

Episode 300: Wild Problems
17 snips Jan 9, 2023
Russ Roberts, President of Shalem College and a research fellow at Stanford, delves into the concept of 'wild problems'—life-altering decisions like marriage and parenting that resist straightforward solutions. He contrasts these with 'tame' and 'wicked' problems, emphasizing the importance of personal judgment. Discussions highlight the limits of quantifying human experience, ethical dilemmas in economics, and the role of liberal arts in education. Roberts also shares insights on leading higher education institutions while promoting critical thinking and cultural comprehension.
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Defining Wild Problems
- Wild problems involve major life decisions like marriage or having children that cannot be solved scientifically.
- Unlike wicked problems, wild problems can be solved, sometimes by simply not deciding to solve them.
Limits of Measurable Knowledge
- Knowledge that cannot be measured is often deemed meager and insignificant scientifically.
- Roberts critiques this view, stressing some life knowledge resists scientific quantification but remains valuable.
Limits of Science in Personal Decisions
- Scientific methods fit well for clear, testable economic questions but falter on personal life decisions.
- Using data to find a perfect spouse or government policy for citizen happiness oversimplifies complex human aims.