However, by the second paragraph, I've usually restored my
self-confidence. I've come to terms
with my inadequacy by considering that if only adequate people wrote anything,
then the world presented in the written word would appear even more frightening
to those who, like me, don’t think they've really got that much to say, or who
don’t know what they’re doing. The
world is already too full of people declaring their certainties or their
conclusions. I rarely have either, so if
I can give comfort to those who share my failings, then I’ll have achieved something.
What I'm trying to get at here is this: uncertainty, doubt,
confusion are rather splendid things, and should be nurtured. How to cultivate
them, though, is a different matter, as I don’t think it’s a good thing for
absolutely everyone. I don’t really want a surgeon to have such uncertainty,
especially if it came to the matter of which of my legs he needed to
remove. (My legs are both perfectly
fine, so there isn't really any serious matter at stake here.) And I want mechanics, engineers, carpenters,
electricians, and airline pilots to embrace certainty, especially when they are
in my service. Although, thinking
again, I’d rather not. I’d like to
think these people are cautious, would make sure what they thought was correct,
double checked and so on. A little more
self-doubt could save lives.
But when it comes to matters of less urgency, I
find I simultaneously loathe and admire people who are too certain. These are often politicians, or they are
selling something. Politicians, like
William Hague, for example, who made up his mind about what he believed long
before he was eighteen, presenting his self-assured young self at a Tory Party
conference, and he hasn't changed his mind since. A smug adolescent is
determining British foreign policy.
Most teenagers think they know it all, but few of them get to run the
world.
There is a wonderful scene at the very beginning of Howard
Brenton and David Hare’s Pravda, in which a Rupert Murdoch figure
addresses the audience. He says
something like this: 'I have over a ten thousand books in my library, but I
don’t need to read any of them. I have already made up my mind.' I remember laughing and feeling chilled to
the marrow at the same time. I was
young when I saw that play, and felt I had to read at least all of the Penguin
Classics and have a go at Wittgenstein before I was anywhere near to being
educated enough to have a view on anything at all.
Those of us who concur with Keats’ notion of ‘negative
capability’, who are able to suspend judgement, who resist the need to draw
conclusions, we are cast aside in the stampede towards the glittering
prizes. People who have made up their
minds rule the world, and I am completely unable to make up mine. It may be I'm timid, that I never like putting
all my eggs in one basket, or it could be that I'm a ditherer, a moral coward.
And here is a paradox, for if we are to write fiction well shouldn't we be able to circle around an argument, see things from more than
one point of view, to take the role of the omniscient narrator and claim an
infinite perspective, rather than just trumpeting our own self-satisfied
certainty? But if we can never make up
our minds, then nothing will ever get written.
It’s almost crippling.
E M Foster wrote: 'How can I tell what
I think until I see what I say?' And I sort of know what he meant. I've finished my blog. I can see what I've said.
But I've still no idea what I think.
7 comments:
I like the Quaker saying: "Think it possible you may be mistaken."
Thanks for posting!
Brilliant post, Andrew. Really thought-provoking.
And I love that Quaker saying, Joan. Fabulous. I might stick that up somewhere that I can see it every day. It would be great if everyone else did, too!
What a great post - thank you.
I wonder if uncertainty is the flipside of acknowledging complexity? So we might feel certain that, say, exploiting the poor is wrong, but uncertain about how to prevent it because we see how everything is inter-related in a very complex way. There are probably some fairly solid certainties of principle behind your manifold uncertainties.
This post really rings true for me. You've put a lot of the way I experience the world into words. Thank you.
This is exactly how I think, too! I find people who are very certain about things quite scary because that's how dictatorships occur. And I love the Keats reference. Spot on!
Anne - I really liked what you wrote: 'uncertainty is the flipside of acknowledging complexity'. You're dead right. It's a response to feeling completely overwhelmed.
Lovely! Thanks, Andrew
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