June 07, 2005

Why smart people defend bad ideas

Essential reading for smart people (via John Hawks):

Majoring in logic is not the kind of thing that makes people want to talk to you at parties, or read your essays. But one thing I did learn after years of studying advanced logic theory is that proficiency in argument can easily be used to overpower others, even when you are dead wrong. If you learn a few tricks of logic and debate, you can refute the obvious, and defend the ridiculous. If the people you’re arguing with aren’t as comfortable in the tactics of argument, or aren’t as arrogant as you are, they may even give in and agree with you. The problem with smart people is that they like to be right and sometimes will defend ideas to the death rather than admit they’re wrong. This is bad. Worse, if they got away with it when they were young (say, because they were smarter than their parents, their friends, and their parent’s friends) they’ve probably built an ego around being right, and will therefore defend their perfect record of invented righteousness to the death. Smart people often fall into the trap of preferring to be right even if it’s based in delusion, or results in them, or their loved ones, becoming miserable.
Posted by David Boxenhorn at June 7, 2005 04:53 PM | TrackBacks
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Just dropped in after GNXP -- and thanks for a brilliant citation. The article itself by Scott Berkun is the greatest essay I myself never wrote (not smart enough), but that has always been somewhere in my head.

Posted by: Cathal Copeland at June 20, 2005 02:05 PM Permalink

A lot of this applies to dumb people as well, who often power their arguments through despite their obvious deficiciencies. Often smart people are inclined to give in because the idiot is convinced he is right and he wouldn't understand your counter-arguments anyway, so why bother.

Posted by: om_shalom at June 20, 2005 05:59 PM Permalink

Absolutley have seen this in action! Great way of explaining it!

Posted by: Hannah at June 21, 2005 01:21 AM Permalink

We have been talking about this all week in my advanced logic class. Sometimes the only way to tell the truth from the rest of the garbage is to keep tossing it out one piece at a time. Eventually, under all the waste, you'll find something resembling the truth.

Posted by: Joan at June 24, 2005 09:41 PM Permalink

Misery -- OK, but death, especially when repeated twice, is just too strong. Unless this is an essay about religious zealots / terrorists rather than people like us.

Posted by: Dina Q at June 30, 2005 04:17 PM Permalink