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Saturday, January 14, 2017

The Power of Meaning by Emily Esfahan Smith

I really wanted to love this book, but I can only muster up a like. I was hoping for a modern update to Viktor Frankl’s “Man’s Search for Meaning”, indeed, the author Emily Esfahan Smith, cites Frankl’s work. She even uses the book as a part of her examination of the power of meaning.
In reading this book, I gathered that this was meant to be one of the many books that came out which ape’s Malcom Gladwell’s mode of storytelling: examining a subject closely through econometric to tell a story. Many books have resulted from using Gladwell’s method and many successful books have resulted, even though the success of the storytelling has been uneven. Not everyone can be Malcolm Gladwell. This is yet another one that is disappointing.
Emily Esfahan Smith is a very talented writer; I have read her work in The Atlantic. She has a voice that captured my attention. So it is that I was greatly disappointed in her treatment of meaning here.
She first created four main pillars that underlie the idea of meaning, these pillars, according to her, makes the idea of meaning powerful: Belonging, Purpose, Storytelling, and Transcendence. Those comprise of chapters 2-5 of the book. Chapter 1: The Meaning Crisis, where she convinces us that the topic is important was well written and makes a very strong case. It made her case and drew me in. I was dubious about the value of Belonging and Storytelling as being central to her argument, but she made a good case for belonging, but not so much for storytelling, but I knew that would be a difficult one to justify because it was a weak pillar to start with.
I was very surprised and disappointed with the purpose chapter, I felt that would be a central theme to the entire book and I felt that the cases cited and the generally the tone and attack that she took with the chapter was tepid at best. In general, the chapters on purpose, storytelling, and transcendence felt rushed and not very well thought out.
The transcendence chapter, I felt, would be a very important chapter. I thought that her own personal background in the Sufi tradition would lead her to expanding and shedding light on transcendence throughout many non-Christian spiritual practices, yet, she chose to focus on Christian transcendence as cases and examples. I believe that in order for her to make her point about the universality of the power of meaning, she needed to create an ethos of universality and demonstrate that the subject of which she is expounding on is indeed, itself universal. I believe she succeeded in a very limited manner. I wouldn’t say she failed, just did not succeed in as large a manner as I would have expected.
I thought the cases she explored in support of her are not well written, they sounded kind of forced. Even though her emphasis is on storytelling, she failed at storytelling. The attraction of this kind of case study journalism is to give heft to the argument with legitimate scholarly econometrics but then also engage the reader by linking the cold sterile numbers with human passion and emotional response. She failed in that regard.
The next two chapters: Growth and the Culture of Meaning were disparate in terms of effectiveness. Growth chapter, while not as weak as the weaker chaters in the book was still unsettling in its lack of passion. She used the ideas from Frankl, the ideas on grit and resilience from Angela Duckworth, and the growth mindset from Carole Dweck to add intellectual depth to the growth chapter, but did not specifically talk about Duckworth and Dwecks idea, it seems that she assumed that everyone are already well versed in their works. I was and was able to glean a bit of what she was referring to in advance of her citation of both Duckworth and Dweck, but it is too bad that she did not give the readers a bit more information before making her final point.
Th last two chapters, the Culture of Meaning and the conclusion were the strongest chapters, outside of The Meaning Crisis chapter. The Culture of Meaning chapter was seemingly Smith at her most free and maximum engagement. She made her points in a very lucid manner, her storytelling was excellent, perhaps because the story about her brush with Story Corp was a better story and her own personal engagement in the process lit a fuse in her. That led naturally to her conclusion, which was stronger than the rest of the book.
I think this was a missed opportunity to make a point about meaning, purpose, transcendence, and what it all means to us in our society today, and how this all could help guide us through the miasma which is our cultural maze. If I were dismissive and cruel, I would call it a Cliff’s Notes updating  of Frankl with a lot of economic studies cited, that was my first reaction. But after much thought and re-reading, I felt that this was a good try at revisiting the same landscape, and a valiant effort at using all the modern day psychology and econometric studies to take an updated look at meaning, a rather ambitious undertaking. I think she fell short, which is not an altogether unexpected result, but a disappointing one nevertheless.
I think a better plan of attack and more motivated storytelling could have made the difference.



Monday, January 9, 2017

Messy By Tim Harford

Messy is yet another non-fiction books that falls in the genre created for writers, economist, and area experts etc. to expound on an amorphous topic by using examples from many different areas of life. They are usually written along the lines of a self-help/business/leadership book. They use the famous case study, combination of stories of the intrepid researchers, some rudimentary statistics to show that there is gravitas in what they say and it is all wrapped up in a nice tidy package and conclusions.
Even though I am cynical about the packaging and structure of the genre, I actually enjoyed Messy very much. A bit of confirmation bias maybe at play here since I am personally “messy” in the way I work, the way I organize myself, and the way I think abstractly.  So it is with great excitement that I ordered this book. Tim Harford had me at hello.
Fortunately for me, he delivered on what he had promised. I thoroughly enjoyed the read and he did get me thinking about the nature and beauty of disorder in the things that affects us.
Harford, a very well-known writer and economist is the author of a number of bestselling books, mostly found in the business best-seller list. I suspect this one will also be climbing the charts. Truth of the matter is that Harford is a very thorough researcher, an excellent writer and explainer, and never lets the details fog up the big picture for the reader.
The thesis of the book is captured in the sub title of the book itself: The Power of Disorder to Transform our lives. That is: disorder is good for us and we just get ourselves in trouble when we try to inject too much order and discipline into our daily lives. Harford divides his tome into none distinct words, each one is the lead in for a number of stories pertinent to the topic of messiness. They are: Creativity, Collaboration, Workplaces, Improvisation, Winning, Incentives, Automation, Resilience, and Life. He employs examples from music, politics, business, forestry, architecture, military strategy, education, engineering, mathematics, life sciences etc.  to illustrate his point, all the while entertaining us with his stories, and Harford is a very good story teller. Most importantly, he is also very good at weaving all these disparate stories into a cogent and logical thesis. I deliberately did not wish to give examples of his stories in this review because I did not want to deprive other readers the chance to read Harford’s prose and steal his thunder. It is best if you read the book.
Time and again, Harford persuasively tells us his stories and engages us into the depths of his thoughts regarding the main theme. He is thoroughly convincing in his arguments. He chides the people in the stories about being too ordered, too disciplined, and too devoted to linear thinking. Even though I was convinced early on in the reading process, I feel like his writing provided me with even more proof of what I already believed and made me think about other extensions of the messiness idea. I will be referring back to this book as I ponder his ideas.
I obviously recommend the book.