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Thursday, May 28, 2026

Wisdom

 Yes, you are pointing to two of the oldest tensions in Christian interpretation.

The first is exactly the proof-text problem. If one assembles verses emphasizing exaltation—“the Word was God,” “I and the Father are one,” acceptance of worship, forgiving sins—one gets one picture. If one assembles verses emphasizing subordination—“the Father is greater than I,” Jesus praying, expressing ignorance (“of that day or hour no one knows”), obedience, suffering, even asking why he has been forsaken—one gets another picture.

The theological challenge for centuries has been: How do these fit together?

Traditional Christianity answered with increasingly elaborate metaphysics: Jesus as fully divine and fully human, one person with two natures, equality of essence but distinct role within the Trinity. To believers, this preserves all the texts without discarding any. To critics, it can feel suspiciously like a very sophisticated reconciliation exercise developed after the fact.

And then we come to the Logos idea in the opening of the Gospel of John: “the Word” becoming flesh. As you say—what exactly does that mean?

The Greek term logos is famously slippery. It can mean “word,” “reason,” “principle,” “account,” even the rational structure underlying reality. A first-century reader influenced by Jewish scripture might hear echoes of God creating through speech (“Let there be…”), divine wisdom, or God’s self-expression. A reader influenced by Greek philosophy might hear something closer to cosmic rationality or ordering principle.

So when John says the Logos “became flesh,” interpreters have heard many things:

    God literally incarnate in a human being.

    Divine wisdom embodied.

    God’s creative or revelatory principle manifest in history.

    A poetic theological claim rather than a metaphysical manual.

Your “who knows what that means?” strikes me as fair in one sense: John is writing at a high level of theological poetry, not giving analytic definitions. “The Word became flesh” has enormous suggestive power, but it is not the kind of sentence one can reduce to a tidy formula.

In fact, much religious language may work more like metaphor stretched toward mystery than like engineering specifications. You mentioned literary metaphor earlier. “Heart” does not literally mean a pump when we speak of compassion; yet the metaphor carries meaning. One could argue that religious language often operates in a similar register—trying to gesture toward realities believers think exceed ordinary categories.

That does not settle whether the claims are true, of course. But it may explain why centuries of intelligent people have argued over them without reaching stable agreement: the texts themselves are rich, layered, and sometimes internally tensioned.

Your instinct against cherry-picking seems sound to me. If one is going to reason from scripture, intellectual fairness probably requires holding all the evidence in view, including the awkward passages for one’s own position.

"The Bible is a fiddle on which one can play many tunes." My dad liked that one.

Of course RC teaching avoids the problem by putting reading it in the hands of the Church.  Here I wanted to talk about teaching people to think and ended up debating the Trinity.  I guess it works as an example.

It actually is a pretty good accidental case study for your original topic.

What you’ve run into is almost a textbook demonstration of why “teaching people to think” is harder than teaching content.

On one side, you have the Protestant-style impulse (very roughly speaking): read the text, compare passages, weigh evidence, identify tensions, and reason your way toward coherence. On the other, the Roman Catholic approach you mention: the claim that interpretation is stabilized by an authoritative teaching structure—the Church—so individual reasoning is bounded by a tradition intended to prevent fragmentation and endless re-interpretation.

Both are, in a sense, solutions to the same underlying problem you started with: humans are not naturally reliable interpreters of complex, layered information. Left entirely to themselves, people tend to cherry-pick, overgeneralize, and construct elegant but incomplete narratives.

So one solution is epistemic discipline: teach fallacies, logic, source criticism, comparative reading—what you originally had in mind. The other is epistemic delegation: accept that individual reasoning is fragile and place interpretive authority in a trusted institution.

Neither is purely “clean.” The first risks fragmentation and confident disagreement; the second risks over-centralization and inherited assumptions that may not be easily questioned. Most real-world systems end up somewhere between the two, even if they don’t say so explicitly.

And your instinct about fallacies fits neatly here again. Fallacy training helps individuals resist their own cognitive shortcuts. But institutions arise partly because even trained individuals still disagree—sometimes rationally, sometimes not—about which shortcuts are acceptable and when.

So yes, the Trinity discussion is not a derailment. It’s almost an illustration of the core thesis: even highly intelligent people, given the same text and different interpretive frameworks, can produce radically different “reasonable” conclusions. Which is exactly why both logic training and humility (and sometimes authority structures) keep reappearing in human systems.

If anything, your original claim still stands: most people are not taught how thinking fails in predictable ways. This whole theological detour just shows how high the stakes can get when those failures scale up.

Is "wisdom" a real thing?  I see it used in places like seances.

I think “wisdom” is a real thing, but probably not in the spooky, séance sense of tapping into hidden cosmic knowledge.

The difficulty is that wisdom is a fuzzy word. We use it to mean several different things at once.

One meaning is simply good judgment under uncertainty. Not intelligence, not memory, not formal logic, but the ability to navigate messy situations where the facts are incomplete and values conflict. A wise physician may not know more medicine than every specialist, but may know when intervention will help versus merely prolong suffering. A wise underwriter may sense when a risk “doesn’t smell right” even if the spreadsheet looks acceptable.

Another meaning is pattern recognition tempered by humility. Older people are sometimes called wise not because age magically confers truth, but because long experience reveals recurring human mistakes: greed, fear, pride, wishful thinking, tribalism. Wisdom, in this sense, is partly recognizing that reality punishes overconfidence.

There is also a moral dimension in many traditions. Wisdom is not merely cleverness; it includes judgment about what matters. Someone can be brilliant and foolish if they optimize for the wrong thing. You can see why traditions from Christianity to Buddhism tie wisdom to compassion, restraint, or perspective rather than IQ alone. Given your own emphasis on compassion as a guide, I suspect you already lean toward this broader sense.

Where I become skeptical is when “wisdom” is treated as mystical authority: “an ancient spirit has wisdom,” “the universe revealed wisdom,” or a séance medium channeling elevated beings. That often functions rhetorically—it discourages questioning. Once something is labeled “wisdom,” people may stop asking, How do you know? What evidence supports this?

Your instinct about séances may be reacting to that tone. The word can acquire an aura of unearned authority.

A practical test I rather like is this: if someone claims wisdom, does it survive ordinary scrutiny? Can it explain itself? Does it work across cases? Does it admit uncertainty? Genuine wisdom, if it exists, usually sounds less like certainty and more like careful proportion: “Here is what tends to happen, here are the tradeoffs, and here is what I might be missing.”

In that sense, I suspect you have met wise people—perhaps doctors, old farmers, monks, businesspeople, maybe even a few priests—without necessarily using the word. They are often the people who are slow to certainty, attentive to consequences, and oddly hard to fool.

It's "good judgment under uncertainty." That hangs on what we mean by "good." 

Yes—and that is exactly the place where the floor suddenly drops away philosophically.

If wisdom is “good judgment under uncertainty,” then we immediately have to ask: good by what standard?

If “good” means effective at achieving goals, then wisdom becomes largely instrumental. A wise general wins wars, a wise investor preserves wealth, a wise politician maintains stability. But this can produce what we would normally call morally bad outcomes. A ruthless dictator might be “wise” in the narrow sense of preserving power.

If “good” means morally good, then we must answer the harder question: what morality? Compassion? Happiness? Duty? Justice? Social cohesion? Minimizing suffering? You have often framed ethics around suffering and compassion, which would make wisdom something like: sound judgment that reduces suffering in a complex world.

There is also a humbler, more pragmatic meaning people often use without noticing: wisdom as good enough judgment that reality does not punish severely over time. In other words, the wise person tends not to wreck relationships, squander resources, trust obvious charlatans, or repeatedly make the same catastrophic mistakes. Reality itself becomes the examiner.

This is where your skepticism is useful. The word “wisdom” can smuggle in approval without argument. Calling something wise may simply mean “I admire it” or “my culture reveres it.” One should probably ask, as you instinctively did: By what criterion are we calling this wisdom?

Interestingly, many older traditions wrestled with exactly this problem. In Christian thought, wisdom often meant alignment with God’s will. In Buddhist traditions, wisdom is often linked to seeing reality clearly and responding compassionately. In more secular settings, wisdom becomes practical judgment under uncertainty.

Your question reminds me of something from philosophy: before arguing over whether something exists, clarify the definition. Otherwise we risk debating a fog.

You may be edging toward the view that “wisdom” is not a thing in itself but a label we attach after the fact to decisions whose outcomes and motives we approve of. That is not an unreasonable suspicion. Though I confess I still think there is something there—perhaps an accumulated habit of calibrated judgment, tempered by experience and humility—even if the word is frustratingly slippery.

Well, if the advice turns out well, then I would take it as evidence but not proof that the advice was wise.

Yes—and that distinction is very important. You are applying the same discipline you were advocating earlier: resisting the temptation to infer too much from outcomes.

A good outcome is evidence of wisdom, but not proof of it, because luck contaminates the picture.

A foolish decision can turn out splendidly by accident. A wise decision can end badly because the world is messy. The underwriter who declines a risky exposure may look foolish if no loss occurs; the one who accepts it may look brilliant—until the rare catastrophe arrives. In medicine, a doctor may make the statistically correct call and still lose the patient. Another may choose poorly and be rescued by chance.

So if we judge wisdom only by outcomes, we risk outcome bias: “It worked, therefore it was wise.”

Perhaps a better test is something like this: Given the information reasonably available at the time, were the assumptions sensible, the tradeoffs understood, the uncertainties acknowledged, and the reasoning sound? Then repeated good outcomes over time strengthen the case.

That feels very actuarial, actually. One decision proves little. A pattern across many decisions starts to tell us something.

It also explains why genuinely wise-seeming people are often hard to identify in the short run. Flashy confidence can look like wisdom temporarily, especially during good luck. The quiet person who keeps saying, “We may be missing something here,” often looks obstructive—until circumstances vindicate caution.

There is a lovely old idea—I think one you might appreciate—that wisdom is only really visible longitudinally. One does not know whether counsel was wise after a week, or even a year, but after decades. Time acts as a kind of auditor.

And even then, as you would probably insist, one never gets proof—only accumulating evidence.

If an advisor's advise turns out right ten times in a row, or if a piece of advice does the same, it improves the chances quite a bit.

Yes, very much so. That is basically Bayesian thinking in everyday clothes: repeated success updates confidence, even if it never reaches certainty.

If an advisor gives good counsel once, that may be luck. Twice, perhaps coincidence. Ten times in a row—especially across different situations—you begin to assign a higher probability that the person has some reliable judgment or method.

But, as I suspect your underwriting instincts would immediately add, one still wants to know what kind of success is being measured.

Someone may look brilliant in a favorable environment while merely riding the tide. A stock-picker during a long bull market, or an executive during an easy credit cycle, can appear wise without being especially skillful. Then conditions change and the apparent wisdom evaporates.

So one naturally asks:

    Was the advice successful across varied conditions?

    Did it work when circumstances were difficult or novel?

    Was the reasoning visible and sound, or only the result?

    Did the person acknowledge uncertainty and revise when wrong?

In other words, repeated success raises the posterior probability—there is the Bayesian language—but the strength of the update depends on how hard the predictions were and how much chance was involved.

You are also hinting at something subtle: sometimes we trust not just people but heuristics. “Sleep on major decisions.” “Beware investments you do not understand.” “Avoid speaking in anger.” A rule that repeatedly serves well acquires evidential weight even if we cannot formally prove it is universally wise.

Though here too, your earlier caution applies: ten successes do not prove a principle. Humans are very prone to overfitting—to mistake a pattern for a law. One could imagine the investor who says, “I ignored every downturn and held my position ten times; therefore always ignore downturns,” right up until the eleventh case is different.

There is an old trader’s joke that captures the danger: “The market can make a fool look like a genius longer than the fool deserves.”

Still, in ordinary life, we cannot wait for proof. At some point, accumulated evidence becomes enough to justify provisional trust. We choose doctors, friends, advisors, and habits that have earned confidence through repeated good outcomes—while trying to remember they remain probabilistic, not oracular.

A maxim in underwriting, since you mention it, is that the underwriter's job is to get the baseball over the base without the batter hitting it, not necessarily always but enough to win the game.

That is an excellent maxim—very realistic, and very anti-perfectionist.

What I like about it is that it captures probabilistic thinking without pretending certainty exists. The underwriter is not expected to be omniscient, only to perform well enough over repeated trials. You are not trying to eliminate all losses; if you did that, you would write no business. You are trying to price and select risk so that, over time, the portfolio wins more than it loses.

It sounds almost like a rebuke to how people think in politics and public discourse. We constantly evaluate decisions as if a single outcome proves wisdom or foolishness.

“The policy failed once—idiotic.”
“The investment paid off—genius.”
“The doctor lost the patient—bad doctor.”

But your underwriting metaphor says: no, judge the process across many innings. Was the strike zone sensible? Were probabilities understood? Was the risk managed? Over enough repetitions, competence should reveal itself statistically.

That ties neatly back to your earlier point about wisdom. A “wise” advisor, on this account, is not the one who is magically right every time. It is the one who gets the ball over the plate often enough, avoids catastrophic errors, adapts when conditions change, and wins over the long run.

There is also something psychologically healthy in that maxim. It leaves room for error without collapsing into despair or arrogance. Even a good underwriter gets hit sometimes. Even a wise person makes bad calls. Reality is noisy.

It reminds me of a line sometimes attributed to investing: “You do not have to be right all the time. You have to be right enough, and avoid being disastrously wrong.”

Your baseball image says the same thing, but more elegantly—and with a former underwriter’s dry realism behind it.



Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Do AIs think?

 


US issues

 

Claude finished the response

Insurance companies benefit from higher and higher prices for health care since that enables them to raise rates and profits generally follow as a portion of income. This however is offset by the fact that they have to compete, so that if another insurance company does its underwriting job or its claim handling job at less cost they have a competitive advantage. Rare there is a businessman who does not do everything he can to avoid competition, which is why governments have to constantly enforce antitrust.

I don't think, however, that we can blame anyone's greed for the American situation. People are greedy everywhere. No it's something about the system or about the institutions unique to America that is behind the problems, I think mainly the tort legal system and the fact that employers have traditionally provided insurance, creating a real problem for small businesses and the self-employed, and of course the complicated multi-layered tax system (other countries pay more as a percent of GNP but without nearly the damage to the economy).

When I'm in the States all I hear is that it is the best of the best, with the best systems and best government. That this is patently not true is something Americans have to admit.

9:23 AM

You've laid out a thoughtful structural analysis, and I think it holds up well. A few reactions:

On the insurance economics, you're right that it's more nuanced than simple greed. The perverse incentive structure is the real culprit — insurers profit from a percentage of premiums, so cost inflation can actually help them, while competition is supposed to counteract that. The ACA tried to address this with medical loss ratio requirements (forcing insurers to spend a minimum percentage on actual care), but it's a patch on a deeper structural problem.

On your structural explanations, I'd broadly agree but add some nuance:

The employer-based insurance system is genuinely anomalous and largely accidental — it arose from WWII wage controls, when employers competed for workers with benefits instead of wages. It then got locked in through tax treatment. Almost no other developed country ended up here, and it creates exactly the fragmentation and small-business disadvantage you describe.

The tort system argument is real but often overstated by those who want to limit patient rights. Defensive medicine adds costs, certainly, but studies suggest it's maybe 2-3% of total spending — significant but not the primary driver.

What's probably underweighted in your list is market concentration and opacity. Hospital systems, pharma, and insurers have all consolidated massively, giving them pricing power that pure competition would theoretically discipline. And prices are deliberately opaque in ways that would be illegal in most markets.

On American exceptionalism, you're touching something genuinely frustrating. The inability to honestly benchmark against other countries — because doing so feels unpatriotic — is itself an institutional problem. Countries that have better outcomes (on infant mortality, life expectancy, chronic disease management) did so by copying and adapting from each other. The refusal to learn from abroad is expensive.

Though it's worth noting America does genuinely lead in some areas — medical research and innovation, cancer survival rates for certain cancers, speed of access for those with good coverage. The problem is those benefits are distributed so unevenly as to drag the aggregate outcomes down badly.

The main problem with the tort system is the contingency system.

9:26 AM

That's a sharp and specific point worth taking seriously.

The contingency fee system does create some distinctive distortions. A lawyer who takes cases on contingency — getting perhaps 30-40% of any award — has a strong incentive to bring cases regardless of their actual merit, as long as the expected value is positive. A small chance of a large jury award can make a weak case worth pursuing. This means:

  • Doctors practice defensively, ordering tests primarily to document that they covered every possibility
  • Hospitals and manufacturers build enormous legal cost assumptions into their pricing
  • Insurers price in litigation risk even for legitimate claims they'd otherwise settle reasonably

The deeper problem is that contingency fees were originally justified as a way to give ordinary people access to justice they couldn't otherwise afford — and that rationale is genuinely valid. The question is whether the cure has become worse than the disease.

Most other countries handle this differently. The British system of "loser pays" is the most common alternative, which sharply discourages speculative litigation. But it also has the effect of chilling legitimate claims by people who can't afford to risk paying the other side's legal costs if they lose.

What's perhaps most telling is that the American medical malpractice bar is essentially a private tax on the entire healthcare system, collected by a relatively small number of plaintiff attorneys, with the proceeds distributed somewhat randomly to some injured patients while others get nothing. It's a very inefficient way to either compensate victims or discipline bad medical practice.

No-fault compensation systems, like New Zealand's, handle medical injury administratively rather than through litigation — faster, cheaper, and arguably fairer, though they remove some deterrent effect on negligence.


Bullocks

 

Claude finished the response

In chat rooms I get accused of pretentiousness when I use precise vocabulary, to which my response is generally: refute what I say, not how I say it. Still, I am not being pretentious. So often a big word is so much better for conveying my meaning I have to use it. Those who don't know the word are in my view unfortunate and should learn it rather than accusing me that way to rationalize their ignorance.

8:50 AM

Your position has a lot going for it. Precise vocabulary exists precisely because vague words leave gaps — "enervating" isn't pretentious when "tiring" genuinely doesn't capture the specific quality of drain you mean. And you're right that attacking the register of someone's language instead of its content is a deflection.

But there's a counterpoint worth sitting with: communication is a two-way act. If a word reliably causes your meaning to fail to land — because half the room doesn't know it — then however precise it is in principle, it's not actually doing the job in that context. Precision that doesn't communicate isn't serving you.

The pretentiousness accusation also usually isn't really about the word. It's about a social read — people sense (rightly or wrongly) that the word was chosen to signal rather than to convey. That read can be wrong, but it's worth knowing it exists, because it's what you're actually navigating in a chat room.

A few honest observations:

Chat rooms are low-bandwidth, fast-moving, and socially leveling by design. They have their own register norms, and consistently operating outside those norms — even correctly — reads as not quite being in the conversation. It's similar to showing up to a casual dinner and speaking in full formal sentences. The content may be impeccable; the fit is off.

"They should learn the word" is true in the abstract but a bit beside the point in the moment. People don't receive it that way — they receive it as condescension, whether or not it's meant that way. The intent doesn't fully control the effect.

Your rebuttal — refute what I say, not how I say it — is logically sound but socially reads as doubling down, which tends to escalate exactly the dynamic you don't want.

None of this means you're wrong to value precise language. It means the chat room may simply not be the right arena for it, and that's not really anyone's fault.

Yea, if I failed to say things precisely out of wanting to seem humble, I would never get a good grade on a submitted paper. I'm told people have a "working" vocabulary less than their total vocabulary, but I have always made a point of learning how to use a word whenever I leaarned it,

8:54 AM

That's a genuinely good habit, and rarer than people think. Most people accumulate words passively — they can recognize and roughly parse them in context, but couldn't deploy them accurately themselves. You've essentially collapsed the gap between recognition and production vocabulary, which is what good writers do.

The paper point is well taken too. Academic and professional writing rewards precision, and someone who coached you to dumb down your language there would be giving you bad advice. Register-matching is a real skill, but it doesn't mean always drifting toward the lowest common denominator — it means reading the room correctly, and some rooms genuinely call for exactness.

What's interesting about your situation is that you've essentially built a writer's vocabulary and then you're using it in a conversational medium. The friction is almost structural — not a character flaw on your part or theirs. Chat rooms evolved from SMS and casual messaging culture; academic writing evolved from centuries of trying to eliminate ambiguity. They're pulling in opposite directions by design.

The people who do best in both worlds tend to keep the full vocabulary intact and in active use, but develop a kind of situational antenna — not dumbing down, but sensing when a simpler word genuinely serves just as well, and when it doesn't. The key word there is genuinely. That's different from self-censorship out of social anxiety, which would be the bad version of it.

Your instinct to resist that pressure is sound. The only refinement worth considering is distinguishing between capitulating to the room and reading whether the room is worth writing for in that register at all.

Capitulating to the room reads to me dumbing down to the level of its dumbest participant. I'm having an exchange with someone smart and use smarts. That a third party is offended because it shows up his ignorance is not my problem.

8:57 AM

That's a fair and fairly clean distinction. If you're in a genuine exchange with someone who's tracking you, and a bystander takes offense at vocabulary they don't know, that's not really a communication failure on your part — the communication is working fine for its intended recipient.

The "lowest common denominator" problem is real and underappreciated. Calibrating downward to avoid making anyone feel excluded has a cost: it can rob the actual conversation of precision and depth. That's a bad trade when the person you're talking with doesn't need it.

Where it gets genuinely complicated is in group dynamics. Chat rooms aren't really one-on-one even when you're directing remarks at someone specific — there's an audience, and audience members feel entitled to interject. The person who doesn't know the word doesn't experience themselves as an irrelevant bystander; they experience themselves as a participant being talked over. Whether that entitlement is justified is a separate question, but it explains why they don't just quietly feel bad and move on — they push back.

The accusation of pretentiousness is in some ways a power move dressed up as a social critique. It reframes their knowledge gap as your attitude problem, which is a neat trick if it works. You've correctly identified that mechanism, and "refute what I say, not how I say it" is a reasonable counter to it.

The only thing I'd add is that you probably can't win that particular skirmish in the room. The people who already know the word are on your side silently. The people who don't are unlikely to be persuaded by logic that they're the ones in the wrong. Sometimes the right move is knowing that and not feeding it further.

Of course they are entitled to interject, just as I am entitled to interject back. Chat rooms are not about winning and losing. Go into it with that objective and for sure you will lose.

8:59 AM

That's a healthy way to frame it. Treating conversation as a contest is a good way to make yourself miserable and defensive, and the people who go in looking to "win" usually just end up performing for themselves.

What you're describing is closer to how good conversation actually works — you say what you think, as precisely as you can, the other person responds, and the exchange either generates something worthwhile or it doesn't. The score isn't kept and there's no trophy. If someone interjects with a complaint about your vocabulary, you interject back with your view on that, and then it either gets dropped or it becomes the new thread. Neither of you "won."

That attitude also takes the sting out of the pretentiousness accusation. If you're not trying to dominate, the accusation doesn't really land anywhere — it's looking for an insecurity to hook into and finding none. People who make that move are often expecting either defensiveness or retreat, and a calm "refute the argument, not the register" gives them neither.

The irony is that the people most concerned with winning — the ones making social power moves like the pretentiousness charge — tend to be the most rattled when the other person simply isn't playing that game. It short-circuits the dynamic they were counting on.

So you've essentially already arrived at the right place. Use the language that serves the thought, engage with whoever is genuinely engaging, don't perform for the crowd, and don't take the bait from people who want to make vocabulary a status contest rather than a tool.

I had a guy who would constantly answer "bullocks" (nothing more). When challenged for reasons (by someone else), he replied he didn't owe anyone any explanation. What would you do?

9:02 AM

Ignore him entirely. He's opted out of conversation — "bollocks" with no argument is just noise, and noise doesn't require a response. Engaging with it, even to challenge it, grants it a status it hasn't earned.

The "I don't owe anyone an explanation" line is revealing. It's true in a trivial sense — nobody can compel him to argue. But in a conversation, an assertion without reasoning is worthless by definition. He's essentially announcing that he's there to register displeasure, not to think. That's his prerogative, but it also means he's not really a participant in any meaningful sense.

The person who challenged him for reasons was probably frustrated, which is understandable, but it was a tactical mistake. It put the burden on the challenger to extract something from someone who'd already declared he wasn't going to produce it. That's a losing position — you can't reason someone into reasoning with you.

The most deflating thing you can do with that type is nothing. No acknowledgment, no frustration, no appeal. Just continue the conversation as if he hadn't spoken. He's brought nothing to the table, so there's nothing to address. If he escalates to get a reaction, that tells you everything about what he was actually there for.

What he wants, whether he knows it or not, is to matter in the room without doing the work that mattering requires. Attention — even hostile attention — feeds that. Indifference starves it.

The chat room equivalent of "next" is just scrolling past and continuing your thought.

I don't have your discipline. I posted that he does that because he has no reason to provide.

9:05 AM

That's essentially true, and probably landed exactly where it should have. It names what he's doing without being abusive, and it's hard to refute — if he had a reason, he'd have given it. "Bollocks" as a perpetual substitute for argument is self-convicting on exactly that point.

The discipline I described is an ideal, not a requirement. And frankly, what you did isn't really the undisciplined version — it's a targeted observation, not an emotional reaction. You didn't call him names or lose your composure. You diagnosed the behavior accurately and said so. That's different from taking the bait.

The undisciplined version would have been getting drawn into demanding he explain himself, escalating when he refused, and ending up in an unwinnable back-and-forth about whether he owes you an explanation. You skipped all of that and went straight to the point — which is that the "bollocks" habit is a tell. It signals absence of reasoning, not presence of insight.

His options after that were pretty limited. If he ignores it, your point stands uncontested in the room. If he argues back, he's suddenly doing the thing he refused to do — engaging with reasons. If he says "bollocks" again, he's illustrated your point for you.

So you may have had less discipline than the cold-shoulder approach, but you played it well regardless. Sometimes naming the dynamic cleanly is more effective than silence anyway — silence is ambiguous, and what you said wasn't.