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The Daily Stoic

Never Attribute To Malice…

The Daily Stoic

Daily Stoic | Backyard Ventures

Education, 694393, Daily Stoic, Society & Culture, Stoic, Stoicism, Self-improvement, Business, Stoic Philosophy, Philosophy, Ryan Holiday

4.64.7K Ratings

🗓️ 25 June 2019

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

People do a lot of things that feel mean. That frustrate us. That cause problems for us. That make the world a worse place. They vote for bad politicians. They say offensive things. They make messes. They screw stuff up.

Naturally, our first instinct is to get upset about this. To want to confront the perpetrators about it. To hold them fully accountable for the consequences of their behavior. But it’s worth stepping back and asking yourself first, are they really fully accountable?

Consider, for instance, Hanlon’s Razor--the idea that one should “never attribute to malice what can easily be attributed to stupidity.” Meaning that most of the bad things people do are not done out of evil...but simple incompetence. Not everyone is as well-educated as you, not everyone was raised to be responsible like you were, not everyone is as talented as you, and it is in this gap that you can find the explanations to most errors, most bad driving, most of the litter you see on the street, and most of the wrongs you feel have been done to you.

Remember, this is what Marcus was trying to say in the famous opening passage of Meditations. Yes, we will bump into obnoxious, self-centered, and rude people today. But it’s not because they’re bad or worth less than we are. It’s because they don’t yet know any better. Because they have been left behind and deprived. And if we can remember this, we won’t be so angered by it and it won’t ruin our day.

It’s going to take all our patience and preparation to hold onto this, but it will be worth it.



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.

0:13.6

Welcome to the Daily Stoke. Or each day we read a short passage designed to help you cultivate the strength, insight, wisdom necessary for living good life.

0:23.3

Each one of these passages is based on the 2000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of history's greatest men and women. For more, you can visit us at DailyStoic.com.

0:36.3

Never attribute to malice. People do a lot of things that feel mean, that frustrate us, that cause problems for us, that make the world the worst place.

0:45.3

They vote for bad politicians, they say offensive things, they make messes, they mess stuff up.

0:50.3

Naturally, our first instinct is to get upset about this. We want to confront them about it, to hold them fully accountable for the consequences of their behavior.

0:59.3

But it's worth stepping back and asking yourself first. Are they really fully accountable?

1:04.3

Dating back at least a couple hundred years, we have the so-called Hanlon's Razor, that states we should never attribute to malice, will can easily be attributed to stupidity.

1:14.3

Meaning that most of the bad things people do are not done out of evil, but simple incompetence.

1:20.3

Not everyone is as well educated as you, not everyone was raised to be responsible like you were, not everyone is as talented as you.

1:28.3

And it is this that explains most errors, most bad driving, and most of the litter you see on the street.

1:34.3

Remember, this is what Marcus Aurelius was trying to say in the famous opening passage of meditations.

1:40.3

Yes, we will bump into obnoxious self-centered and rude people today.

1:44.3

But it's not because they're bad or worth less than we are. It's because they don't yet know any better, because they have been left behind or deprived.

1:52.3

And if we can remember this, we won't be so angered by it and it won't ruin our day.

1:57.3

It's going to take all our patience and preparation to hold on to this, but it will be worth it.

2:03.3

I've got a question for you. Are you really challenging yourself? Are you pushing yourself to be better or you stuck in your comfort zone?

2:12.3

So many of us are stuck. So many of us know we are leaving potential on the table.

2:17.3

And so that's one of the reasons we've created this new 21 day daily still challenge. We're calling it the daily still freedom challenge.

2:23.3

It's going to help you break free from bad habits, from bad choices, from bad routines, from bad thinking.

2:30.3

It's going to be awesome. You can check it out at dailystoic.com slash challenge.

2:35.3

And you can do the 21 day challenge alongside me. I'm going to be doing it every day.

...

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