bush as President. I am reading Bush on the basis of my knowledge of humanity, on the basis of my knowledge about what pretty much everybody likes to think about himself.
I agree, yours is a more reasonable interpretation. I think I was interpreting “winds” as referring to “the winds of evidence,” which is not reasonable in this context.
I do think your accusing me of “tribal affiliation signaling” was unnecessary and uncharitable: I don’t consider Bush to have been a significantly worse a president than any other recent presidents. I just happened to have run into the quote awhile back, and in my misinterpretation thought it was a good anti-rationality quote.
Edit: I did some thinking to try to figure out how I could have missed the obviously correct interpretation of Bush’s words. The first hypothesis (which Constant first put forth) was that I was signalling tribal loyalties—boo Republicans, yay Democrats. That does not make much sense, however, because I pretty solidly dislike all major political parties and the entire politics theater of the U.S. Maybe I was attempting to signal loyalty to the “boo politicians” tribe, but I think there’s a better explanation: a cached thought. Even though I do not currently belong to the anti-Republican tribe, I did belong to that tribe in my high school years (i.e. during Bush’ presidency), and I was most likely operating on a “Bush is stupid/irrational” cached thought.
I do think your accusing me of “tribal affiliation signaling” was unnecessary and uncharitable:
I swear that it was not my intent to make any statement about your motivation, and I have evidence of my intent. In another comment in this discussion I wrote:
I offer the hypothesis that the function of the repetition of these quotes down the years has been to signal tribal affiliation.
Notice that I wrote “down the years” and “has been”. I put in those words intentionally, to direct attention toward the repetition of the quote down the years and not toward the occurrence here in this forum.
Imagine if I had instead written:
I offer the hypothesis that the function of the repetition of these quotes was to signal tribal affiliation.
I might have written that because that still allows the intended historical interpretation, but it is more ambiguous because it also allows an interpretation that attacks you for posting the quote here now. I took pains to add words to avoid that interpretation.
Admittedly, I was not as careful over in this part of the discussion.
The memes you carry are not all your fault. I know that.
Name an effective U.S. President who did not have great confidence in his ability to make decisions, though. Or name one who doubted his own goodness or questioned his basic beliefs or basic goals.
I’d have a hard time digging up an appropriate quote, but I get that impression from Lincoln’s writings, for the first part. If any president had low confidence in their decisionmaking ability though, how strongly should we expect to know about it?
If any president had low confidence in their decisionmaking ability though, how strongly should we expect to know about it?
Fair enough (and I am impressed that you were able to go right to IMHO the best example out of the 44 choices), but if you replace my “did not have great confidence” with “did not publicly display great confidence”, my point (that the quote of Bush is not significant evidence of arationality or irrationality) stands.
If any president had low confidence in their decisionmaking ability though, how strongly should we expect to know about it?
In fact, now that I think about it, that point is support for the conclusion I have been arguing for, since the American voter is impressed enough with confidence that anyone without unusually high confidence in the intrinsic rightness of his own basic beliefs might have to fake it in public just to be an effective presidential candidate no matter how distasteful he or she privately finds it.
Is it hard to make decisions as President? Not really. If you know what you believe, decisions come pretty easy. If you’re one of these types of people that are always trying to figure out which way the wind is blowing, decision making can be difficult. But I find that—I know who I am. I know what I believe in, and I know where I want to lead the country.
“I know who I am. I know what I believe in” does not sound like the words of a rationalist. Who here would advocate that the essential step in making good decisions is simply looking at what you presently believe? How is this quote not totally anti-epistemology?
This quote sounds somewhat trite, but its message is straightforward, clear, and coherent, and while one may disagree with the opinion it expresses, it is at the very least plausible prima facie. As with the Regan quote in the earlier comment, I am baffled as to what elements of irrationality you (and those who upvoted the comment) find in it, let alone what makes it so remarkable that it’s worth quoting years after it was said.
So you are baffled by both quotes.
I offer the hypothesis that the function of the repetition of these quotes down the years has been to signal tribal affiliation. This being the case, the fact that outsiders are baffled may be a strength, because this reveals them as non-tribe-members. The quotes then serve a function similar to that of an inside joke.
Affiliation with the tribe against Reagan and Bush, right?
Your hypothesis seems clearly true to me, and I have thought of it myself. However, with these quotes, I was really unable to figure out which exact bad-faith misinterpretation was being suggested. (Admittedly, as I note in my response to Joshua Z., my own original interpretation of the Bush quote may have been too favorable, though even in that case, it still requires a hostile over-stretching to make the quote a remarkable exhibit of irrationality.)
It seems that an implicit part of the quote is that having certainty is a good thing because it makes decisions easier even when they might be difficult. I am however worried by the prevalence of quotes (granted only two right now) of quotes from a specific end of the political spectrum. This is a thread that could easily go into mind-killing territory.
Hm… it is possible that my English comprehension has failed me.
I interpreted the phrase “which way the wind is blowing” to mean the prevailing fashion and majority opinion, so that the quote would contrast making decisions based on principled conviction with bowing down to momentary fashion and popular pressure. (This phrase, i.e. its literal translation, is commonly used in this sense in my native language.) However, looking it up, now I see that this is not its usual meaning in English, though such meaning is attested to some degree.
So the question is, did Bush actually use the phrase “which way the wind is blowing” with this somewhat unusual meaning? It’s hard for me to tell. (Even if this meaning is unusual or archaic, I can think of at least one other occasion when Bush was derided by many people for using what they thought was a bizarrely incorrect word, but the joke was in fact on them and their ignorance, since the word is nowadays unusual and archaic, but perfectly standard and well-attested. I have in mind the occasion when he referred to “Grecians.”)
In any case, even if Bush didn’t have this meaning in mind, the quote can be interpreted as making the assertion that in matters of politics firm and consistent principles provide a better guide for action than frantic and futile attempts to analyze each particular situation better than is actually possible, which leads to overthinking and indecisiveness. Whether or not one agrees with this, it’s certainly not something deserving of being included into a chrestomathy of human irrationality.
This is a major meaning of it in English as I know it. And I have a reference—see below.
Not surprising—they probably have a common historical origin, with somebody along the line translating the phrase.
Whatever reference you consulted seems to have misled you. Here is a reference which explains:
So this meaning has been active for almost two centuries, if not longer. And since Bush is a politician, who ultimately succeeds or fails on the basis of the tide of opinion, this creates a strong presumption in favor of this meaning. If Bush were speaking as a sailor, it would be the other way around. But he wasn’t.
Yes, this is a plausible interpretation. It seems that the quote is just very ambiguous about what was intended. It is functioning more as an inkblot for us than anything else (and yes, I know that test actually doesn’t work but the point should be clear).
I looked for the context of the quote, and it was an impromptu answer to a question from the audience. Clearly, on such occasions it’s hard to expect anything else from a professional politician.
The general topic of the persistence of representations of outdated technology in speech and graphic symbols is one that has long interested me. Some still-used pictures of obsolete or becoming-obsolete technologies are: an old-style bell, an old-style metal key of a sort that has been obsolete for a very long time, old telephone or handset, paper envelope (e.g. to represent e-mail), a spherical black bomb, a boat anchor of a certain very old style which modern anchors don’t much resemble, a circular 12-hour clock face which used to be used because of how a clock worked, but which is now displayed (when it is) partly for familiarity. And the even older technology: the hourglass! Still used to represent time passing.
Hmm, good point: you need to take into account background knowledge about George W. Bush (such as that he is a person who believes that God talks to him.) If we take the quote to mean:
then the quote is actually pretty reasonable. If, on the other hand, you take it to mean
then the quote is clearly arational. Also, I interpreted his disparaging of people who are “always trying to figure out which way the wind is blowing” as him essentially saying “forget the territory, I’ve already got a map and that’s good enough for me”.
Oh good lord, this whole topic so far is two quotes from Republican Presidents, and the supposed irrationality of the quotes seems to be nothing more than strained readings of what they meant. Can people come up with any examples of irrational/arational quotes that aren’t just a labored attempt to ridicule the chieftain of the enemy tribe as a form of tribal affiliation signaling?
Here’s the expanded quote:
When we take into account further context that this was spoken to children in elementary school, I think the only strained reading is the one which sees this quote as reasonable. Hey kids, the only thing you need to make good decisions is to know what you already believe in! Reasoning is so much easier when you write the bottom line first.
You are reading Bush as saying he won’t update his priors on the evidence. But to me it is obvious that Bush is saying exactly what everybody says about themselves and about the people they support, which is that they won’t shift with the political winds.
Here’s an example of a person who follows Bush’s advice. He is an atheist and a Darwinist. He enters a Christian Creationist community. Around him everyone is a Christian and a Creationist. They make fun of him for being a Darwinist. He has two options:
A) He can make life easy for himself by seeing which way the wind is blowing and becoming a Creationist, so that people will accept him better socially.
B) He can remain steadfast in his Darwinism, because he realizes that the mass of opinion surrounding him is scant reason to update his priors, when the physical evidence and the reasoned arguments of Darwin and others speak so plainly.
Bush is saying he’s a B type.
Here’s a common expression which is used to chide someone who has shown signs of being an A type:
Social pressure is not the same thing as evidence and argument. Someone who succumbs to social pressure is not being a good Bayesian rationalist.
How do I know that this is what Bush really means? Because it’s what pretty much every person prefers to say and think about himself. Everybody wants to think they have good reasons for what they do. Nobody wants to think they’re a weathervane, a leaf tossed around by the social winds. It’s a massively unremarkable statement. And it’s especially applicable to politicians, who are at extra pains to say that they are people of principle and reason, and don’t flipflop based on the latest popularity polls.
Bush says “I know what I believe in” instead of saying “I know what I know”, because the former is the way we have all been taught to talk. We have been taught to be non-confrontational, so we talk to each other about what we “believe”, what we “think”, instead of about what is real or about what is right, since discussion about what is real or right will quickly lead to arguments, which we are at pains to avoid. It’s not the right wing, by the way, that introduced this way of thinking, this relativism. It was not the right wing which taught us to stop saying “the truth” and start saying “my truth”.
This has nothing to do with any assessment of Bush as President. I am reading Bush on the basis of my knowledge of humanity, on the basis of my knowledge about what pretty much everybody likes to think about himself.
I agree, yours is a more reasonable interpretation. I think I was interpreting “winds” as referring to “the winds of evidence,” which is not reasonable in this context.
I do think your accusing me of “tribal affiliation signaling” was unnecessary and uncharitable: I don’t consider Bush to have been a significantly worse a president than any other recent presidents. I just happened to have run into the quote awhile back, and in my misinterpretation thought it was a good anti-rationality quote.
Edit: I did some thinking to try to figure out how I could have missed the obviously correct interpretation of Bush’s words. The first hypothesis (which Constant first put forth) was that I was signalling tribal loyalties—boo Republicans, yay Democrats. That does not make much sense, however, because I pretty solidly dislike all major political parties and the entire politics theater of the U.S. Maybe I was attempting to signal loyalty to the “boo politicians” tribe, but I think there’s a better explanation: a cached thought. Even though I do not currently belong to the anti-Republican tribe, I did belong to that tribe in my high school years (i.e. during Bush’ presidency), and I was most likely operating on a “Bush is stupid/irrational” cached thought.
I swear that it was not my intent to make any statement about your motivation, and I have evidence of my intent. In another comment in this discussion I wrote:
Notice that I wrote “down the years” and “has been”. I put in those words intentionally, to direct attention toward the repetition of the quote down the years and not toward the occurrence here in this forum.
Imagine if I had instead written:
I might have written that because that still allows the intended historical interpretation, but it is more ambiguous because it also allows an interpretation that attacks you for posting the quote here now. I took pains to add words to avoid that interpretation.
Admittedly, I was not as careful over in this part of the discussion.
The memes you carry are not all your fault. I know that.
Name an effective U.S. President who did not have great confidence in his ability to make decisions, though. Or name one who doubted his own goodness or questioned his basic beliefs or basic goals.
I’d have a hard time digging up an appropriate quote, but I get that impression from Lincoln’s writings, for the first part. If any president had low confidence in their decisionmaking ability though, how strongly should we expect to know about it?
Fair enough (and I am impressed that you were able to go right to IMHO the best example out of the 44 choices), but if you replace my “did not have great confidence” with “did not publicly display great confidence”, my point (that the quote of Bush is not significant evidence of arationality or irrationality) stands.
In fact, now that I think about it, that point is support for the conclusion I have been arguing for, since the American voter is impressed enough with confidence that anyone without unusually high confidence in the intrinsic rightness of his own basic beliefs might have to fake it in public just to be an effective presidential candidate no matter how distasteful he or she privately finds it.
Rejoice! The sample has now been made more diverse with a Glenn Beck quote :D
It’s a good example, though. That makes a big difference. If anyone thinks the interpretation is strained, let them speak up.
Agreed, unlike the other two, that one did make my brain want to crawl out of my head and jump out of the window.
Let’s take a look at the expanded quote:
“I know who I am. I know what I believe in” does not sound like the words of a rationalist. Who here would advocate that the essential step in making good decisions is simply looking at what you presently believe? How is this quote not totally anti-epistemology?