Too Much Emphasis on Failure

In his blog a few days ago, as I mentioned earlier, Nicholas Kristof printed a letter from a University of North Carolina graduate student about why she was not going to enter Kristof’s contest to go to Africa with him. Kristof wrote too much about failure, she said:

[Quoting Kristof:]“I’m hoping that you’ll be changed when you see a boy dying of malaria because his parents couldn’t afford a $5 mosquito net, or when you talk to a smart girl who is at the top of her class but is forced to drop out of school because she can’t afford a school uniform.” . . . The story of Africa in turmoil is the African narrative that many Americans – and certainly those who read The New York Times – already know. It is virtually the only type of reporting that Western news outlets broadcast about the continent. . . Americans don’t need any more stories of a dying Africa. Instead, we should learn of a living one. Kristof and his winners should investigate how it is that Botswana had the highest per-capita growth of any country in the world for the last 30 years of the twenty-first century.

I believe she is correct. The Times and — I’ll take her word for it — “Western news outlets” in general have made a serious mistake in their Africa coverage: Far too much coverage of failure relative to success. An especially curious misjudgment because generally journalists like feel-good stories.

Could an entire well-respected profession do the wrong thing for a long time? Well, Jane Jacobs thinks so. In a 2000 interview, she said this about economists:

One place where past economic theory has gone wrong in a subtle way is that it has always been called upon for explanations of breakdowns and trouble. Look how foreign aid, even today, is all about poverty and where things are not working. There is no focus on trying to learn how things are working when they work. And if you are going to get a good theory about how things work, you have to focus on how they work, not on how they break down. You can look forever at a broken down wagon or airplane and not learn what it did when it was working.

Maybe you say Jacobs wasn’t a real economist (because she didn’t write mainstream academic papers). Well, consider this. In the 1960s, Saul Sternberg changed the face of experimental psychology when he showed what could be done with reaction-time experiments, which are set up so that the subject almost always gets the right answer. Before Sternberg, memory and perception were usually studied via percent-correct experiments, set up so that subjects were often wrong.

Sternberg’s reaction-time research was so much more revealing than the percent-correct research that preceded it that almost everyone switched to using reaction time. The profession of experimental psychologists had done the wrong thing for a long time.

3 thoughts on “Too Much Emphasis on Failure

  1. As far as economists and economic development go, check out anything by Hernando de Soto and Douglass North. Those two are bright lights in a field full of darkness and confusion: they actually study real economies to figure out how they work, rather than playing with toy models on paper.

  2. There is some amazing stuff in economics. Finding out why honey is related to SIDS and lots of other things. In a way, economics is a study of math and how it relates.

    Neat stuff. I liked your points in this post, btw, and I’m thinking on them.

  3. I’m reading _The Ab Revolution_ by Dr. Jolie Bookspan, and it’s a wonderful example of how a profession can be wrong about something for a long time.

    The book is all about how proper posture can be more effective in preventing back pain and developing abdominal muscles than crunches, because proper posture provides a workout all the time in a way which enhances everyday functioning. Crunches don’t actually strengthen abs, and can hurt your neck and back.

    Great stuff!

    Her blog is quite good as well: https://www.healthline.com/blogs/exercise_fitness/index.html

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