Difference Between Chess & Life

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Difference Between Chess & Life

    The New York Times - Opinion Today Newsletter - May 16, 2026.
    By David Epstein
    Mr. Epstein is the author of “Inside the Box: How Constraints Make Us Better.”

    Re: Life
    I am a recovering maximizer. For much of my life, I treated every decision — what meal to order, which Bluetooth speaker to buy, what exercise regimen to embrace — as a search for the very best. In retrospect, I think, the result was rarely a better outcome. What I’m certain of is that I wasted a lot of time agonizing and second-guessing myself afterward. I regularly fell prey to Fredkin’s paradox: The more similar our options, the less choosing between them matters but the harder it is. Thus, we can spend the most energy on the least important decisions.

    While researching my book “Inside the Box: How Constraints Make Us Better,” I learned that it is usually bad to be a maximizer because maximizers are often less satisfied with their decisions and their lives and more prone to regret. Thankfully, I also ran into the work of the Nobel laureate Herbert Simon, who coined the term “satisfice,” a portmanteau of “satisfy” and “suffice” that describes the approach of finding “good enough” criteria for decisions and, once they are met, forging ahead.

    Simon lived it. He wore one brand of socks and owned one beret at a time; he ate the same breakfast every morning and lived in the same house for 46 years. He told his daughter Katherine that one needs “only three sets of clothing: one on one’s body, one in the wash and one in the closet ready to wear.” By removing small decisions, Simon saved attention and energy for the work that mattered most to him.

    In a guest essay for Times Opinion this week, I argue that searching for the best is the wrong goal because searching itself is a cost that we forget to count. In an age of seemingly infinite choice and A.I. tools that now promise to optimize everything from our schedules to our love lives, the most valuable decision-making skill may be the willingness to stop looking."

    Re Chess:

    What do you think about the proposition: "This is the best way to play chess, and minimize time trouble!"

    Bob A

  • #2
    Hi Bob, In chess its called intuition and I often relied on intuition much more than I should have.

    Comment


    • #3
      How would chess be different than life in this respect? In life you probably make thousands or more choices per day. Most are irrelevant and you should spend little or no time on them (blue shirt or red shirt? bagel or toast?). A couple of choices on a typical day might be worth thinking about. Compare that to the top say ten major life choices that should eat up a significant amount of time (get married or not, move to a new city or not, quit this job and take that job, go to school at this university or that trade school or some other path).


      In a typical chess game, mostly "nothing is going on", and if you stick most positions in an engine you will see something like the gap between the best move and the fifth best move is less than 0.5. Those are also decisions that you probably shouldn't be thinking much about, if you are sure the moves are going to be close, which granted will take some time to determine unlike whether you have Coke or Pepsi with your sandwich at lunch. So maybe 20% of the moves in a typical 40-move game should be using up say half of your time allotment. Not exactly like life, but the principle of spending more time on critical decisions is still the same, no?

      When I read Schwartz's "The Paradox of Choice" (the premise of which is that for many things having more choices makes people unhappier because it is harder to determine if you have made the best one) I understood that most of his arguments were for people who would be "maximizers" and it didn't apply to me as in most things I would be the typical "satisficer". I like this term and will use it going forward. Thanks.
      "Tom is a well known racist, and like most of them he won't admit it, possibly even to himself." - Ed Seedhouse, October 4, 2020.

      Comment


      • #4
        Hi Tom:

        Thanks for teasing this out........your position seems quite reasonable.

        Bob

        Comment

        Working...
        X