Which is not as easy
as it appears.
So we are sitting in the Delta
waiting area for our flight to San Diego…
Wait. (Or “esly” if your fingers are on the wrong
keys.)
Did you ever wonder who exactly it is who initiates
conversational trends, like who was the first person to start sentences with
”So” and now it’s everywhere, including on educated channels like C-SPAN?
“Whatever.”
Yeah, that too.
Never mind.
“That was Emily
Litella.”
“Who?”
Taking us back to the original subject of looking things up.
Which I may have mentioned is not as easy as it appears.
So we are sitting in the Delta departure lounge for our flight to San Diego, and they announce that our flight
will be delayed. (And ultimately
cancelled. Followed by the announcement
that, as there is no replacement plane available, we will be bused to San Diego. Followed by our decision to return home – a
relatively short cab ride from the airport – and our driving to San Diego instead.
Followed by six-and-a-half hours of congested traffic on the San Diego freeway,
which is the main reason we’d decided to fly
to San Diego in the first place. But
that’s another story. Best penned in
parentheses because it’s excruciatingly boring.)
But before that
ultimate – and possibly mistaken – decision, we have substantial time to kill, sitting
in the Delta departure lounge. I do not recall what exactly gets me thinking
about the intractable issue of “Personal self-interest” but that’s what I begin
thinking about. While others jabber
endlessly on their smartphones or peruse magazines of no interest. (Perhaps even to the perusers.)
My mind floats inevitably to The Federalist Papers, in particular Federalist Paper Number 10, because it is specifically concerned
with the issue of “Personal self-interest” and its affect on a cooperating
legislature, who, given the inescapable reality of “Personal self-interest”
have a personal self-interest in not cooperating.
(Have you noticed? So
Federalist 10 notwithstanding, the
problem of “Personal self-interest” is still with us. Compounded by the fact that, in contrast to 18th
Century legislators, who were desperate to fulfill their patriotic duties and
return as quickly as possible to private life, today’s legislators’ most
desired aspiration is to remain serving in Congress until they die.)
Based on "If you can't eradicate it, use it", the anonymous writer of “Federalist
10” (James Madison) determined that if you were to cram a bunch of equally personally
self-interested legislators into a chamber, they will – because it is in their
personal self-interest to do so – create strategic, temporary alliances to obtain a vote-counted
majority, leading the government functioning successfully due to that self-interested
“horse-trading.”
As in,
“I’ll vote for your whisky distilling interests to place tariffs
on the importation of foreign whisky if you’ll vote with me to maintain the
institution of slavery.”
And it worked like a charm.
Except for the slaves.
Who, although they were considered three-fifths of a person for enumerational
purposes were commensurately not allotted
three-fifths of a vote.
Or any vote. (And were treated quite nastily when they
inquired “How come?”)
In time, my vacation in thought concerning “Personal
self-interest” proceeded naturally to the man who argued that Mother Teresa was
selfish. (Only helping the poor and
downtrodden so as to personally self-interestedly feel better about herself.)
And here – sadly belatedly – begins our story.
“Who said Mother Teresa was selfish?” I ask Dr. M, who has
possession of an i-related electrical
device that can look things up and I don’t.
The problem is…
To receive the desired answer, you must ask it precisely the
right question. It’s like using the
telephone. To reach the person you are
calling, you must press ten correct numbers.
You get one number wrong and you are be talking to a stranger.
Dr. M dutifully asks her machine my question.
“Who said Mother
Teresa was selfish?”
She receives no answer.
I immediately alter the question.
“What writer said Mother Teresa was selfish?”
Again, no answer.
I try yet again, offering clarificational information.
“What British writer said Mother Teresa was selfish?”
Still nothing doing.
I make a strategic adjustment.
“What British essayist said Mother Teresa was selfish?”
Ding-ding-ding! – I get an answer:
“Malcolm Muggeridge.”
A long-deceased British writer and essayist who, as it turns
out, was a devoted enthusiast of
Mother Teresa’s – the machine thus providing an erroneous response – and also
not the man I had in mind but was unable to remember.
Losing curiosital steam, I decide on one final
formulation. Before returning to
thoughts about The Federalist Papers.
“What recent British essayist said Mother Teresa was
selfish?
Finally, I get the right answer. (Which may already know, making this an
grating exercise in “Would you please move this along?”)
It was Christopher Hitchens.
That’s the name I’d been looking for. And it only took twenty minutes to get there,
not because the device’s computer was
slow but because we were.
Computers have the capacity to provide the correct answers,
but you have to know exactly what to ask them.
When, I wonder, will they assist us with that?
COMPUTERS: “Never.
We love messin’ with you guys.”
1 comment:
It's kind of funny, I got the computer to come up with Hitchens' name by entering "pompous ass" and "jealous" and it didn't take twenty minutes.
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