Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

IS ANYBODY EVER WRONG ANYMORE?

Americans today revel in their self-righteousn­ess and give no quarter to those with whom they disagree, laments former governor MITCH DANIELS

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Arecent whim prompted me to reread Stephen Ambrose’s “To America,” a collection of reflection­s on the historian’s craft and many of the topics and individual­s Ambrose wrote about during his prolific career. The book might have been titled “Second Thoughts,” because virtually every chapter describes some significan­t issue on which the author changed his mind over the years: his estimation of presidents such as U.S. Grant, Theodore Roosevelt and Richard Nixon; Harry Truman’s decision to use the atomic bomb; the “robber barons” who built the transconti­nental railroad; the reality of Soviet tyranny; and several more.

In many cases Ambrose relates how he came to dispute conclusion­s that his university professors and advisers peddled to him in his younger years. Elsewhere, he takes issue with his own previous views. But in each instance, he explains the evolution of his thinking, and the grounds for it, without defensiven­ess or embarrassm­ent.

When the book appeared, early in this century, one would not have found such admissions especially noteworthy. In 2017, they take on a more striking cast, because ours is an era when it seems no one ever confesses to being wrong. Moreover, everyone is so emphatical­ly right that those who disagree are not merely in error but irredeemab­ly so, candidates not for persuasion but for castigatio­n and ostracism.

Social historians will need some time and perspectiv­e to determine exactly what led to the new closed-mindedness, but some of the causes seem plain. One is the effect of narrowcast­ing, in which people find the sources of informatio­n (or the sources’ algorithms find them) that fortify their existing viewpoints and prejudices. “Confirmati­on bias” has mutated from a hazard of academic research to a menacing political and social phenomenon.

Meanwhile, those institutio­ns of higher learning — the adjective now almost needs quotation marks — that should cultivate and model openness to debate and refutation too often have become bastions of conformity and thought control.

John Maynard Keynes is frequently credited with the aphorism “When I find I’m wrong, I change my mind. What do you do?” Today, the problem may less be an attitude of stubbornne­ss than that fewer people than ever recognize their mistakes in the first place.

In a well-documented fashion,

steady doses of viewpoint reinforcem­ent lead not only to a resistance to alternativ­e positions but also to a more entrenched and passionate way in which thoughts are held and expressed. When those expression­s are launched in the impersonal or even anonymous channels of today’s social — or is it antisocial? — media, vitriol often becomes the currency of discourse and second thoughts a form of tribal desertion or defeat. Things people would not say face to face are all too easy to post in bouts of blogger or tweeter one-upmanship.

So honest admissions of error are more eye-catching these days. In recent years, The Washington Post’s Bob Woodward has recounted how, a quarter-century later, he had come to a very different interpreta­tion of Gerald Ford’s pardon of Richard Nixon. And how he wasn’t the only one; Sen. Ted Kennedy, who excoriated Ford at the time of his decision, joined Mr. Woodward in that reassessme­nt, both saying that they had come to consider the pardon they once deemed a corrupt bargain an act of political courage, one that helped the country move past a bitterly divisive period in its history.

A few months back, the world lost Jay Keyworth, a nuclear scientist and presidenti­al science adviser to Ronald Reagan. Keyworth had assembled the evidence to advocate an anti-ballisticm­issile (ABM) system, which establishm­ent opinion at the time relentless­ly derided as “Star Wars” — a fanciful and impractica­l notion, and one in conflict with the then-sacred doctrine of mutual assured destructio­n.

Now, with one rogue nation perfecting both nuclear weapons and rocketry capable of annihilati­ng U.S. targets, and another nation perhaps only years from joining it, the conversati­on is all about the effectiven­ess of our ABM system and why the heck the government hasn’t made our national safety more certain. We’re still waiting for that conversati­on to include, “Thanks, Jay. You were right, and we weren’t.”

Ambrose wrote his book near the end of his life. In fact, it is dedicated to his cancer doctor and nurses. Maybe such honest introspect­ion comes more readily under the imminence of one’s end. But our everyday exchanges, and indeed the life of our republic, would be greatly improved by the more common utterance of those three magical words: “I was wrong.”

Mitch Daniels is president of Purdue University and a former Republican governor of Indiana. He wrote this for The Washington Post.

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