Morning Must-Read: Daniel Davies: Rules for Contrarians: 1. Don’t Whine. That Is All
Apropos of Jonathan Chait’s “Not a Very P.C. Thing to Say” and Hanna Rosin’s “The Patriarchy Is Dead”, some constructive advice from Daniel Davies:
…So I’m disturbed to see that people who are making roughly infinity more money than me out of the practice aren’t sticking to the unwritten rules of the game…. The whole idea of contrarianism is that you’re… setting out to annoy people…. If annoying people is what you’re trying to do, then you can hardly complain when annoying people is what you actually do. If you start a fight, you can hardly be surprised that you’re in a fight. It’s the definition of passive-aggression and really quite unseemly, to set out to provoke people, and then when they react passionately and defensively, to criticise them for not holding to your standards of a calm and rational debate. If [Levitt and Dubner’s] Superfreakonomics wanted a calm and rational debate, this chapter would have been called something like: ‘Geoengineering: Issues in Relative Cost Estimation of SO2 Shielding’ [rather than the book being subtitled ‘Global Cooling’], and the book would have sold about five copies….
The other point of contrarianism is that, if it’s well done, you assemble a whole load of points which are individually uncontroversial (or at least, solidly substantiated) and put them together to support a conclusion which is surprising and counterintuitive…. Because of this, if you’re writing a contrarian piece properly, you ought to be well aware of what point it looks like you’re making, because the entire point is to make a defensible argument which strongly resembles a controversial one. So having done this intentionally, you don’t get to complain that people have ‘misinterpreted’ your piece by taking you to be saying exactly what you carefully constructed the argument to look like you were saying…. A degree of diffidence is appropriate here, because the confusion is entirely and intentionally your fault: ‘(That is the ‘global cooling’ in our subtitle. If someone interprets our brief mention of the global-cooling scare of the 1970’s as an assertion of ‘a scientific consensus that the planet was cooling,’ that feels like a willful misreading.)’ No it doesn’t; it feels like someone read the first two pages for the plain meaning of the words and didn’t spot that you were actually playing a little crossword-puzzle game… ‘global cooling’ meant, it was put on the cover in full knowledge of the impression it would give… so… it is not legitimate to complain that this phrase was interpreted in the way in which it was intended to be interpreted. In general, contrarians ought to have thick skins, because their entire raison d’etre is the giving of intellectual offence to others. So don’t whine, for heaven’s sake. Own your bullshit…