In Orthodox Judaism there is a saying: "The previous generation is
to the next one as angels are to men; the next generation is to the
previous one as donkeys are to men." This follows from the Orthodox
Jewish belief that all Judaic law was given to Moses by God at Mount
Sinai. After all, it's not as if you could do an experiment to gain new
halachic knowledge; the only way you can know is if someone tells you
(who heard it from someone else, who heard it from God). Since there is
no new source of information, it can only be degraded in transmission
from generation to generation.
Thus, modern rabbis are not allowed to overrule ancient rabbis.
Crawly things are ordinarily unkosher, but it is permissible to eat a
worm found in an apple—the ancient rabbis believed the worm was
spontaneously generated inside the apple, and therefore was part of the
apple. A modern rabbi cannot say, "Yeah, well, the ancient rabbis knew
diddly-squat about biology. Overruled!" A modern rabbi cannot possibly
know a halachic principle the ancient rabbis did not, because how could
the ancient rabbis have passed down the answer from Mount Sinai to
him? Knowledge derives from authority, and therefore is only ever lost,
not gained, as time passes.
When I was first exposed to the angels-and-donkeys proverb in
(religious) elementary school, I was not old enough to be a full-blown
atheist, but I still thought to myself: "Torah loses knowledge in every
generation. Science gains knowledge with every generation. No matter
where they started out, sooner or later science must surpass Torah."
The most important thing is that there should be progress. So long
as you keep moving forward you will reach your destination; but if you
stop moving you will never reach it.
Tsuyoku naritai is Japanese. Tsuyoku is "strong"; naru is "becoming" and the form naritai
is "want to become". Together it means "I want to become stronger" and
it expresses a sentiment embodied more intensely in Japanese works than
in any Western literature I've read. You might say it when expressing
your determination to become a professional Go player—or after you lose
an important match, but you haven't given up—or after you win an
important match, but you're not a ninth-dan player yet—or after you've
become the greatest Go player of all time, but you still think you can
do better. That is tsuyoku naritai, the will to transcendence.
Tsuyoku naritai is the driving force behind my essay The Proper Use of Humility,
in which I contrast the student who humbly double-checks his math test,
and the student who modestly says "But how can we ever really know? No
matter how many times I check, I can never be absolutely certain." The
student who double-checks his answers wants to become stronger; he reacts to a possible inner flaw by doing what he can to repair the flaw, not with resignation.
Each year on Yom Kippur, an Orthodox Jew recites a litany which begins Ashamnu, bagadnu, gazalnu, dibarnu dofi, and goes on through the entire Hebrew alphabet: We have acted shamefully, we have betrayed, we have stolen, we have slandered...
As you pronounce each word, you strike yourself over the heart in
penitence. There's no exemption whereby, if you manage to go without
stealing all year long, you can skip the word gazalnu and strike yourself one less time. That would violate the community spirit of Yom Kippur, which is about confessing sins—not avoiding sins so that you have less to confess.
By the same token, the Ashamnu does not end, "But that was this year, and next year I will do better."
The Ashamnu bears a remarkable resemblance to the notion
that the way of rationality is to beat your fist against your heart and
say, "We are all biased, we are all irrational, we are not fully
informed, we are overconfident, we are poorly calibrated..."
Fine. Now tell me how you plan to become less biased, less irrational, more informed, less overconfident, better calibrated.
There is an old Jewish joke: During Yom Kippur, the rabbi is seized
by a sudden wave of guilt, and prostrates himself and cries, "God, I am
nothing before you!" The cantor is likewise seized by guilt, and cries,
"God, I am nothing before you!" Seeing this, the janitor at the back
of the synagogue prostrates himself and cries, "God, I am nothing before
you!" And the rabbi nudges the cantor and whispers, "Look who thinks
he's nothing."
Take no pride in your confession that you too are biased; do not
glory in your self-awareness of your flaws. This is akin to the
principle of not taking pride in confessing your ignorance;
for if your ignorance is a source of pride to you, you may become
loathe to relinquish your ignorance when evidence comes knocking.
Likewise with our flaws—we should not gloat over how self-aware we are
for confessing them; the occasion for rejoicing is when we have a little
less to confess.
Otherwise, when the one comes to us with a plan for correcting
the bias, we will snarl, "Do you think to set yourself above us?" We
will shake our heads sadly and say, "You must not be very self-aware."
Never confess to me that you are just as flawed as I am unless you
can tell me what you plan to do about it. Afterward you will still have
plenty of flaws left, but that's not the point; the important thing is
to do better, to keep moving ahead, to take one more step forward. Tsuyoku naritai!
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