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Hervé
1st June 2019, 15:50
Illeism: New research finds this ancient rhetorical trick leads to wiser reasoning (https://digest.bps.org.uk/2019/05/24/a-new-trial-of-an-ancient-rhetorical-trick-finds-it-can-make-you-wiser/#more-37207)

David Robson BPS Research Digest (https://digest.bps.org.uk/2019/05/24/a-new-trial-of-an-ancient-rhetorical-trick-finds-it-can-make-you-wiser/#more-37207)
Fri, 24 May 2019 00:00 UTC


https://www.sott.net/image/s26/524525/large/facts_julius_caesar_tSa_727X36.jpg (https://www.sott.net/image/s26/524525/full/facts_julius_caesar_tSa_727X36.jpg)
Caesar reportedly practised “illeism”


Socrates famously declared that "the unexamined life is not worth living" and that "knowing thyself" was the path to true wisdom. But is there a right and a wrong way to go about such self-reflection?

Simple rumination - the process of churning your concerns around in your head - isn't the answer. It's likely to cause you to become stuck in the rut of your own thoughts and immersed in the emotions that might be leading you astray. Certainly, research has shown that people who are prone to rumination also often suffer from impaired decision-making under pressure (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1469029215000308) and are at substantially increased risk of depression.

Instead, the scientific research suggests that you should adopt an ancient rhetorical method favoured by the likes of Julius Caesar and known as "illeism" - or speaking about yourself in the third person (the term was coined by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (https://www.spectator.co.uk/2019/01/illeism-the-weird-habit-of-talking-about-oneself-in-the-third-person/) from the Latin ille meaning "he, that"). If I was considering an argument that I'd had with a friend, for instance, I may start by silently thinking to myself "David felt frustrated that..." The idea is that this small change in perspective can clear your emotional fog, allowing you to see past your biases.

A bulk of research has already shown that this kind of third-person thinking can temporarily improve decision making. Now a preprint (https://psyarxiv.com/a5fgu) at PsyArxiv finds that it can also bring long-term benefits to thinking and emotional regulation. It is, according to the authors, "the first evidence that wisdom-related cognitive and affective processes can be trained in daily life and of how to do so."

The findings are the brainchild of Igor Grossmann at the University of Waterloo, whose work on the psychology of wisdom was one of the inspirations for my recent book (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Intelligence-Trap-People-Mistakes-Decisions/dp/1473669839) on intelligence and how we can make wiser decisions.

Grossmann's aim is to build a strong experimental footing for the study of wisdom (https://evidencebasedwisdom.com/), which had long been considered too nebulous for scientific inquiry. In one his earlier experiments, he established that it's possible to measure wise reasoning and that, as with IQ, people's scores matter. He did this by asking participants to discuss out-loud a personal or political dilemma, which he then scored on various elements of thinking long-considered crucial to wisdom, including: intellectual humility (https://digest.bps.org.uk/2019/04/03/people-with-greater-intellectual-humility-have-superior-general-knowledge/); taking the perspective of others; recognising uncertainty; and having the capacity to search for a compromise. Grossmann found that these wise-reasoning scores were far better than intelligence tests at predicting emotional well-being, and relationship satisfaction (https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%25252Fa0029560) - supporting the idea that wisdom, as defined by these qualities, constitutes a unique construct that determines how we navigate life challenges.

Working with Ethan Kross at the University of Michigan, Grossmann has also looked for ways to improve these scores - with some striking experiments demonstrating the power of illeism. In a series of laboratory experiments (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24916084), they found that people tend to be humbler, and readier to consider other perspectives, when they are asked to describe problems in the third person.

Imagine, for instance, that you are arguing with your partner. Adopting a third-person perspective might help you to recognise their point of view or to accept the limits of your understanding of the problem at hand. Or imagine you are considering moving jobs. Taking the distanced perspective could help you to weigh up the benefits and the risks of the move more dispassionately.

This previous research only involved short-term interventions, however - meaning it was far from clear whether wiser reasoning would become a long-term habit with regular practice at illeism.

To find out, Grossmann's team first asked nearly 300 participants to describe a challenging social situation, while two independent psychologists scored them on the different aspects of wise reasoning (intellectual humility etc). The participants then had to fill out a daily diary for four weeks. Each day they had to describe a situation they'd just experienced, such as a disagreement with a colleague or some bad news. Half were prompted to do so in the first-person, while the others were encouraged to describe their trials from a third-person perspective. At the end of the study all participants repeated the wise-reasoning test.

Grossmann's results were exactly as he hoped. While the control participants showed no overall change in their wise reasoning scores, those using illeism improved in their intellectual humility, perspective-taking and capacity to find a compromise.

A further stage of the study suggested that this newfound wisdom also translated into greater emotional regulation and stability. After they had finished the four-week diary intervention, participants had to predict how their feelings of trust, frustration or anger about a close family member or friend might change over the next month - then, after that month was up, they reported back on how things had actually gone.

In line with other work on "affective forecasting", the people in the control condition over-estimated their positive emotions and under-estimated the intensity of their negative emotions over the course of the month. In contrast, those who'd kept a third-person diary, were more accurate. A closer look revealed that their negative feelings, as a whole, were more muted, and that's why their rosy predictions were more accurate. It seems their wiser reasoning had allowed them to find better ways to cope.

I find these emotion and relationship effects particularly fascinating, considering the fact that illeism is often considered to be infantile. Just think of Elmo in Sesame Street (https://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=577), or the intensely irritating Jimmy in Seinfeld (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Jimmy) - hardly models of sophisticated thinking.

Alternatively, it can be taken to be the sign of a narcissistic personality - the very opposite of personal wisdom. After all, Coleridge believed that it was a ruse to cover up one's own egotism, and many of President Trump's critics have pointed out with disapproval that he often refers to himself in the third-person (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-33943762). Clearly politicians like Trump may use illeism for purely rhetorical purposes, but when applied to genuine reflection, it appears to be a powerful tool for wiser reasoning.

As the researchers point out, it would be exciting to see whether the benefits apply to other forms of decision making besides the more personal dilemmas examined in Grossmann's study. There's reason to think they might. Previous experiments have shown, for instance, that rumination leads to worse choices in poker (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10899-012-9311-3) (hence why expert players strive for a detached, emotionally distanced attitude), and that greater emotional awareness and regulation can improve performance on the stock market (https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/amj.2007.26279217).

In the meantime, Grossmann's work continues to prove that the subject of wisdom is worthy of rigorous experimental study - with potential benefits for all of us. It is notoriously difficult to increase general intelligence through brain training, but these results suggest that wiser reasoning and better decision making are within everyone's power.

David Robson (http://www.davidrobson.me/) (@d_a_robson (https://twitter.com/d_a_robson))
David is the author of The Intelligence Trap: Why Smart People Do Stupid Things and How to Make Wiser Decisions (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Intelligence-Trap-People-Mistakes-Decisions/dp/1473669839/). It is out now in the UK and Commonwealth and will be published in the USA in August.

Bill Ryan
1st June 2019, 16:10
David Robson (http://www.davidrobson.me/) (@d_a_robson (https://twitter.com/d_a_robson))
David is the author of The Intelligence Trap: Why Smart People Do Stupid Things and How to Make Wiser Decisions (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Intelligence-Trap-People-Mistakes-Decisions/dp/1473669839/). It is out now in the UK and Commonwealth and will be published in the USA in August.

Here: :thumbsup:


http://avalonlibrary.net/ebooks/David%20Robson%20-%20The%20Intelligence%20Trap%20-%20Why%20smart%20people%20do%20stupid%20things%20and%20how%20to%20make%20wiser%20decisions.pdf

onawah
1st June 2019, 16:25
It's not such a new technique, actually, as it has been practiced by Buddhists for a very long time--one of the original disciplines which have long been used to remain in a detached state.

Hervé
7th June 2019, 12:17
It might not be a new process and it might be interesting to find out where Julius got that idea?

Anyway, here is something related in that department:


Misology: The hatred of reason and argument deprives us of truth and knowledge (https://davidrobson.me/2017/08/21/misology-the-hatred-of-reason-and-argument/)

David Robson Blog (https://davidrobson.me/2017/08/21/misology-the-hatred-of-reason-and-argument/)
Mon, 21 Aug 2017 00:00 UTC


https://www.sott.net/image/s26/524312/large/s900_mo_c_c0xffffffff_rj_k_no.jpg (https://www.sott.net/image/s26/524312/full/s900_mo_c_c0xffffffff_rj_k_no.jpg)
“What we must beware of,” he said, “is becoming ‘misologists‘, hating arguments in the way ‘misanthropists’ hate their fellow men.


In Plato's Phaedo, the great philosopher Socrates has been sentenced to death for "corrupting" the youth of Athens. As he awaits his execution, he begins to discuss the afterlife with his students: Socrates believes the soul is immortal, while his students are sceptical. Arguments fly backwards and forwards, and it soon seems like they will never reach an agreement, when Socrates offers a warning.
"What we must beware of," he said, "is becoming 'misologists', hating arguments in the way 'misanthropists' hate their fellow men. He goes on to argue that a hatred of people, and a hatred of reason, arise much the same way.
Misanthropy creeps in as a result of placing too much trust in someone without having the knowledge required: we suppose the person to be completely genuine, sound and trustworth, only to find a bit later that he's bad an untrustworthy, and then it happens again with someone else; when we've experienced the same thing many times over, and especially when it's with those we'd have supposed our nearest and dearest, we get fed up with making so many mistakes and so end up hating everyone and supposing no one to be sound in any respect. Similarly, we may sometimes find that our cherished beliefs were baseless, without evidence: this is an inevitable consequence of thinking and learning. The rational behaviour would be to update our knowledge and learn from our mistakes. But the misologist instead begins to distrust everything - even the true and verifiable facts that appear before his eyes.
Wouldn't it be quite a pitiable thing if there really were some true and stable argument, and yet because a person mixed with the sorts of arguments that now seem true, now false, he failed to blame himself, and his own lack of expertise, and instead eased his distress by happily shifting the blame from himself to his arguments, thus living out the rest of his life not only hating and abusing arguments but deprived of the truth of things and of knowledge about them? Although recent scientific research hasn't explicitly examined "misology", Socrates's term perfectly describes the growing distrust of expert judgement (http://theconversation.com/distrust-of-experts-happens-when-we-forget-they-are-human-beings-76219) and reasoned debate. The sentiment is perhaps best encapsulated in Michael Gove's statement that the people of Britain "have had enough of experts from organisations with acronyms saying that they know what is best and getting it consistently wrong." This isn't an isolated phenomenon: as The Atlantic (https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/01/trump-edelman-trust-crisis/513350/)recently reported (https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/01/trump-edelman-trust-crisis/513350/), trust in various institutions such as the government, the media, or NGOs, has consistently declined over the last couple of years.

I especially like Socrates' definition of misology since it helps us to understand his "intellectual humility". By declaring that "I am wise because I know I know nothing", he wasn't claiming that we should reject all expert judgement (like Gove). Instead, he was arguing that we should learn to question and update our own beliefs in the face of new evidence - to keep a healthy balance between scepticism and open-mindedness. As I'll be discussing in my book The Intelligence Trap, robust psychological evidence has demonstrated a multitude of benefits to this mindset.

Socrates points out "there's nothing worse that can happen to anyone than coming to hate arguments", since it eliminates any chance of living a rational life. If Plato's account is correct, he was willing to die rather than be forced to foresake that philosophy.

Related:
Jordan Peterson gives excellent advice on the better ways to argue - and learn something!


(<10 minutes)


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Constance
7th June 2019, 20:50
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An excellent excellent post. The video is especially good and well worth a listen.
:bump:
When we are humble enough and open enough with one another, wonderous things can happen :heart:

There is something else I wanted to add to this. When we have examined every aspect of a subject, exhausted every avenue possible, left no stone unturned, the truth becomes self-evident and any argument then falls away. It is very exciting when sharing gets to this point of awareness.