Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

The Daily Score


It Is Impossible To Know the Future

Posted by Eric de Place
What we can't know.

AIG

Maybe I've been reading too much punditry lately, but I find myself annoyed with the self-important tone of pretty much everyone who writes about politics. Everyone knows something about the bailouts, Obama's "handling" of the economy, how health care will play out, or the timing of federal climate policy.

Note to everyone: shut up.

Feel free to have an opinion, but please express it as an opinion or belief. Perhaps you have some analysis or evidence to support your belief. But whatever else you may know, you do not know what will happen in the future. And this goes double if you're talking about politics.

(To clarify: I'm not saying you can't make predictions that turn out to be right. I'm saying you can't know the future. Highly surprising and counterintuitive things happen all the time. There is nothing irrational about imagining a future that looks a lot different from the present.)

End of rant.

Image appears thanks to my friend Paul Gettmann. It's from an advertisement in a 1980s-era National Geographic.



Comments
Posted by Dave F. 03/24/2009 02:26 PM
I predict that you will enjoy, the surprising power of neighborly advice -- http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/323/5921/1617
Posted by Eric de Place 03/24/2009 04:28 PM
Good prediction, Dave! That's a truly fascinating piece of research. I didn't spring for the $15 to buy the article, but I did listen to the free podcast here: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/sci;323/5921/1617/DC2.

Add a Comment

Name (required)
Email (will not be published) (required)
Website
See a list of html tags you can use in your comment.
(required)
This check is used to prevent comments by spammers.


Sightline Daily brought to you by Sightline Institute.

ORGANIZATION'S NAME GOES HERE!!! It will be hidden by CSS; we need it only for hCard compliance.
1402 Third Avenue, Suite 500 | Seattle, Washington 98101 | tel: +1.206.447.1880 | fax: +1.206.447.2270