I have an enormous amount of sympathy for us humans, who are required to make these kinds of decisions with nothing but our brains. My sympathy increased radically during the period of my life when, due to traumatic brain injury, my level of executive function was highly impaired and ordering lunch became an “above my pay grade” decision. We really do astonishingly well, for what we are.
But none of that changes my belief that we aren’t especially well designed for making hard choices.
It’s also not surprising that people can’t fly across the Atlantic Ocean. But I expect a sufficiently well designed aircraft to do so.
It’s interesting that we view those who do make the tough decisions as virtuous—i.e. the commander in a war movie (I’m thinking of Bill Adama). We recognize that it is a hard but valuable thing to do!
100% agreed.
I have an enormous amount of sympathy for us humans, who are required to make these kinds of decisions with nothing but our brains. My sympathy increased radically during the period of my life when, due to traumatic brain injury, my level of executive function was highly impaired and ordering lunch became an “above my pay grade” decision. We really do astonishingly well, for what we are.
But none of that changes my belief that we aren’t especially well designed for making hard choices.
It’s also not surprising that people can’t fly across the Atlantic Ocean. But I expect a sufficiently well designed aircraft to do so.
It’s interesting that we view those who do make the tough decisions as virtuous—i.e. the commander in a war movie (I’m thinking of Bill Adama). We recognize that it is a hard but valuable thing to do!