* A gentle warning: You might find SAVVY this month a bit heavy. If nobody else appreciates the topic, I got a lot out of thinking it through and trying to articulate the logic. If you suffer from insomnia, this would be a good edition of Tips and Topics to read with your head on the pillow.
With the mid-term elections coming up November 6, I have been trying to get my head around all of the partisan and tribal division in the USA (and around the world actually). So when I heard abstract mathematician, Eugenia Cheng interviewed on Science Friday earlier in October, I was pleasantly surprised by what she said:
“I have found ways to understand what other people are thinking from their point of view and to find ways of bridging the gap to show that we’re not actually on completely different planets.”
I thought I was good at empathy, but I have been struggling with what might bring us all together for the good of the country (and world) rather than for the good of one’s political party, subgroup, advocacy topic (gun control, abortion, climate change etc.) or other divisive issues.
Dr. Eugenia Cheng is a mathematician, and Scientist in Residence at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is the author of a new book: how logic can help us agree, or at least disagree more helpfully – “The Art of Logic in an Illogical World” (Basic Books, 2018). I listened intently to see what I could learn from Dr. Cheng on National Public Radio’s (NPR) Science Friday program on October 5, 2018.
If you’d like to hear the whole 24-minute interview, here is the link to “Using Logic In A Maddening World”
Science Friday, October 5, 2018
TIP 1
Consider some of the highlights on why we “butt heads when trying to persuade people we disagree with.“
I excerpted from highlights provided at the program’s link and bullet-pointed them to make the points clearer:
Eugenia Cheng:
We can find the logic inside situations even if the whole situation isn’t completely logical.
Example
Shave away details and discover the common root of arguments about:
These apparently different arguments have the same root:
Do we care about false positives more or false negatives more?
If you make it easy to vote without careful scrutiny of voter registration information, you could get false positives with people voting who should not be allowed. If you have strict voter registration and rules, you might get false negatives, by taking away the rights of someone who deserves to vote but couldn’t because they didn’t register to vote by the deadline.
If you make it easy and widespread to have cancer screening (low cost and many screening sites), you could get false positives diagnosing people as having cancer, when they do not. If you restrict who can get screening to just family members of cancer patients and tighten the criteria to certain ages and races, you can might get false negatives and miss people who have cancer, but didn’t land in the cancer screening net to be allowed a test.
If you make it easy to accuse a person of harassment, you might get false positives and have innocent people’s lives destroyed by a false accusation. If it is hard for people to accuse others of sexual harassment due to a conspiracy of silence or the intimidation of powerful people, you can get false negatives and have people getting away with sexual assault who really should be punished.
Dr. Cheng: What often happens is that people simply use the wrong definitions right at the start.
Example
Dr. Cheng: Your emotions are always valid…..we have been led into a false dichotomy between emotions and logic……some people-I’m afraid it’s often men-take the position that if you are emotional, then it somehow proves that you’re not logical, and that’s not the case. I know that I’m a very emotional person, and also, that I’m a very logical person.
Example
Take the example of a woman’s accusation of sexual assault against a man with an established and successful career.
By putting the emotions in a “different compartment”, we can begin to understand another’s point of view by looking at their chain of logic, step by step. You don’t have to feel what they are feeling but you can see the logic that they are using.
“And this helps me to understand another person’s point of view, even if I disagree with them very, very viscerally and I’m very upset about their position. If I abstract from that and look at their chain of logic step by step, then I don’t have to feel what they are feeling, but I can see the logic they are using. And those two things can be separate. But then I can actually use the logic to be able to understand their points of view despite my emotional disagreements.” (Dr. Cheng)
Dr. Cheng: “I have found ways….. of bridging the gap…..that we’re not actually on completely different planets. It’s not black and white. It’s usually that there’s some kind of gray area in between. And if I can find that we’re both on the same gray area, just in different places, then it’s much easier to think about sliding around it than to think about flipping an entire coin onto the other side.”
With this aspiration in mind, here are a few Tips I summarized from the Science Friday program.
TIP 1
Be aware of the “false equivalence between one argument and another argument.”
Eugenia Cheng: “And this often happens in what’s called a straw man argument. But I prefer to call it straw person, because I don’t like gendering things unnecessarily.”
Example
Again, take the example of a woman’s accusation of sexual assault against a man with an established and successful career.
TIP 2
Spend more time and energy trying to understand the other person’s point of view rather than defending your own views.
Ira Flatow: Is part of the problem that we don’t see how others see us?
Dr. Eugenia Cheng: I think that is part of the problem. But I think a big problem is that we often spend too long trying to defend our own points of view instead of trying to understand somebody else’s points of view. And we often focus on trying to change someone else’s mind instead of trying to see their points of view and see what its validity is.
TIP 3
Be careful of black and white thinking.
Eugenia Cheng: “So the next problem is a question of black and white thinking. And this happens a lot where people get into arguments in extremes.”
TIP 4
Slow down and practice mindfulness to understand the opposing views and people.
Ira Flatow: I think……..one of the hardest things to do these days is to just count to 10.
Dr. Eugenia Cheng: Yes. That’s a very important aspect of it, because logic is a slow process, and it doesn’t happen in the format that is very popular in the current modern world which consists of a mic drop, or a one-liner, or some kind of meme that doesn’t have very many words in it, or a 280-character tweet. Logic takes longer than that. And I wish we could all take time to slow down our arguments so we have time to explore the logic and build the logic.
Ira Flatow: So it’s almost like mindfulness. You have to find a way to catch yourself in the moment.
Dr. Eugenia Cheng: Yes, it is a lot like that. And I think that kind of mindfulness can help us understand the logic inside our own emotions. Because our emotions are all coming from somewhere. There is something that is causing them.
And I honestly believe that when I see somebody who is feeling something emotional about something very differently from me, if I do that mindfulness for them, even if they are unable to do it for themselves, then I can start to understand what their basic belief is from which all of this is stemming. And maybe I can see how that basic belief is different from my basic belief. And that’s why we think different things, not because we our logic is different, but because our starting points are different.
Have you noticed how some people running for office vow to stay positive in their campaign, focus on issues not personalities, take the high road and inspire people to vote for them? Then their poll numbers start lagging behind their opponent and their political consultants jolt them out of their naivete and urge them to “go negative.”
I’ll never run for political office because I can’t stomach the realities needed to win. My hat goes off to the women and men willing to put themselves on the line and stand for office…..and it’s not for the big bucks.
Here are a few naïve and idealistic questions to ponder in this bitter election season:
“I have found ways to understand what other people are thinking from their point of view and to find ways of bridging the gap to show that we’re not actually on completely different planets” said Dr. Eugenia Cheng.
I’m still working on that. I hope you will join me too in finding ways to bridge the gap.