Research subjects who believe in ego depletion (that willpower is a limited resource) show diminishing self-control over the course of an experiment, while people who don’t believe in ego depletion are steady throughout. What’s more, when subjects are manipulated into believing in ego depletion through subtly biased questionnaires at the outset of a study, their performance suffers as well.
Seeing willpower as a muscle-like force does seem to match up with some limited examples, such as resisting cravings, and the analogy is reinforced by social expectations stretching back to Victorian moralizing. But these ideas also have a pernicious effect, distracting us from more accurate ways of understanding human psychology and even detracting from our efforts toward meaningful self-control. The best way forward may be to let go of “willpower” altogether.
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Okay so I’m halfway through the article, right, and I get the feeling that this author has a point. Maybe “Willpower” as a term is too broad.
But then I think about Akrasia and how adjusting your situation so that you do not need to expend willpower to take actions which help advance long term goals is helpful for discussing things. And these are… seemlingly in conflict, but both true.
… So is this community using the same definition of willpower as the author?
The author describes his version of willpower as “finite and exhaustible”, as something books say you can increase, and the modern definition of willpower, “the capacity for immediate self-control”.
I think that adjusting a situation so that you don’t need to restrain yourself on a daily basis is a good strategy. One of the reasons for that is that restraining yourself uses resources. The author seems to say that there is no such resource to consume, there is no willpower. Or, more specifically, if you believe that there is such a resource, then there is, and if you don’t believe that there is such a resource, then there isn’t.
… Then the author concludes that since willpower can only hold you back, humanity as a species should let go of the whole idea. Sure, we’ll lose a term to describe this … “thing”, but the advantages will be all the greater.
I’m left confused, though.
Say you erase the idea of willpower from the general population. People still lapse in self-control, but muuuuch less than they do right now. How would you go about explaining your friend (who is having more trouble with self-control than others) that, you know, maybe if he did his groceries shopping earlier in the day, he wouldn’t be so hungry during the groceries shopping and thus would be making less impulse buys? Without the concept of willpower, lest you unleash that demon on civilization.
(That’s a poor argument though, because I’m saying “but wait, even if everyone is better off, what about this one guy”)
Maybe a stronger version; how do you explain to people that forcing everything is bad? That you shouldn’t put yourself through life in a way where you have to fight yourself every step of the way?
I think my POV on this is “if what you’re saying is true, then yes, we should scrap it. Before we do that, though, I have this one thing I’m worried about...”
“Willpower is not exhaustible” is not necessarily the same claim as “willpower is infallible”. If, for example, you have a flat 75% chance of turning down sweets, then avoiding sweets still makes you more likely to not eat them. You’re not spending willpower, it’s just inherently unreliable.
The important parts, for me:
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Okay so I’m halfway through the article, right, and I get the feeling that this author has a point. Maybe “Willpower” as a term is too broad.
But then I think about Akrasia and how adjusting your situation so that you do not need to expend willpower to take actions which help advance long term goals is helpful for discussing things. And these are… seemlingly in conflict, but both true.
… So is this community using the same definition of willpower as the author?
The author describes his version of willpower as “finite and exhaustible”, as something books say you can increase, and the modern definition of willpower, “the capacity for immediate self-control”.
I think that adjusting a situation so that you don’t need to restrain yourself on a daily basis is a good strategy. One of the reasons for that is that restraining yourself uses resources. The author seems to say that there is no such resource to consume, there is no willpower. Or, more specifically, if you believe that there is such a resource, then there is, and if you don’t believe that there is such a resource, then there isn’t.
… Then the author concludes that since willpower can only hold you back, humanity as a species should let go of the whole idea. Sure, we’ll lose a term to describe this … “thing”, but the advantages will be all the greater.
I’m left confused, though.
Say you erase the idea of willpower from the general population. People still lapse in self-control, but muuuuch less than they do right now. How would you go about explaining your friend (who is having more trouble with self-control than others) that, you know, maybe if he did his groceries shopping earlier in the day, he wouldn’t be so hungry during the groceries shopping and thus would be making less impulse buys? Without the concept of willpower, lest you unleash that demon on civilization.
(That’s a poor argument though, because I’m saying “but wait, even if everyone is better off, what about this one guy”)
Maybe a stronger version; how do you explain to people that forcing everything is bad? That you shouldn’t put yourself through life in a way where you have to fight yourself every step of the way?
I think my POV on this is “if what you’re saying is true, then yes, we should scrap it. Before we do that, though, I have this one thing I’m worried about...”
“Willpower is not exhaustible” is not necessarily the same claim as “willpower is infallible”. If, for example, you have a flat 75% chance of turning down sweets, then avoiding sweets still makes you more likely to not eat them. You’re not spending willpower, it’s just inherently unreliable.