Philosophy

Simple But Not Easy

There’s what’s difficult and there’s what’s simple.

But then there’s “simple but not easy”.

 

How can something be “simple but not easy”?

In truth, it can’t! It doesn’t make any sense, it’s paradoxical.

The true meaning of “simple but not easy” is that it is UNKNOWN

The difficulty is ultimately UNKNOWN, in how:

-it appears simple (especially intellectually)

-but it’s not easy in practice (to execute, control, predict)

The true difficulty is concealed

 

Thus there are two reasons why a “simple” thing could be difficult:

-it’s unpredictable

-or it involves fallible human mind: in particular psyche, with all it’s biases and emotionality

 

The problem of unpredictability is an epistemic problem

The so called “epistemic arrogance”

We like to think we know more than is knowable

It’s simple truth that it is going to rain EVENTUALLY — but it’s not so simple to foretell the exact day and hour and minute!

 

The problem of human mind is actually also epistemic — in that it’s rooted in our ignorance about our ability

There’s the infamous Dunning–Kruger effect: the lowest-ability individuals tend to overestimate their skill the most. Of course. The less you know — the less you know how little you know.

When you’re ignorant about your ability — you will underestimate the challenge before you.

It may appear easy intellectually — but unless you understand that appearances can be illusive — you will underestimate the challenge

Then you’ll call it “simple but not easy”

It was never “easy”. You just didn’t understand it, nor your ability, nor your own biases.

If you had solved many real world problems — you would have understood that it’s NOT ALWAYS as easy as it seems

 

Now, what is the significance of all that?

Obviously correctly appraising the difficulty of a given undertaking is of vital importance

If you underestimate the task at hand — and devote too few resources to it — you will fail (and waste your resources/energy/time/investment, with nothing to show for it, no return)

Likewise if you overestimate the task — you will devote too many resources to it — resulting in underwhelming returns — compared to expanded resources — which could have been devoted to something more profitable

 

A lot of what you think is hard is actually easy

A lot of what you think is simple is actually hard

You’ll waste your time trying simple solutions on hard problems

You’ll waste your potential avoiding easy opportunities which you considered hard

It’s imperative that you understand what is EASY and what is DIFFICULT

 

How do you understand what is EASY and what is DIFFICULT?

You learn

BROADLY

 

Obviously what you learned specifically becomes “easy”. This is self-evident.

What concerns us however is knowing BEFOREHAND how difficult something is

And BEFORE you expanded your resources learning that thing

 

Therefore you learn broadly

So that you have general ideas about the difficultly of various things

 

Furthermore

Learning, truly learning, involves doing

It involves you getting real results in the real world

As you solve problems — you mature

And you begin to understand yourself

You can only understand yourself in relation. Relation to something. Relation to doing.

(one can only distinguish something by comparing it to something else)

And once you understand yourself, once you know yourself — is when you delude yourself a little less

 

Therefore learn, and learn all you can

Stay ACCOUNTABLE at all times, keep your word — it’s the only way to learn (otherwise your results are falsified)

Be humble, no, learn to be humble, let the world humble you, which it will, if you take on it

Take on easy things and difficult things

And as you get wiser — you’ll be taking at things just adequately difficult

Adequately difficult for you to conclude them successfully (with high probability of success) — and highest possible return of investment

And then still learn more in the process

And then take on greater still challenges,

And STILL succeed