tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6926413038778731189.post8579770696974966744..comments2023-10-16T07:13:12.123-05:00Comments on A plain blog about politics: The Chess Model of SacrificeJonathan Bernsteinhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15931039630306253241noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6926413038778731189.post-86910754409246621262010-09-15T00:42:21.982-05:002010-09-15T00:42:21.982-05:00While I don't agree with Friedman's genera...While I don't agree with Friedman's generalizing, I do believe he invoked the proper usage of the term "sacrifice" in his context.<br /><br />According to the simplistic analysis he offers, his argument is that everyone wants something for nothing- few are willing to sacrifice for their ideals. There is no need to ask people to sacrifice for their self-interest. Or, if there is, such as building savings before taking out more debt, it's a different question: delayed gratification. A sacrifice for ideals or principles, however, is not like a chess sacrifice, but is still considered a value amongst most.<br /><br />The epic war hero is not the guy who looks to sacrifice his life only when there is something great in store for himself (though that is a sure way to Valhalla, I suppose). The soldier who jumps on a grenade for his comrades isn't acting out of thought for his own great rewards, and certainly nothing believed to come in the afterlife is as objectively anticipated as a chess strategy.<br /><br />In fact, I would say the chess analogy, a quid-pro-quo sacrifice is exactly the wrong model to apply here. First of all, a chess sacrifice is made by the player, not the piece. The player is not sacrificing himself, he's sacrificing a piece for a better position/etc. The player expects to be better off from the exchange, not worse. Thus, the term is a misnomer. It's more like the general who decides to send the infantry on a suicide mission. The general is not the valued hero, the soldiers are. <br /><br />Friedman is saying if you want to win the war, you have to be willing to sacrifice your own interests toward that goal. Not some other pawn.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6926413038778731189.post-3917829822982643742010-09-13T11:06:38.281-05:002010-09-13T11:06:38.281-05:00Just one quibble, Jonathan: someone *might* critic...Just one quibble, Jonathan: someone *might* criticize a chess player for failing to sacrifice on grounds that the player was not cold-blooded enough. "He lost because he was unwilling to hazard his queen," or "she failed to get health care reform passed because she refused to give up on the public option."<br /><br />In matters of the greatest import, it seems to me that a leader has a positive duty to consider the nation's interest in the terms you suggest - but "interest" has a complicated relationship to morality. Lincoln could have saved hundreds of thousands of American lives by letting the South go its way and expanding the union in another direction - but he seems to have calculated that if he did so, government of the people, for the people, by the people would have perished from the earth. That strikes me as a counterintuitive proposition.Andrew Sprunghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17601269968798865106noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6926413038778731189.post-36368612773962815392010-09-13T11:06:36.289-05:002010-09-13T11:06:36.289-05:00I like this. If anything, though, the chess model...I like this. If anything, though, the chess model is far more precise than anything in real life - or even in baseball. You're actually talking about cost-benefit analysis.<br /><br />The chess player sees the logical conclusions of his move, and the sacrifice pins his opponent into a losing position. In baseball, you're just playing the odds. You give up an out to move the runner into scoring position, and hope the rest of the side doesn't strike out.<br /><br />What Friedman ought to be talking about is resource allocation, frex: you sacrifice meat for a few meals to help feed the troops.<br /><br />BTW, he is a blowhard joke.<br /><br />Cheers!<br />JzBJazzbumpahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07337490817307473659noreply@blogger.com