Playing Dumb

by Theodore Dalrymple

Recently, I read a splendid book, titled Homo cretinus, by the French science journalist and writer Olivier Postel-Vinay, on the subject of human stupidity, a subject as perpetually amusing as murder, and eternally relevant to the situation we are in.

Stupidity is a much-underestimated factor in human history, perhaps because stupidity is the characteristic to accusations of which we all feel most vulnerable. If someone were to say, “I have never done anything stupid in my life,” the only possible reply would be, “That must be because you have never done anything at all in your life—which is stupid.”

Stupidity is like measles in the old days: Everyone has to go through it. But there is no possible immunization against stupidity. If anything, its prevalence seems to have risen with tertiary education and yet further with the so-called social media. Artificial intelligence will boost it to new heights, or depths.

Of course, stupidity is like beauty: It is in the eye of the beholder. While I commit understandable mistakes, you behave stupidly; but, as Postel-Vinay reminds us, stupidity is not the same as the absence of intelligence, certainly not intelligence of the IQ variety. Indeed, the stupidity of the intelligent and educated is worse and more dangerous in its effects than that of the unintelligent and ignorant, inasmuch as it is the former who are more likely to have power and make decisions that affect multitudes.

A precise definition of stupidity is not possible, though we all (apart from the person who commits it) recognize it when we see it. And if to make choices in the absence of good reason for them is stupid, life itself, at least in its modern form, forces stupidity upon us.

Recently, for example, I received an invitation from my doctor, or at least from a computer standing in for my doctor, an invitation to be immunized against flu and COVID. I had either to accept it or not to accept it; there was no third way. On what basis could I make my decision?

For quite a time, I followed at least some of the research on the value of such vaccines. I tried to separate the signal from the noise, which was very difficult because there was so much noise, and so many preposterous or ill-founded assertions. I came eventually to the tentative conclusion that the value of the vaccine was that it reduced the chances of death in someone like me but was not otherwise valuable. A reduced chance of death, however, is something not entirely to be sneezed at.

My chances of dying were not very high in the first place, however, so the vaccine was unlikely to have been my savior, and I probably do not owe my life to it. But still I took it, because I estimated that the benefit outweighed the possible harm. Oddly enough, for reasons that I cannot quite fathom, the process of immunization has aroused passions from the very beginning of its history, sometimes with disastrous effect. I suppose it has something to do with a subliminal and quasi-pagan feeling that Nature knows best, and to interfere with Nature invites trouble.

Be that all as it may, my situation has changed since the COVID epidemic was at its height both medically and in the panicky official response to it. I have since had an unpleasant but not mortal illness with a recrudescence twice when suffering from a minor viral illness such as a cold. For the moment I am free of it.

The recrudescence might have been caused by the viral infection or might have been a mere coincidence (there is no worse argument in medicine than that something stands to reason). It is impossible to judge the truth from a single case, and while there were in the medical literature similar anecdotes of cases such as mine, there was no proof one way or the other.

The vaccine might itself be an immunological challenge sufficient to cause recrudescence, or it might be sufficient to reduce the immunological challenge of the illnesses should I contract them. The vaccines might therefore protect me, or the reverse. Certainly, I have friends who have recently suffered very unpleasantly from a new outbreak of COVID. As far as I know, there is no definitive evidence either way. I am therefore forced to choose, yea or nay, but in the absence of evidence. Moreover, I am aware that were I to study the question more closely, I might come to a semi-reasonable, but not therefore correct, decision, for science is not a matter of laying down definitive doctrines. Given the vastness of the scientific literature, moreover, and given also that I have many other things to do than study it, I shall have to make my decision in a condition of ignorance.

This is how we make many, if not most of our decisions. I invest my savings, but I have neither the time nor inclination to study how best to do it. I am not even sure that there is a knowable best way to do it. The best way to do anything also depends on one’s goals: in my case, not the achievement of wealth but the avoidance of poverty (as I define it for myself). I have an adviser, but I have no idea whether he advises me in my interests or his own, or both. I am not sufficiently interested to find out whether there is someone better to advise me, of if that someone better, that is to say with a better record, is better by chance or by skill. There is probably a normal distribution of financial advice, and whether good performance is a matter of luck or judgment is a complex question that I am neither qualified nor willing to investigate. I have to hope that my adviser is good enough, or at least better than nothing. I do not want to spend the rest of my days poring over the financial data, though an American of my acquaintance says it is irrational of me not do so, since an hour a day would be enough (the same as I am supposed to devote to physiotherapy, in fact). I suppose you might call it a matter of financial physiotherapy.

So I return to my stupidities like a dog to its vomit. The unexamined life might not be worth living, but the too closely examined life is not worth living either. Therefore, seize the hour, seize the day—within reason, of course.

First published in Taki’s magazine.

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2 Responses

  1. I’m afraid the author’s deepest thoughts on vaccination are not deep enough. I had reached the same conclusions with my personal vaccinations as the author, before the Covid crisis, when it became apparent to me that I needed to look into the necessity and worth of vaccination and found that some real due diligence was required. One link led to another; one book to the next. The credence with what you find is factored by the journey you take. I finally, have ended upon what seems to be a current best analysis in the rather large book, (641 pages sans appendix), “Dissolving Illusions” by the authors Suzanne Humphries, M.D. and Roan Bystrianyk. It is revelatory and rather like witnessing an institutional dogma-iceberg flipping topsy turvy. I am currently framing a review of the book. There is so much to say. Not only do vaccines rarely do what they claim, but do much worse than is admitted. But possibly most horrific is that vaccines can direct the immune system which while allowing the infection, also determines and increases its proliferation. The chapter on whooping cough is perhaps the most illustrative of this. Vaccines not only can do this, but they allow the harboring of infective agents in manners which promote recombination until the body becomes a literal Wuhan Lab for newer and virulent infective agents, which it then spreads to the populace. And reaching even further into the future of continuing vaccination is a technology which is destroying the very fabric of our immune systems altogether.
    Doctors, are like the robotic arms of the Accepted Standards of Care in these respects and cannot be trusted. I have been through medical school and I would wager I couldn’t find 5 doctors in my area who even know of this book or what is contained within it. It’s a terrible world manifesting and each person is going to have to assume charge of their medical treatment in a much greater capacity. Playing dumb will kill or disable you.
    Am I going to show this book to my own doctor? I have my qualms. To quote a passage from the book: “The belief that vaccination was instrumental in the decline of death [from whooping cough] is not supported by the data. Yet when reading the “Peridatrics” paper, the reader – a doctor – would have accepted the belief that the vaccine was the only factor.”
    “This explains the behavior of doctors and their fear of pertussis as it drives them to push the vaccine even on those who don’t want it. Doctors do not receive unbiased information in medical school or during their careers. In order for doctors to learn the full truth, they have to seek it and then deal with the resultant cognitive dissonance. It is very difficult to continue practicing medicine under conventional dictates once that truth is accepted.”
    Can I risk my lifeline to health services by being so bold?

  2. I view stupidity as having the same root as “stupor”. In other words, you can be extremely intelligent (let’s say a high IQ) but still be stupid in certain respects. In a sense it means that you fail to exert some level of discriminatory thinking, and instead resort to what I would call “built-in” thinking; thinking that is that result of perhaps ideological propaganda or information pushed into your mind by others without your questioning this information. This “built-in” thinking is used to make decisions that given the situation in question, could very well be labelled “stupid”.
    I can think of many examples, but this goes ‘way over the scope of this essay.

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