In this case that roughly translates to self contradictory advice. Do and do not do. There are plenty of quotes that make just as much sense when reversed and in such cases the quotes themselves contain very information and any actual wisdom must be entirely embedded in the algorithm that selects which quoted meaning to apply in which case.
You can’t simultaneously say “aim higher on the margin” and “aim lower on the margin”, but you can say “don’t aim too high” and “don’t aim too low”—or more simply “mind your aim point”. It is entirely possible that people miss on both sides and they are simply not being careful enough to avoid either extreme.
Consider it a recommendation to be aware of the trade off, not a recommendation to bias your decisions in any particular direction.
Is this a recommendation or a warning?
Can’t it be both?
In this case that roughly translates to self contradictory advice. Do and do not do. There are plenty of quotes that make just as much sense when reversed and in such cases the quotes themselves contain very information and any actual wisdom must be entirely embedded in the algorithm that selects which quoted meaning to apply in which case.
You can’t simultaneously say “aim higher on the margin” and “aim lower on the margin”, but you can say “don’t aim too high” and “don’t aim too low”—or more simply “mind your aim point”. It is entirely possible that people miss on both sides and they are simply not being careful enough to avoid either extreme.
Consider it a recommendation to be aware of the trade off, not a recommendation to bias your decisions in any particular direction.