Eclectic Spacewalk #5 - Skin In The Game
Nicholas McCay
MA Graduate in 'Responsibility in Engineering, Science, and Technology'; Founder of Eclectic Spacewalk; Filmmaker
How Risk Should Be Shared More Symmetrically?
Table of Contents:
Skin In The Game—
1) Bullshit Detection
2) Symmetry in human affairs
3) Information sharing in transactions
4) Rationality in complex systems
Reading Time: 15-20 minutes (Read sections you find intriguing, bookmark the media/links, and come back to anytime.)
Skin In The Game—
Abstract: “Skin In The Game” is a multilayered & continuously evolving aphorism about viewing the world through incurred risk to yourself and others. Risk *should* be shared more symmetrically. If we look at history, then systems that evolve, and thus survive, fundamentally have “Skin In The Game” characteristics.
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"With it. Or on it." —
The above saying supposedly goes back to ancient Greece, and recently made a cameo in the movie 300. Parting mothers would basically cry “Come back with your shield, or on it” to their sons heading off to war. The premise being - dying in battle was the noblest of deaths. “Mothers whose sons died in battle openly rejoiced, mothers whose sons survived hung their heads in shame…
Asked why it was dishonorable to return without a shield and not without a helmet, the Spartan king, Demaratos (510 - 491) is said to have replied: "Because the latter they put on for their own protection, but the shield for the common good of all." (Plutarch, Mor.220 & 241)”
The now re-popularized phase is a good primer for our current post’s subject matter. A helmet to the ancient Spartan was a necessary protection for the individual, but the shield was a symbol for the “common good.”
So, what is the common good exactly?
Dishonor, especially in battle or in death, was so taboo in Spartan culture that doing the opposite, acting honorably in battle or death, was the only *real* way to live. Anything short of this standard would probably mean death, or possibly exile, but most definitely shame. Still to this day, we remember the Spartans for their ferocious courage at the Battle of Thermopylae, but how do you get ~300 humans to literally die for their beliefs? The ancients knew something intuitively about “Skin In The Game” (SITG), as they applied the principle to war strategy that trickled down into everyday life and culture.
Collective behavior doesn’t flow from individual behavior because of the increasingly interconnected of asymmetries in life.
BUT, when you create a “culture” of symmetry, the sum total of individual behaviors moves towards a better collective behavior. (The initial goal direction of honor in this example that is.) Aka the behavior survives longer.
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Antifragile, Black Swans, & The Incerto Series —
SITG is the 5th installment of Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Incerto series, “an investigation of opacity, luck, uncertainty, probability, human error, risk, and decision-making in a world we don’t understand.” That last part, “in a world we don’t understand” being the key to this particular essay. Incerto means “uncertainty” in Latin.
Consider the following questions for yourself, and then for society:
How best should I make decisions? Should those answers differ when dealing with myself compared to others?
Am I ever *only* making decisions for myself or my circle, family, and tribe?…Or am I, and my decisions, *always* effecting others? And vice versus - their decisions having an affect on me?
How does society move towards a more symmetrical, and thus beneficial, outcome through the sum total of ALL decisions from ALL individuals?
Are there unifying principle(s) or heuristics in dealing with reality to answer these questions?
Taleb’s answer is his Incerto series. My answer is the newsletter you are currently reading. (Check out our other topics including: “The Overview Effect,” “Systems Thinking,” “Object Oriented Ontology,” and “Non-Zero Sum.”)
What is your answer?
Before we go deeper into SITG, it is beneficial to bring up two topics of other Incerto books, AntiFragile & Black Swan (events), that our current topic of investigation builds upon.
The 08’ sub-prime mortgage crisis and the Fukushima nuclear reactor disaster in Japan (even Chernobyl, and the recent HBO series effectively critiquing what can happen when you don’t heed these principles) are catastrophic events that are unpredictable as specific occurrences but are predictable as rare-but-known phenomena. These events are called “Black Swans.” The only way to avoid Black Swans, is to give structures resilience, or “Antifragility.”
Taleb describes structures with antifragile characteristics as the ability to fail in small doses, and to use that failure to “gain from disorder” over time—counter-intuitively producing a greater order. These principles would in theory, and as we will see soon also in practice, impart resiliency into the structure, so that the system has the ability to transmit lessons from those small failures (by learning, adapting, and evolving) into developing new strengths.
Keeping things “small enough to fail” (as opposed to “too big to fail”) is the cornerstone. The 2008 financial crisis, and its “too big too fail” banks, was a prophetic moment for all of modernity in that it showed precisely what’s going on in too many places today. Bacon’s Rebellion says more about what kind of fragile world this creates when Black Swans happen:
“The result of this dynamic is that there is very little learning within the system, and we go right back to making structures that are more unstable over time. In evolutionary terms, we are not advancing into greater resilience, but lesser resilience.
Thus, instead of creating a world in which the most destructive Black Swans are more survivable, all the emphasis is on preventing such Black Swans, and creating an unsustainable state of normality. The inevitable result is that these Black Swans come anyway—with ever more catastrophic results.”
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Skin In The Game —
Taleb, hearkens that today’s society at large is dominated by a specialists culture who are rewarded for excessive intervention, and for predictions that are routinely inaccurate. Bacon’s rebellion picks it back up with how this has devastating consequences:
“The big reward for them is not in creating antifragility or even resilience, but stability—or rather, the?temporary?appearance of stability. Then, when disaster strikes, these specialists, who have very little “skin in the game,” pay a very small price, if any.
How many systems that you know of are dominated by ideologues and so-called experts with no skin in the game — people who suffer no repercussions from their failed prescriptions, who pass on the cost of their failures to the public, and who are insulated from the evolutionary process that weeds out failures?…
We see this “too big to fail” and “too big to learn” phenomenon in system after system. We see it in central bank policies around the world. Central bankers are so terrified by the prospect of a recession that they continually pump more credit into financial systems, guaranteeing a bigger and more catastrophic crash down the road. We see it in California’s fire-fighting policies that suppress small wildfires but build up fuel for catastrophic wild fires. We see it in top-down social engineering policies and in special interest-driven land use policies.”
When you put together structures that are resilient (AntiFragile) and legitimately account for unlikely events (Black Swans) by actually planning for them rather than ignoring them till they become catastrophic, you will inevitably create SITG characteristics within said structures.
It may seem counter intuitive, but the economic theory underlining all of behavioral economics is just plain wrong. Behavioral economics takes into account singular plays (doesn’t consider time), but evolutionary economics (considers time) “takes the passage of previous events and does not take the characteristics of either the objects of choice or of the decision-maker as fixed.”
The former of the two is static, and Taleb says in his own words that incentives are NOT enough!
“What is Skin in the Game? The phrase is often mistaken for one-sided incentives: the promise of a bonus will make someone work harder for you. For the central attribute is symmetry: the balancing of incentives and disincentives, people should also penalized if something for which they are responsible goes wrong and hurts others: he or she who wants a share of the benefits needs to also share some of the risks.""
SITG is about suffering (albeit that is a charged word nowadays) & evolution (again, a loaded term in today’s world). We are effectively filtering people out of the system through a “meta-rationality." Filtering is necessary for the function of well - basically everything.
You can see this quite clearly with asking the question, “Why, on high-speed highways there are surprisingly few rogue drivers who could, with a simple maneuver, kill scores of people?” Taleb answers with a pithy response:
“Well, they would also kill themselves and most dangerous drivers are already dead (or with suspended license). Driving is done under the skin in the game constraint, which acts as a filter. It’s a risk management tool by society, ingrained in the ecology of risk sharing in both human and biological systems. The captain who goes down with the ship will no longer have a ship. Bad pilots end up in the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean; risk-blind traders become taxi drivers or surfing instructors (if they traded their own money)?”
SITG is not simply about decision making. It is really about symmetry. To make it easier to digest for the visual folk, below is a graphic of sorts on who has: “No Skin In The Game,” “Skin In the Game,” AND most importantly “Skin In The Game Of Others, or Soul In The Game.”
How many people, institutions, or governments are on the left side and NOT on the right side?
领英推荐
(Side Note: Hypatia is the left handed holographic bust on the Eclectic Spacewalk logo)
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Four Topics of Consideration
Next, we focus on the surprising implications of the hidden asymmetries that do not immediately come to mind as well as the less obvious consequences.
“The same logic mysteriously answers many vital questions, such as 1) the difference between rationality and rationalization, 2) that between virtue and virtue signaling, 3) the nature of honor and sacrifice, 4) Religion and signaling (why the pope is functionally atheist) 5) the justification for economic inequality that doesn’t arise from rent seeking, 6) why to never tell people your forecasts (only discuss publicly what you own in your portfolio) and, 7) even, how and from whom to buy your next car.”
The four topics that cannot be disentangled if one has SITG are as follows:
1) Bullshit Detection - Uncertainty and the reliability of knowledge
2) Symmetry in human affairs - Fairness, Justice, Responsibility, and Reciprocity
3) Information sharing in transactions
4) Rationality in Complex Systems
SITG is NOT just about having a share of the benefits (like in finance), but it is really about symmetry - having a share of the game —and promoting better decision makers rather than giving you better decision making skills.
The below graphic succinctly conveys who the “wrong enemy” is, an abstract and overarching term with no meaning: “The rich,” against who the “right enemy” is by using our SITG rubric as a specific delineation between them: Earners & Predators, Entrepreneurs & Cronies, Protectors & Rent-seekers."
The people, or groups of people, on the right of the graphic are who we should be putting pressure on, as well as creating systems that effectively make it hard, if not impossible, to NOT have Skin In The Game!
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What Lindy Told Us—
“The Lindy Effect” is another heuristic popularized by the author, that tells the story of Broadway actors predicting how long a play would last on the most famous theatrical street in the US.
It loosely said that the future life expectancy of the play (in days), or how long it was “On Broadway,” was double the number of days it had already lasted on Broadway. An example being, Book of Mormon has ran for 100 days, so the heuristic would be that Book of Mormon would run for 100 more days. And on, and on…
When something is “Lindy Proof,” “Is Lindy,” or “Lindy compatible” it shows that something seems to belong to the class of things that have proven to have the following property: “That which is “Lindy” is what ages in reverse, i.e. its life expectancy lengthens with time, conditional on survival.”
This has incredibly profound consequences to our modern world view Taleb says, “thanks to Lindy, no expert is the final expert anymore and we don not need meta-experts judging the expertise of experts one rank below them. We solves the “turtles all the way down” problem. Fragility is the expert, hence time and survival.”
Taleb finishes his 5th installment of the Incerto, with the below maxim - via negativa style - to summarize the “Lindy Effect,” “Antifragile,” “Black Swans,“ in culmination with “Skin In The Game.”
“No muscles without strength,
friendship without trust,
opinion without consequence,
change without aesthetics,
age without values,
life without effort,
water without thirst,
food without nourishment,
love without sacrifice,
power without fairness,
facts without rigor,
statistics without logic,
mathematics without proof,
teaching without experience,
politeness without warmth,
values without embodiment,
degrees without erudition,
militarism without fortitude,
progress without civilization,
friendship without investment,
virtue without risk,
probability without ergodicity,
wealth without exposure,
complication without depth,
fluency without content,
decision without symmetry,
science without skepticism,
religion without tolerance,
AND, most of all:
nothing without skin in the game.”
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