Why smart people defend bad ideas

http://scottberkun.com/essays/40-why-smart-people-defend-bad-ideas/

excerpt:
<<The second stop on our tour of commonly defended bad ideas is the
seemingly friendly notion of communal thinking. Just because everyone in
the room is smart doesn’t mean that collectively they will arrive at smart
ideas. The power of peer pressure is that it works on our psychology, not
our intellect. As social animals we are heavily influenced by how the
people around us behave, and the quality of our own internal decision
making varies widely depending on the environment we currently are in.
(e.g. Try to write a haiku poem while standing in an elevator with 15 opera
singers screaming 15 different operas, in 15 different languages, in
falsetto, directly at you vs. sitting on a bench in a quiet stretch of open
woods).


That said, the more homogeneous a group of people are in their thinking,
the narrower the range of ideas that the group will openly consider. The
more open minded, creative, and courageous a group is, the wider the pool
of ideas they’ll be capable of exploring.

Some teams of people look to focus groups, consultancies, and research
methods to bring in outside ideas, but this rarely improves the quality of
thinking in the group itself. Those outside ideas, however bold or
original, are at the mercy of the diversity of thought within the group
itself. If the group, as a collective, is only capable of approving B level
work, it doesn’t matter how many A level ideas you bring to it. Focus
groups or other outside sources of information can not give a team, or its
leaders, a soul. A bland homogeneous team of people has no real opinions,
because it consists of people with same backgrounds, outlooks, and
experiences who will only feel comfortable discussing the safe ideas that
fit into those constraints.If you want your smart people to be as smart as
possible, seek a diversity of ideas. Find people with different
experiences, opinions, backgrounds, weights, heights, races, facial hair
styles, colors, past-times, favorite items of clothing, philosophies, and
beliefs. Unify them around the results you want, not the means or
approaches they are expected to use. It’s the only way to guarantee that
the best ideas from your smartest people will be received openly by the
people around them. On your own, avoid homogenous books, films, music,
food, sex, media and people. Actually experience life by going to places
you don’t usually go, spending time with people you don’t usually spend
time with. Be in the moment and be open to it. Until recently in human
history, life was much less predictable and we were forced to encounter
things not always of our own choosing. We are capable of more interesting
and creative lives than our modern cultures often provide for us. If you go
out of your way to find diverse experiences it will become impossible for
you to miss ideas simply because your homogenous outlook filtered them out.
​>>​

​Harry​

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