Making Decisions
We are all familiar with the paintings in the Altamira Cave,
Spain, the ones with bisons, hunters and other creatures. Scientists might not
agree how old the paintings are, who did them and what they mean, if any, but
we all agree that they are really old. We can safely assume that the paintings
are genuine, and that the drawings are sufficiently complex not to be random
strokes of paint. Some might argue that people at the time did not have the
dexterity to create complex paintings, but that’s a different issue.
So what do the Altamira paintings have to do with philosophy
and decision making? Each and every one of those paintings represent a person
making a decision on where to start the painting, and even more important, when
to stop painting. Making a decision to stop painting represents a belief, an
intention and an act to make the intention happen; in other words the painter
is satisfied with the work. And the fact that the paintings have a pattern that
is recognizable of being an animal or a hand or a human being also reflects a
purpose. We can say that the person who painted these images fulfilled his or
her purpose because the decision to stop was made when the paintings met the
necessary and sufficient conditions of the purpose.
Making decisions, I would argue, is a basic human (and
animal) function that goes back, way back into pre history. But can we possibly
say that the decision a cave painter made was a rational decision making
process? Sure, we might argue, anyone can abstract a form and reproduce it with
an acceptable degree of form to pass as a shape of an animal. I would argue
that these paintings represent more than just acceptable degree of form, but
rather a mind set to pass on experiences to others; these painting are no
doodles. The mixture of the paint, the tones and intensities of the pigments
all suggests an endeavour rather than a whimsical fidget with paint.
Surely, an endeavour can only be a rational process full of
value judgments, trial and error, and comparative analysis between experience
and memory on the one hand and skill and dexterity in reproducing such memories
on the other.
So far I haven’t said anything other than make obvious
observations of facts. There is nothing strange or unusual to suggest that each
and every process and stage of an endeavour involves a series of decision
making and associated actions. But can we deduce from these obvious facts what
were the intentions and purposes of doing so many unique figures and shapes
(mostly) of real world things and objects? What these cave painters want to
convey to their society? I exclude the idea that the painters wanted to create
a work of art, any more than Pope Sixtus IV commissioned the Sistine Chapel for
art’s sake. The paint and shapes are the means, the media, to convey ideas and
concepts. I don’t use Ariel font for my essay as a work of art but as a means
to make reading on a PC relatively easy on the eye.
I make no apologies for my bias now and suggest that the
cave people were early “photojournalists” who wanted to “report” what they
witnessed and thence to “inform” others in their society; ie those who saw the
paintings. The fact that they show people hunting (action) fulfils the first
criteria of photojournalism: it is about people. Surely, the painter had direct
experience of the events depicted in the cave, either as a participant, witness
or observer. As I said I betray my bias towards photojournalism, but there can
be no doubt that the painter or painters wanted to educate members of the
tribe. Especially since the scenes and animals depicted could be quite
dangerous thus these paintings communicate to the rest of the tribe “how things
were out there in the field”!
Making decisions is a process including beliefs, be them
true or false, and a rational process to arrive at an acceptable (even if
subjective) intention and then acting on it. But there is and another aspect to
making decisions: do one’s decisions make sense to other observers? Why did he
buy a blue car when he hates blue?
Of course, some of our decisions are made in private and
even for our own private concern, but the issue still remains that if others
had access to these decisions would they be categorised as rational or even
reasonable, in the absence of mitigating circumstances? Basically we do apply
value judgements to other people’s decisions.
It is at this point that our subjective decision making
becomes public interest and maybe even moral judgements and beyond. If our
decisions do not make sense to others the chances are that they won’t trust us.
If our decisions do not make sense people would want to know why such a
decision was made and there are real consequences if there is no answer to the
why. Leaders might not be followed, politicians might be derided and empires
might fall. In modern history Operation Barbarossa brought the downfall of the
third Reich, the failed invasion by France and the UK of the Suez Canal
resulted in the USA becoming the absolute power in the Middle East. And Brexit
is a catastrophe in the making.
This means that although our decisions are made in private
they do have public implications. In effect we can either “think twice, and act
once” or “act in haste, and repent at leisure”
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