If (as those of us who make a study of ourselves have been led to do) each man, on hearing a wise maxim immediately looked to see how it properly applied to him, he would find that it was not so much a pithy saying as a whiplash applied to the habitual stupidity of his faculty of judgment. But the counsels of Truth and her precepts are taken to apply to the generality of men, never to oneself; we store them up in our memory not in our manners, which is most stupid and unprofitable.
Does it actually help? My usual reactions are “Ha, yeah, I totally do that. Silly human foibles eh?”, “Screw you, anonymous proverb author, just because you don’t mention what makes this a least-bad option doesn’t make it worse”, or “Yeah, that’s the problem. Do you have a solution?”.
Yes. One option is to use it as a memorable trigger- “Oh, I’m making mistake X, like the proverb”- and then amend behavior. (This is one of the reasons why it’s worth trying to word proverbs as memorably as possible- rhyming helps quite a bit. If your actions you want to jigger, then do not fail to set a trigger! Sometimes it works better than others.)
A superior option is, upon seeing the maxim, to contemplate it fully, and plan out now how it could be avoided in some way, and then practice that offline.
In general, though, de Montaigne is highlighting the general thrust of Less Wrong. Knowing the ways in which people in general make mistakes is most useful to you if you use that knowledge to prevent yourself from making that mistake, and a general mistake people make is to not do that!
Michel de Montaigne, Essays, “On habit”
Does it actually help? My usual reactions are “Ha, yeah, I totally do that. Silly human foibles eh?”, “Screw you, anonymous proverb author, just because you don’t mention what makes this a least-bad option doesn’t make it worse”, or “Yeah, that’s the problem. Do you have a solution?”.
Yes. One option is to use it as a memorable trigger- “Oh, I’m making mistake X, like the proverb”- and then amend behavior. (This is one of the reasons why it’s worth trying to word proverbs as memorably as possible- rhyming helps quite a bit. If your actions you want to jigger, then do not fail to set a trigger! Sometimes it works better than others.)
A superior option is, upon seeing the maxim, to contemplate it fully, and plan out now how it could be avoided in some way, and then practice that offline.
In general, though, de Montaigne is highlighting the general thrust of Less Wrong. Knowing the ways in which people in general make mistakes is most useful to you if you use that knowledge to prevent yourself from making that mistake, and a general mistake people make is to not do that!
Or “If it’s your actions that you want to jigger, do not fail to set a trigger!”.