Video Transcript: How to make hard choices
Think of a hard choice you'll face in the near future. It might be between two
careers – artist and accountant – or places to live -- the city or the country – or
even between two people to marry – you could marry Betty or you could marry
Lolita. Or it might be a choice about whether to have children, to have an ailing
parent move in with you, to raise your child in a religion that your partner lives by
but leaves you cold. Or whether to donate your life savings to charity. Chances
are, the hard choice you thought of was something big, something momentous,
something that matters to you. Hard choices seem to be occasions for
agonizing, hand-wringing, the gnashing of teeth. But I think we've
misunderstood hard choices and the role they play in our lives. Understanding
hard choices uncovers a hidden power each of us possesses. What makes a
choice hard is the way the alternatives relate. In any easy choice, one
alternative is better than the other. In a hard choice, one alternative is better in
some ways, the other alternative is better in other ways, and neither is better
than the other overall. You agonize over whether to stay in your current job in
the city or uproot your life for more challenging work in the country, because
staying is better in some ways, moving is better in others, and neither is better
than the other overall. We shouldn't think that all hard choices are big. Let's say
you're deciding what to have for breakfast. You could have high fiber bran cereal
or a chocolate donut. Suppose what matters in the choice is tastiness and
healthfulness. The cereal is better for you, the donut tastes way better, but
neither is better than the other overall, a hard choice. Realizing that small
choices can also be hard, may make big hard choices seem less intractable.
After all, we manage to figure out what to have for breakfast, so maybe we can
figure out whether to stay in the city or uproot for the new job in the country. We
also shouldn't think that hard choices are hard because we are stupid. When I
graduated from college, I couldn't decide between two careers, philosophy and
law. I really loved philosophy. There are amazing things you can learn as a
philosopher, and all from the comfort of an armchair. But I came from a modest
immigrant family where my idea of luxury was having a pork tongue and jelly
sandwich in my school lunchbox, so the thought of spending my whole life
sitting around in armchairs just thinking … Well, that struck me as the height of
extravagance and frivolity. So I got out my yellow pad, I drew a line down the
middle, and I tried my best to think of the reasons for and against each
alternative. I remember thinking to myself, if only I knew what my life in each
career would be like. If only God or Netflix would send me a DVD of my two
possible future careers, I'd be set. I'd compare them side by side, I'd see that
one was better, and the choice would be easy. But I got no DVD, and because I
couldn't figure out which was better, I did what many of us do in hard choices: I
took the safest option. Fear of being an unemployed philosopher led me to
become a lawyer, and as I discovered, lawyering didn't quite fit. It wasn't who I
was. So now I'm a philosopher, and I study hard choices, and I can tell you, that
fear of the unknown, while a common motivational default in dealing with hard
choices, rests on a misconception of them. It's a mistake to think that in hard
choices, one alternative really is better than the other, but we're too stupid to
know which, and since we don't know which, we might as well take the least
risky option. Even taking two alternatives side by side with full information, a
choice can still be hard. Hard choices are hard not because of us or our
ignorance; they're hard because there is no best option. Now, if there's no best
option, if the scales don't tip in favor of one alternative over another, then surely
the alternatives must be equally good. So maybe the right thing to say in hard
choices is that they're between equally good options. But that can't be right. If
alternatives are equally good, you should just flip a coin between them, and it
seems a mistake to think, here's how you should decide between careers,
places to live, people to marry: Flip a coin. There's another reason for thinking
that hard choices aren't choices between equally good options. Suppose you
have a choice between two jobs: you could be an investment banker or a
graphic artist. There are a variety of things that matter in such a choice, like the
excitement of the work, achieving financial security, having time to raise a family,
and so on. Maybe the artist's career puts you on the cutting edge of new forms
of pictorial expression. Maybe the banking career puts you on the cutting edge
of new forms of financial manipulation. Imagine the two jobs however you like,
so that neither is better than the other. Now suppose we improve one of them, a
bit. Suppose the bank, wooing you, adds 500 dollars a month to your salary.
Does the extra money now make the banking job better than the artist one? Not
necessarily. A higher salary makes the banking job better than it was before, but
it might not be enough to make being a banker better than being an artist. But if
an improvement in one of the jobs doesn't make it better than the other, then the
two original jobs could not have been equally good. If you start with two things
that are equally good, and you improve one of them, it now must be better than
the other. That's not the case with options in hard choices. So now we've got a
puzzle. We've got two jobs. Neither is better than the other, nor are they equally
good. So how are we supposed to choose? Something seems to have gone
wrong here. Maybe the choice itself is problematic, and comparison is
impossible. But that can't be right. It's not like we're trying to choose between
two things that can't be compared. We're weighing the merits of two jobs, after
all, not the merits of the number nine and a plate of fried eggs. A comparison of
the overall merits of two jobs is something we can make, and one we often do
make. I think the puzzle arises because of an unreflective assumption we make
about value. We unwittingly assume that values like justice, beauty, kindness,
are akin to scientific quantities, like length, mass and weight. Take any
comparative question not involving value, such as which of two suitcases is
heavier. There are only three possibilities. The weight of one is greater, lesser or
equal to the weight of the other. Properties like weight can be represented by
real numbers – one, two, three and so on – and there are only three possible
comparisons between any two real numbers. One number is greater, lesser, or
equal to the other. Not so with values. As post-Enlightenment creatures, we tend
to assume that scientific thinking holds the key to everything of importance in
our world, but the world of value is different from the world of science. The stuff
of the one world can be quantified by real numbers. The stuff of the other world
can't. We shouldn't assume that the world of is, of lengths and weights, has the
same structure as the world of ought, of what we should do. So if what matters
to us – a child's delight, the love you have for your partner — can't be
represented by real numbers, then there's no reason to believe that in choice,
there are only three possibilities – that one alternative is better, worse or equal
to the other. We need to introduce a new, fourth relation beyond being better,
worse or equal, that describes what's going on in hard choices. I like to say that
the alternatives are "on a par." When alternatives are on a par, it may matter
very much which you choose, but one alternative isn't better than the other.
Rather, the alternatives are in the same neighborhood of value, in the same
league of value, while at the same time being very different in kind of value.
That's why the choice is hard. Understanding hard choices in this way uncovers
something about ourselves we didn't know. Each of us has the power to create
reasons. Imagine a world in which every choice you face is an easy choice, that
is, there's always a best alternative. If there's a best alternative, then that's the
one you should choose, because part of being rational is doing the better thing
rather than the worse thing, choosing what you have most reason to choose. In
such a world, we'd have most reason to wear black socks instead of pink socks,
to eat cereal instead of donuts, to live in the city rather than the country, to marry
Betty instead of Lolita. A world full of only easy choices would enslave us to
reasons. When you think about it, it's nuts to believe that the reasons given to
you dictated that you had most reason to pursue the exact hobbies you do, to
live in the exact house you do, to work at the exact job you do. Instead, you
faced alternatives that were on a par – hard choices – and you made reasons
for yourself to choose that hobby, that house and that job. When alternatives are
on a par, the reasons given to us, the ones that determine whether we're making
a mistake, are silent as to what to do. It's here, in the space of hard choices, that
we get to exercise our normative power – the power to create reasons for
yourself, to make yourself into the kind of person for whom country living is
preferable to the urban life. When we choose between options that are on a par,
we can do something really rather remarkable. We can put our very selves
behind an option. Here's where I stand. Here's who I am, I am for banking. I am
for chocolate donuts. This response in hard choices is a rational response, but
it's not dictated by reasons given to us. Rather, it's supported by reasons
created by us. When we create reasons for ourselves to become this kind of
person rather than that, we wholeheartedly become the people that we are. You
might say that we become the authors of our own lives. So when we face hard
choices, we shouldn't beat our head against a wall trying to figure out which
alternative is better. There is no best alternative. Instead of looking for reasons
out there, we should be looking for reasons in here: Who am I to be? You might
decide to be a pink sock-wearing, cereal-loving, country-living banker, and I
might decide to be a black sock-wearing, urban, donut-loving artist. What we do
in hard choices is very much up to each of us. Now, people who don't exercise
their normative powers in hard choices are drifters. We all know people like that.
I drifted into being a lawyer. I didn't put my agency behind lawyering. I wasn't for
lawyering. Drifters allow the world to write the story of their lives. They let
mechanisms of reward and punishment – pats on the head, fear, the easiness of
an option – to determine what they do. So the lesson of hard choices: reflect on
what you can put your agency behind, on what you can be for, and through hard
choices, become that person. Far from being sources of agony and dread, hard
choices are precious opportunities for us to celebrate what is special about the
human condition, that the reasons that govern our choices as correct or
incorrect sometimes run out, and it is here, in the space of hard choices, that we
have the power to create reasons for ourselves to become the distinctive people
that we are. And that's why hard choices are not a curse but a godsend. Thank
you.