Really, does it actually matter that something isn’t a magic bullet? Either the cost/benefit balance is good enough to warrant doing something, or it isn’t. Perhaps taw is overstating the case, and certainly there are other causes of akrasia, but someone giving disproportionate attention to a plausible hypothesis isn’t really evidence against that hypothesis, especially one supported by multiple scientific studies.
From what I can see, there’s more than sufficient evidence to warrant serious consideration for something like the following propositions:
Application of short-term willpower measurably expends some short-term biological resource
Willpower “weakens” as the resource is depleted, recovering over a longer time span
Resource expenditure correlates with reduced blood sugar concentration
So, my questions are: If this is correct, what practical use could we make of the idea? What could we do as individuals or as a group to decide whether it’s useful enough to bother thinking about? Particularly in cases where willpower is needed mostly to start a task rather than continue it, if there’s a simple way to get a quick, short-term boost that might make the difference between several hours of productivity vs. akratic frustration, that’s significant!
As an aside, I recall seeing some studies indicating that there may be more general principles in play here, regarding the mind’s executive functions as a whole, but I don’t have citations on hand at the moment.
Really, does it actually matter that something isn’t a magic bullet? Either the cost/benefit balance is good enough to warrant doing something, or it isn’t. Perhaps taw is overstating the case, and certainly there are other causes of akrasia, but someone giving disproportionate attention to a plausible hypothesis isn’t really evidence against that hypothesis, especially one supported by multiple scientific studies.
From what I can see, there’s more than sufficient evidence to warrant serious consideration for something like the following propositions:
Application of short-term willpower measurably expends some short-term biological resource
Willpower “weakens” as the resource is depleted, recovering over a longer time span
Resource expenditure correlates with reduced blood sugar concentration
Increasing blood sugar (temporarily?) restores resource availability
So, my questions are: If this is correct, what practical use could we make of the idea? What could we do as individuals or as a group to decide whether it’s useful enough to bother thinking about? Particularly in cases where willpower is needed mostly to start a task rather than continue it, if there’s a simple way to get a quick, short-term boost that might make the difference between several hours of productivity vs. akratic frustration, that’s significant!
As an aside, I recall seeing some studies indicating that there may be more general principles in play here, regarding the mind’s executive functions as a whole, but I don’t have citations on hand at the moment.
I’m wondering if akrasia is partially caused by inefficient use of willpower.