Showing posts with label self-control. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self-control. Show all posts

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Mental fog causes 100 car pileup in Fresno


According to this morning's Los Angeles Times, "fog causes accident." It precedes this winter's coming series of "ice causes accident" headlines.

A massive highway pileup killed at least two people Saturday and shut a section of northbound California 99 in Fresno, clogging one of the state's major north-south routes.

All three northbound lanes were expected to be closed until at least midnight Saturday as authorities investigated what sparked the crashes, said California Highway Patrol Officer Scott Jobinger.

A total of 108 vehicles, including 18 big rigs, were involved in the collisions, which occurred about 7:45 a.m. over a two-mile stretch in dense fog, authorities said.

But the combination of fog and excessive speed by many vehicles was suspected to be the primary cause of the pileup, an official said.
As my wife, who is from California noted: "That's been happening every year since I was a child. Why don't they ever learn?"

I'm sure that fatigue, distraction, cell-phones, a new base speed of 85 mph, and financial stress were all contributing factors, but I'm also fairly sure, having watched this phenomenon for 40 years or so, that the largest "cause" of this type of accident is the passive, "what me worry?" kind of attitude that drivers bring to their driving today.

Between television's constant conditioning of us to be passive observers of anything going on at all, now boosted by huge screen sizes, and video-games conditioning that speed is fun and you can always just hit "reset" after you crash, people seem to have become walking or driving zombies that feel "cruise control" will drive their cars for them. Or the government. Or something, anything, except them themselves.

And, in the way of "unintended consequences", making safer and safer cars and safer and safer roads has led to the steady increase of basic driving speed. Around Detroit, this now seems to be somewhere around 87 miles per hour during rush hour, regardless of what the posted speed is.

So, kind of like they treat their health and body, they expect to abuse driving and then "take a pill" or rely on the air-bag to pull them out of whatever jam their cavalier attitude gets them into. Worrying about consequences is "someone else's job."

"There was no way I could know the fog hid a stopped car, so I did nothing!" seems to be the attitude. Once upon a time, that would have read "There was no way I could be sure the fog did not hide a stopped car, so I slowed down to about 5 miles per hour until I got through it.... as I'm sure everyone else would do too."

The same thing may be rampant at corporate or even national levels, where people rush into something they can't see through, and then are shocked that some problem was waiting for them there. This seems to have become the norm.

Regardless, the tipping point has been reached, critical mass achieved, and now this has become entangled with itself as a social "system" problem that individual action alone cannot fix.

In fact, to try to drive "60" in a "55 zone" is now unsafe due to risks of massive rear-end collisions from zoned-out drivers going 85, or the huge stream of cars dividing around your car and trying to merge back into the lane from both sides, now that passing on the right is normal.

(Once upon a time, young people, passing on the right side in the USA was not only discouraged, it was illegal and considered unsafe. It is still unsafe, but doesn't seem to be illegal. In fact, it seems to be more common to be passed on the right than on the left for some reason.)

As a new young driver in Cleveland in rush hour traffic, I was pulled over by a police car for going only 35 in a 35 mph zone. The officer was perplexed when I asked if I was supposed to break the law, and he finally muttered "Just go the same speed everyone else does!" as he left without giving me a ticket.

So, we have here another perfect example of a behavior situation where we can't change the behavior of "just one person" while leaving the rest of the surrounding people untouched.

Once you understand this pattern, you can see these problems are everywhere around us. We need to learn how to deal with them better.

And in a very real sense, "fog" didn't cause the accident. Fog was just the local trigger that revealed the system problem we have with how each other behaves. If we made fog somehow go away with huge fans or heaters or something, there would still be "ice causes accident" and "slippery road following rain" causes accident and "blind corner" causes accident, etc.

We can try to tackle each of those as a separate problem, or we can try to go back upstream and
figure out what structural system thing is happening here in all of them that we need to figure out how to fix instead.

We get way more "bang per buck" if we don't stop at the first "cause" we find, but keep going upstream until we find and fix the "root-cause problem", and don't spend time and money trying to solve each of the symptoms separately.

The second mental error that goes on here is belief that the "solution" is located "near" the problem. In some senses it is true to say "What could I do? There I was going 85 in the fog and this stopped car suddenly showed up and I had no time to brake!" In a larger sense, however, this is the whole point of learning and civilization that we run into such problems and realize they can't be fixed at the time they become visible, but have to be fixed way before that point.
What we can do is take action to prevent ever finding ourselves in a situation that has no good "way out." That requires a sense of personal responsibility for preventive and proactive actions that maybe no one can legally hold us to. We have to hold ourselves to a higher standard of conduct than the law can enforce.
In fact, following Toyota's "Five Whys", we can go further upstream and ask why it is that we, as a society, can't get our heads together, have a meeting, figure out what's going on, figure out what to do about it, and just do it.

We keep on looking for technical solutions so perfect that no one will need to "be good."

We won't find one. We need to start thinking more about the "being good" problem. It has a lot of similarity to the driving-safely problem -- if just one person does it, it doesn't work very well. We need to all decide, somehow, that we're all going to do it at the same time.

Those are the cultural shifts that are so important now, for letting go of our old behaviors that don't work anymore and moving, together, to new ones that do work.

Or, every year, in bigger and bigger ways, people will be saying "They keep doing that! Why don't they ever learn?" And that is a good place to start the investigation, instead of ending it. Why, exactly, are we having so much trouble learning and adapting.

Our corporations need to do a lot of learning and adapting to adjust to the new world, where there is actual competition and at least one other country is ahead of us in almost everything.

We can blame students for not learning, or teachers and schools for not teaching, but this is a larger cultural problem we all need to be working on together, or it can't be fixed.

If "patriotism" consists entirely of blaming other people for things that are wrong, and has no sense of civic responsibility to share in doing the heavy lifting ("someone else's job"), it won't make for a very successful company or country, once it starts bogging down in the the structural system problems that level of indifference or apathy creates that can't be fixed by just a few people doing all the work.

In some sense, then, this traces back upstream to the "not my problem" and "not my job" attitudes, and figuring out where those came into play and what to do about it. Collective cynicism, depression, and apathy are a pretty sure recipe for continuing decline that no technological system will fix.

Because, if we look at the economic equivalents of the 100 car pileups going on all around us, and at uncontrolled global climate change, this is rapidly becoming "our problem".

Related post: Ground causes accidents, claim pilots!

(California tule fog photo by by emdot
auto accident by by wander.lust )

Monday, August 20, 2007

Are you my mommy? What shape AM I anyway?


I'm working on turning my thinking to the practical problem of the economy of Southeast Michigan, the area of the USA near the city of Detroit - on the Canadian border.

Actually, from Detroit, you cross the bridge Southeast to get to Canada, which everyone knows is to the North of the US. It's a perfect illustration of how things that are "true" at one scale can also be "false" at another scale at the same time. In general, on the world-sized map, yes, Canada is to the North of the USA (above it on the map for those with no sense of direction.) At the same time, on a city sized map, Canada is Southeast of Detroit.

Please try it now. Take this Mapquest map and slowly change to larger views by clicking successively lower buttons on the left. Watch as the city of Windsor (and the country of Canada) "move" from the south to the north of Detroit. Don't just think about it -- actualyl do it. Interacting helps the idea come forward in your mind which you'll need in a minute.

Both are true and not in conflict, because the "fact" varies with the size of your map. This kind of "fact" is common, but not discussed in school, and many people didn't pay attention in school anyway.

It seems to turn out to be a huge conceptual error to assume that things that are "true" at one scale must be "true" at every scale. Cultural, governmental, corporate, and personal mistakes due to this single, simple error are responsible for much of the misery we face in life.

I gave another example before, of the visual equivalent - a photograph of, well, either the female movie star of old, Marilyn Monroe, or of the male scientist Albert Einstein. Which it is depends on how far back from your computer screen you are. -- Up close, it is CLEARLY and OBVIOUSLY a picture of Einstein. Walk across the room and look back, and it is CLEARLY a picture of Marilyn Monroe. In between it is just confusing.

The original post was here: "The Sixth Discipline for Learning Organizations." And here's the picture:


(That picture is the work of researche rGregory T Huang, from New Scientist's 31 March 2007 issue at newscientist.com -- subscription required to get to it online.)

Now, imagine trying to achieve any meeting of the minds, or trade agreement, or corporate policy, or an end to conflict between groups sitting close to the screen and another group sitting far from the screen, that depended on what it was showing on the screen. "See, how we help you?" one group might say. "Help us? You're killing us!" the other group might say, and new fighting might ensue, or both groups could walk out of the room because the other group is "being unreasonable."

We've adapted to the fact that which building is larger needs to be adjusted for "perspective", so that now we automatically "see" a tiny skyscraper on the horizon as "being" much larger than a one-story house nearby, despite the fact that on a photograph of the scene or on a TV view of the screen, the house takes up most of the screen and the skyscraper is tiny.

Now, this is a really strange thing, if you stop and think about it, which we normally don't. It's not that our eyes "are broken" or "don't work" at all - our eyes are fine. There's a physical thing going on that changes what we see depending on where we are. The "one world" contains within it millions of "perspectives", as we try to reduce a real 3-dimensional world into a single two-dimensional image. The image is not the world. Same world has many different images, which may "appear" to conflict.

The only conflict is in our confusing the image with the world. The error is in "reducing" the complex world to a simple picture, which has a result that differs depending on where you are.

Note that it's not WHO you are. If you and the other person swapped places, you'd now see what they see, and vice versa. It's the same "you" near the screen with the picture of Einstein and across the room with the picture of Marilyn Monroe. The only thing that changed is where you are looking from.

Our language has terms "different perspective" and "different viewpoint" but they have become twisted around to mean that something inside the person is different, and that those viewpoints would persist even if the person swapped places with us. That's an error in thinking, responsible for much bloodshed.

So, with that discussion of Detroit and Marilyn Monroe in mind, let's turn and look at a recent news article , one of many recently on researchers discovering that "we" aren't at all shaped like what "we" thought "we" were.

And, again, this conceptual error is responsible for many failed policies across the spectrum.

The article is from the August 11-17, 2007 issue of New Scientist, an article by Chris Frith on Determining Free Will. This is a great subject for killing time and getting nowhere - back in the 70's I used to attend a conference out on Star Island of the group IRAS - Institute for Religion in an Age of Science, and we'd spend a week happily arguing about the existence or non-existence of "free will", or temptation, "demon possession", fate, etc.

So, anyway, the article goes on to talk about some presentations at a conference by the John Templeton Foundation on that subject. Frith discovers that in many cases, "we", our conscious selves, seem to actually just be inheriting actions that "our brain" decided for us long before, and sort of tells us about after the fact, when "we" swiftly pivot and act as if, then actually belive, that "we" made that decision and "took" that action.

I have noted, of course, a similar phenomenon among CEO's of companies, and Kings and Presidents, and the "pointy-haired boss" in the Cartoon "Dilbert", who act as if, and come to believe that they are "running things". They get all puffed up with their "greatness" and carried away with taking credit. Recently Forbes had a "Titans of Industry" article where some CEO's were astoundingly arrogant talking about why they, singlehandedly, had "done" such and such and why they, single-bank-accountedly, should indeed receive that bonus of $250,000,000 for the company's success.

Uh, actually, the other 350,000 people had something to do with the success.

But, again, this is the work of "perspective" and "viewpoint" and "scale" -- from the Office of the CEO, it really honestly LOOKS LIKE they are the one doing all the work, against the arrayed forces of decay and opposition and enemies and inertia. Of course, to the people actually building the cars with their hands and labor, it appears that the actual work is being done by them, and the CEO is some pompous windbag totally out of touch with reality.

Thus, management and labor, subject to the subtle and insidious power of "perspective", end up deciding each other must be some combination of demented, evil, uncaring, and stupid -- and productive work drops off, and the company becomes "non-competitive." Management then, to "lighten the burden" of all those excess useless moocher employees, lays off 10% or 20% of "the workforce" (a term whose meaning they have lost, as with the term "labor".) Wall Street applauds the great move and stock prices go up.

Then, curiously, output at the factory goes down for some reason. Management keeps on laying off more and more "workers" but, dammit, there STILL seems to be too much dead weight holding the company back from the efforts to lift it up that management is exerting.

In the extreme case, management lays off 100% of the "workers" trying to make the unit more "productive." I actually saw this happen at Cornell University, when times were rough and the Buildings and Grounds unit laid off 100% of the employees that they sent out to do actual work, for which B&G charged $60/hour, their only source of income. No one in management could understand why this still didn't improve the profitability of the unit.

The illusion at the top that "they" are in charge is very, very strong. It's not an "illusion", but a "perspective" effect, like the size of the buildings. To their eyes, their little 1-story house looks huge in comparison to the labor "skyscraper" that is very far away from them.

Well, it appears, as is so often the case, that important processes are the same across all scales. Some design patterns that work at one scale work at every scale, and those are the ones to focus on first -- and possibly the only ones we ever need to look at to understand what's going on.

So, "you" and "your body" and "people around you" are just the same as the "boss" and the company. In fact, yes, it turns out that most of what "you" end up doing was actually done by some other part of your mind or body, or by the people around you, or even your spouse or employees, when "you" weren't looking. And, in fact, it turns out that most of what "you" think "you" decided to do, because it was "obvious", is also the doing of all these other invisible actors that "you" tend to forget exist.

This repeated finding has startled and baffled some academic scientists, most of whom are deeply committed to the dogma of isolated experts being the only "actors" of importance.

This is a critical realization that impacts our health, the public health, the cost of health care in the USA, the competitiveness of General Motors, the productivity of Southeast Michigan, etc.

In health, for example, Johns Hopkins researchers have found that about 70% of the USA's health care bill is due to "life-style choices" - that is, what we decide to eat, or smoke, or ingest, or whether we decide to exercise or not, or whether we are "compliant" at taking those pills the doctor said we needed, etc.

Actually, the number is a lot higher than 70% if we include the downstream damage from bad choices at work, or "not feeling like" studying, or shutting off our friends and taking that "incredibly low cost mortgage" that now has turned into a nightmare.

While the focus for the last several thousand years has been on what we do and how we behave, and why we do things (belief, attitudes), that is now just at a "tipping point" and starting to change to go back again and revisit that word "we".

After many tens of thousands of efforts to change "people" or intervene in foreign cultures, it's becoming clear that, as soon as the effort stops, "people revert" to their old behaviors. It's also clear that this is due to the larger set of people who "have influence" over the first person, who we had always assumed up to now was the "actor" and the one "making the decision".

Now, that's all turning upside-down.

Now, it appears that many choices are already made for people by the group they are in, so, in fact, it appears that "we" have far less "free will" than assumed. In fact, yes, it appears that sometimes people are "not responsible" for what "they" do because they were "caught up in" a wave of humanity doing something else.

This, of course, as discussed before, totally messes up our concept of morality, and justice, and "criminal justice" and "blame". When Systems Dynamics demonstrates that problems in production aren't due to any person making mistakes, but due to "the system" making a mistake, that doesn't help the argument. When hospitals and airline companies talk about not punishing a person who "makes a mistake" because the "team made a mistake" it further confuses the issue. "What up?" we may well ask.

But, here again our reductionist thinking leads us astray. Yes, it is true that, at a given moment, we may find ourselves, to our surprise, unable to overcome our habit, or tendency to do something, or the impulse to do something that the herd or crowd around us is doing.

That does NOT mean that we are helpless victims, however, because if you change lenses, shift to a larger time frame and scale, you see that we did get to pick our friends, and our job, and the crowd we hang with, and which activities we wanted to pursue, so, in that larger scale we made the bed we are now sleeping in. So, we're responsible again.

But, no wait. It turns out that choice of housing is not a "free choice" but is limited by our language, our culture, our income, social discrimination that forces us to live in an immigrant ghetto, etc. It turns out that our employment is not a "free choice" - or is, more to the point, like "free choice" on network TV or "free choice" of who to vote for for President -- there's not much choice left by the time it's our turn to pick one.

But, no wait, those levels of discrimination are caused by actions that ... etc.

This apparent mess of seemingly contradictory arrows of causality can be quickly and neatly resolved if we simply recognize two things:

1) the near and far worlds are in a feedback loop, each influencing the other. There is no point where you can cut that loop and say "A" causes "B", because you will aso find that you left out the fact that "B" also causes "A". This is confusing to academics not familiar with loops, so they either leave it out of the analysis, or put it in a footnote, or go work on something else.

Sidebar: It's quite remarkable to watch as they erase a data point they don't like with some hand-waving justification for their total violation of intellectual honesty to get the "data to fit." My wife and I attended a conference on "Self-regulation of health behaviors" at the University of Michigan with all the big world-famous researchers - Prochaska, etc. - on a panel. It was clear as they talked that the most effective strategies each of them had found involved group interventions, not individual interventions. They would pay a woman's children $5 for each point she lost instead of paying her and it worked way better. But, I asked in the Q&A, am I imaginging it, or did you each find it's the group that matters, not hte perosn? Yes, after discussion, the panel agreed. Why, I persisted, is none of that in your published papers?
Oh, they said, none of us could figure out how to compute a p-value and do the analysis.

Oh. So, the most successful interventions for the largest health care cost in the country were left out on purpose, because they didn't make sense and fit the model of "an individual actor".

2) To make sense of it, the easiest thing to do is to redefine the shape of a human.

Now, maybe, this is not a profound thing to do. Maybe this is just practical, like treating the sun as if it goes around the earth, not vice versa, because the math is easier and, well, that's what it looks like from here anyway.

But, for "people", it appears that the relevant shape for "a person", or the unit that we're trying to change or understand, is actually a larger shape than their biological body.

In fact, "a person" can be thought of, for planning purposes, more like the combined human in the middle of the mix and the feedback loops out to include the other relevant persons, cultures, and organizations that influence "that person's" behavior and that, effectively, make the choices that we have "ascribed to " or "attributed to" that person.

What I'm trying to do is expand the circle of DNA included in "a person" to cover all the DNA that is involved in the "simple" act of choice or "making a decision." Clearly this includes more than just the DNA inside the skin of the person we're looking at. It includes the DNA of all people, present or past, near or remote, who had or are still having a "controlling" effect on the behavior, attitudes, and choices "this perosn" is making - as well as a "defining" effect on the set of things "this person" gets to choose FROM.

THAT entity, that larger glob of DNA spread out across space, time, and multiple "bodies", is the entity that is actually "making the decision" among "the remaining choices" that "person" has left to them at that time.

We need to stand way, way back in this analysis. Joe may have "no choice" about what happens on this road in life, except that he did select this road back at the last corner and that was his choice. OR was it. Or, more to the point, WHICH JOE are we talking about?

The little Joe, with one skin and one set of genes and DNA? Or the bigger META-Joe, with many people pushing for something, many hands on the steering wheel, many TV ads resonating through his head and shaping his perceptions, etc?

The bigger Meta-Joe seems to be the smallest unit that gets back to being a "causal" actor, but it's not clear that there is an edge here. Because everyone of THOSE other people is tied in a feedback loop to a larger set of people, etc. ,etc.

IN some very real sense, WE ALL are Joe, and Joe is US. The choices he makes, given the choices he has made, given the people pushing on him, given the resources he had available, given the choices he had to work with where he was, all come home to roost in the current "action" and "choices".

Many prior actions are now encoded in habits and patterns of thinking. Many are encoded and stored and persisted as the house or apartment or neighborhood he lives in. Many are now encoded in the friends he hangs with, his job, his boss, his education, his language and culture and sub-culture.

So, 2000 BC to 1900 AD or so, we had a clear model that people were little separate beings, who occasionally interacted. Yes, there was some strange anecdotal talking about marriage as being a "becoming one flesh" but that was just flowery language. Yes, there was talk of "possession" and temptation and not being able to control oneself, but that was ascribed to demons, devils, and maybe bad blood or bad company.

After World WAr II, the psychological warfare crowd realized that it was possible to change people's behavior by simply changing the advertising messages they received, and the unemployed psyop crowd became Madison Avenue, and started trying to control the shopping, eating, driving, buying, and voting habits of Americans - sometimes with startling success.

Finally, this century, we have the computing power and the concepts to start actually getting our hands around swarms of actors interacting, and stop discarding these data points, and look at how things actually come down.

The bad news is that it will appear, as with the New Scientist article, that much of our lives is determined outside "us". The good news is that, with another click of the microscope stage to a larger view, we see that, in fact, "we" get to pick our friends, our city, our job, what we watch on TV, whether to have a TV at all, what country to live in, etc. So, it's not a simple "either or", but a "both".

Yes much of what "we" do is influenced by others, if not actually determined 100% by others, or our subconscious, at this given moment. Longer term, though, we get our turn to determine which others are significant to "us". There is a feedback loop, which causes identities to merge, and we become more "waves" than "particles" -- there is no "me" and "you" there is only "us".

This isn't a "bug" -- it's a "feature". This is what will allow us to interact and build a new society based on the model our body uses to hold ten trillion cells together and act as one person.

It's also a terrifying thought for those who have a mental model of being "above the rabble" and higher class, not subject to this sort of weak-willed nonsense that the poor seem so prone to. As the housing crisis shows, foolishness spanned the rich and the poor equally.

It does suggest, however, that our prisons are filled with people who had less choice in their actions than our penal system considers. It suggests our CEO's are way over-paid, and should be more thankful for their labor force.

It suggests we can get either "active strength" from hanging with the right crowd, or "active weakness" by hanging with the wrong crowd.

It suggest that we don't live in this moment alone, but our second grade teacher's training on us is still operating today, which means, in that sense, she is still alive even though her body isn't.

This is, indeed, a "paradigm shift." It is inexorable now. Having seen it, it won't go back in the box. We're going to have to learn a whole lot more about getting along with "other people" because, it turns out, "they" are actually "us".

If we want to "control" how "we" act in the future, we do have levers to do that -- it's just that the levers look like changing the people around us and how "we" interact with "them".

Just because our internal self has only 5% control of what "we" do at any given moment doesn't mean that's not enough to get us anywhere we want to go. It just takes time and persistence and recognition that much of the "self" we need to change is outside our skin, not inside it.

So, bottom line - what is it? Are we "free" or not?
Well, it's like the Einstein/Monroe picture - - it's BOTH, depending on what SCALE you look at the problem with.

In the short run, over a few minutes or a day or week, perhaps, no, we are not very free, and have almost our whole life determined by "outside influences", constraints, and habits. In the long run, over years, we are pretty much free to determine our life, if we manage to get linked up with enough stability, perhaps a religious institution or a scientific one, so that we can actually make long-term plans and stick with them, despite local setbacks.

As motivational speaker Tony Robbins puts it -- "We overestimate what we can do in a year, but we underestimate what we can do in a decade. "

Amen.
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
T.S. Eliot