Pundits: Foxes vs Hedgehogs

800px-European_hedgehog_(Erinaceus_europaeus)

Jonah Lehrer interviewed Philip Tetlock, the social scientist who disproved the authority of political pundits:

Some experts displayed a top-down style of reasoning: politics as a deductive art. They started with a big-idea premise about human nature, society, or economics and applied it to the specifics of the case. They tended to reach more confident conclusions about the future. And the positions they reached were easier to classify ideologically: that is the Keynesian prediction and that is the free-market fundamentalist prediction and that is the worst-case environmentalist prediction and that is the best case technology-driven growth prediction etc.

Other experts displayed a bottom-up style of reasoning: politics as a much messier inductive art.

They reached less confident conclusions and they are more likely to draw on a seemingly contradictory mix of ideas in reaching those conclusions (sometimes from the left, sometimes from the right). We called the big-idea experts “hedgehogs” (they know one big thing) and the more eclectic experts “foxes” (they know many, not so big things). …The most consistent predictor of consistently more accurate forecasts was “style of reasoning”: experts with the more eclectic, self-critical, and modest cognitive styles tended to outperform the big-idea people (foxes tended to outperform hedgehogs).

I try to be both myself, depending on the issue or event at hand. A Fox with spines?

(Photo: a European hedgehog from Soli-net. via Wiki.)