00:00:01
[Music]
00:00:09
um I want to start by telling you the
00:00:11
truth about decision making and the
00:00:14
truth kind of goes like this as human
00:00:17
beings you're defined by your skeletons
00:00:20
your cells your tissues and your organs
00:00:23
just like Dr Curry was talking about
00:00:25
earlier with his
00:00:27
dinosaurs but as people you're defined
00:00:30
by the decisions that you make and the
00:00:32
decisions that you don't make I teach
00:00:35
decision- making at the University of
00:00:36
Calgary elsewhere and I like to teach
00:00:37
using metaphors and one of the metaphors
00:00:40
I like to use is of the bigger picture
00:00:42
seeing the bigger picture and I like to
00:00:45
show this slide to my students hope you
00:00:47
enjoy it
00:00:48
too and the question I would ask you is
00:00:51
how many dolphins do you
00:00:53
see and there are nine that didn't
00:00:57
appear but there are nine in there there
00:00:59
are arrows that would point to nine
00:01:00
Dolphins you can sort of see them around
00:01:01
the bodies you can see them in the
00:01:04
middle part of the woman there you can
00:01:07
see them all around and I like this
00:01:09
slide because it it kind of says that
00:01:13
when it comes to decision- making we
00:01:14
don't see the big picture either and one
00:01:16
of the things that we don't see when we
00:01:17
talk about decision- making um is really
00:01:20
important and and that is our values our
00:01:23
values are largely hidden from us when
00:01:25
we make the choices that impact us and
00:01:27
that impact the others that are around
00:01:29
us
00:01:30
in many ways you can think of decision-
00:01:31
making as a mirror a mirror that
00:01:34
reflects your values to other people
00:01:37
that's one way to look at it you make
00:01:39
choices you don't think about your
00:01:40
values but there are implied values that
00:01:42
you reflect out to the world around you
00:01:45
another way to think about decision-
00:01:46
making and the way that I prefer to
00:01:48
think about it is that decision- making
00:01:50
is a lens that takes your values that
00:01:53
sharpens them that bring that brings
00:01:54
them into focus and that makes them
00:01:56
materialize in the choices uh that you
00:01:59
make
00:02:01
to illustrate this we've done some
00:02:03
research um one of the examples I'll
00:02:05
show you is relevant to I think a lot of
00:02:07
calgarians and that is around the
00:02:08
question of ethical oil my good friend
00:02:11
Ezra Levant who likes to criticize me
00:02:14
from time to time um this is my way of
00:02:16
kind of getting back at him we designed
00:02:19
an experiment where people could pull up
00:02:21
to a hypothetical gas station much like
00:02:23
he would pull up to a bar and in that
00:02:25
bar just like you could pick beers from
00:02:27
different nations around the world made
00:02:28
of different ingredients and that
00:02:29
different prices you could pull up to
00:02:31
gas pumps and get your gas from
00:02:33
different oils from different places in
00:02:34
the world made in different ways and
00:02:36
that the menu would it look kind of like
00:02:38
something like this that you could look
00:02:39
at the environmental impacts of the
00:02:41
extraction of that oil that made that
00:02:42
gas you could look at the overall
00:02:46
Environmental Protection the reputation
00:02:48
of the country that made that gas you
00:02:50
could look at the reputation of that
00:02:51
country on human rights you could look
00:02:53
at the greenhouse gas emissions of
00:02:54
making that gas from when you pulled it
00:02:56
out of the ground to when you burned it
00:02:57
in the car and you could look how much
00:02:58
that gas actually cost you and if you
00:03:01
ask Canadians and we asked a lot of
00:03:02
Canadians to pull up to this gas station
00:03:04
which pump would they pull up to First
00:03:07
the vast majority of Canadians pull up
00:03:09
to the Canadian pump the pump that makes
00:03:11
oil or that produces gas or that gives
00:03:13
you gas from the oil sands right here in
00:03:15
Alberta if on the other hand we ask
00:03:18
those same Canadians to pause for a
00:03:19
second and reflect on the things that
00:03:22
matter to them their values and to
00:03:24
account for those values in their
00:03:25
decision- making we see something like
00:03:27
this all of a sudden Canada's reputation
00:03:29
doesn't matter nearly as much although
00:03:30
it does matter a lot what ends up
00:03:32
mattering a whole lot more is what's
00:03:33
happening today right now what are we
00:03:36
doing in this country right now today in
00:03:37
terms of the environment what are we
00:03:39
doing right now in this country today in
00:03:41
terms of greenhouse gas emissions and
00:03:43
what we're doing to the climate and when
00:03:45
you get people to account for those
00:03:46
values first and then go to the gas
00:03:48
station something happens Canadian gas
00:03:51
suddenly Falls to fourth place in fact
00:03:53
in some of our experiments it falls all
00:03:54
the way down to fifth place and this
00:03:57
raises an important sort of point and
00:03:59
that point is this doesn't mean that
00:04:01
Canadian gas is an ethical gas it just
00:04:03
means that there are other things out
00:04:04
there that do a better job of reflecting
00:04:07
our values and we want to account for
00:04:09
that in the decisions that we make
00:04:10
because like I said decisions are
00:04:11
important they Define who you are as a
00:04:14
person if we ask people Canadians
00:04:17
Americans Europeans people in Asia which
00:04:20
model of decision- making they prefer
00:04:21
most people would tell us that they
00:04:23
would rather use the Lens model they
00:04:24
would rather pause reflect think about
00:04:27
their values use the lens to focus those
00:04:30
and then use their decisions to manifest
00:04:32
those decision those values into uh real
00:04:34
life
00:04:35
outcomes but if you buy the idea that
00:04:38
for most of the decisions we make we're
00:04:40
looking at mirrors and if you buy the
00:04:42
idea that we fail to see the bigger
00:04:44
picture all the time then we have to
00:04:46
account for another truth in decision-
00:04:47
making and this truth comes from my good
00:04:49
friend Robin Gregory and another good
00:04:50
friend Paul
00:04:52
slovic and that truth is that when it
00:04:54
comes to the vast majority of decisions
00:04:55
that you make in your life you're not
00:04:58
simply an archaeologist uncovering your
00:05:00
preferences in the mind uncovering
00:05:02
pre-existing decisions that you've made
00:05:03
in the past or pre-existing preferences
00:05:05
that you have in the future because you
00:05:09
can't have pre pre-existing preferences
00:05:11
if you haven't thought carefully about
00:05:13
your values to begin with what you are
00:05:15
instead in decision- making is an
00:05:17
architect you're an architect who has to
00:05:20
use the information that's present at
00:05:22
the time of the decision point the
00:05:24
information that you bring to the table
00:05:25
in terms of your values and then
00:05:27
construct a decision the best decision
00:05:29
that you construct at that moment at
00:05:31
that time the decision that reflects
00:05:34
your
00:05:36
values any good architect will tell you
00:05:38
that in order to do good construction
00:05:40
you need a building code and the
00:05:42
building code for decision- making looks
00:05:43
like this we need to First think about
00:05:45
what our goals what our objectives are
00:05:47
as a function of the values that we hold
00:05:50
we need to think about the options that
00:05:51
we have to choose among we need to think
00:05:54
about the outcomes and the consequences
00:05:56
of those Alternatives in terms of the
00:05:58
values that we bring to the table in the
00:06:00
beginning and we need to think carefully
00:06:02
about the tradeoffs that we're willing
00:06:03
to make when we make decisions and the
00:06:05
tradeoffs that we're unwilling to make
00:06:07
when we make decisions ultimately
00:06:08
decision- making is about
00:06:12
tradeoffs now Raheem mentioned something
00:06:14
and it's true I I do a lot of work for
00:06:16
government I do a lot of work for
00:06:17
industry and in that work we use a lot
00:06:19
of fancy computer simulations and models
00:06:22
to get people to think more carefully
00:06:24
about their values and then to input
00:06:26
those values into big decisions and I'm
00:06:28
not going to talk to you about that
00:06:29
today because it implies that decision-
00:06:31
making is really complicated and hard
00:06:32
and to some extent that it is but
00:06:35
there's something about decision- making
00:06:36
that's sort of natural something that we
00:06:37
can all do so the example I'm going to
00:06:39
show you is an example from East Africa
00:06:41
some work we did uh in Tanzania in tiny
00:06:44
tiny Massi Villages over about three
00:06:47
hours and that decision was around
00:06:49
helping people to make better choices
00:06:51
about the water treatment systems that
00:06:52
they would use in their homes to PR
00:06:54
prevent themselves from becoming very
00:06:56
ill and this is a photo of a young boy
00:06:59
at something called the dip it's about
00:07:01
800 met from a small town we worked in
00:07:03
and you can see him dipping a cup into
00:07:06
this uh very Brown kind of chocolate
00:07:08
milky green colored water and he's about
00:07:10
to take a
00:07:11
drink if you look behind the little boy
00:07:14
to the left you'll see some laundry
00:07:15
hanging if you look behind the little
00:07:17
boy to the right you'll see some people
00:07:18
getting ready to do some laundry if you
00:07:20
looked off camera to the right you'd see
00:07:22
some people taking a bath and if you
00:07:25
came back dead in the evening you'd see
00:07:26
some animals in the water too so let me
00:07:29
assure you that this is water that you
00:07:30
wouldn't want to drink on a regular
00:07:31
basis uh if you had a choice in the
00:07:34
matter so the question is what can we do
00:07:37
in terms of the point of view water
00:07:38
treatment systems these people use to
00:07:39
help them actually make better choices
00:07:42
culturally relevant choices choices in
00:07:45
line with their values that would help
00:07:46
them uh to actually stay safe and live
00:07:49
fruitful
00:07:50
lives the conversation started not with
00:07:52
words because this was in a community
00:07:54
that was accustomed to dealing with
00:07:55
Western researchers and Western analysts
00:07:57
on issues like this so the conversation
00:08:00
began with pictures instead and what
00:08:01
you're looking at are eight pictures
00:08:03
drawn by Massi people in these tiny
00:08:05
villages in which we worked uh at this
00:08:07
time and we worked in actually quite a
00:08:09
few Villages at the time to tell you the
00:08:10
truth um the top left is a picture of a
00:08:13
family a family that's happy and healthy
00:08:16
because they're drinking Safe Water the
00:08:18
picture to the right of the family is a
00:08:20
paintbrush reflecting the fact that the
00:08:21
water has to be the right color to the
00:08:23
right of that is a flower reflecting the
00:08:24
fact that the water has to be of the
00:08:27
right smell the most uh the smell that's
00:08:30
most in line with people's values to the
00:08:32
right of that is a piece of candy to
00:08:33
recognize that the water has to taste
00:08:36
just right the lower left a watch you
00:08:40
have to be able to get the water that's
00:08:41
clean and safe in a timely fashion to
00:08:43
the right of that a bucket it has to be
00:08:45
as easy as just sort of getting a big
00:08:47
volume of water in a single bucket
00:08:48
without a lot of thought same with the
00:08:51
pot being able to just sort of pour
00:08:52
water into a pot put the lid on it and
00:08:54
cook and to the right of that that funny
00:08:56
looking thing on the right that sort of
00:08:57
looks like a saddle that's that's a
00:08:59
cashew nut and in a lot of these
00:09:01
Villages there aren't a lot of Tanzanian
00:09:03
Shillings to go around so people would
00:09:05
go out into the uh environment Harvest
00:09:08
cashew nuts take them to Market and
00:09:10
trade those cashew nuts for whatever
00:09:11
they needed water treatment systems if
00:09:13
you wanted in this case and the question
00:09:15
here is how many cashew nuts would it
00:09:16
cost them to get the different water
00:09:18
treatment systems that might help uh in
00:09:20
terms of promoting their health there
00:09:22
are a whole bunch of options people
00:09:23
people could look at from really simple
00:09:25
ones on the top left a few drops of
00:09:26
chlorine to Simply taking water putting
00:09:29
it in a coke bottle putting it on a roof
00:09:30
in bright sunlight for 24 hours and
00:09:32
letting the UV take over boiling the
00:09:35
water ceramic filters made locally to
00:09:37
this really cool thing made by Proctor
00:09:39
and Gamble that you would take a little
00:09:40
powder put it in the brown water on the
00:09:42
left stir it for 15 minutes and create
00:09:45
Crystal Clear safe water on the right
00:09:49
the methods that we used really focused
00:09:51
on getting people to think about how
00:09:52
these different systems would align with
00:09:55
their values and they got to do that by
00:09:57
actually trying out all the different
00:09:59
systems and then going to the trouble of
00:10:01
aligning the Alternatives with their
00:10:04
values how well did each of those
00:10:05
systems perform in terms of color taste
00:10:08
odor safety and so on what people
00:10:11
actually chose isn't as relevant as the
00:10:13
fact that they chose they chose water
00:10:15
treatment systems that really reflected
00:10:18
what they cared about most deeply in
00:10:19
their
00:10:20
communities it's something that we can
00:10:22
all do it's something that we can all
00:10:23
learn from from some really really
00:10:25
beautiful
00:10:27
people you might be asking yourself if
00:10:29
at this point I make a lot of decisions
00:10:30
in every day and you're right um how
00:10:32
much of this is too much if we're going
00:10:34
to do this building code thing how much
00:10:35
do we need to do well I got good news
00:10:38
and bad news on that front in terms of
00:10:40
all the decisions that you make in your
00:10:42
day and we've studied a whole bunch of
00:10:43
different kinds the best we find is that
00:10:47
you're about 50% calibrated with your
00:10:50
values for most of the decisions you
00:10:51
make that is to say that with the vast
00:10:53
majority of decisions you make in a day
00:10:55
you're only hitting 50% of your values
00:10:58
with each of those decisions and that
00:10:59
declines sharply as the decisions become
00:11:02
more complicated so one answer to the
00:11:04
question is we need to be using our
00:11:06
building code for all kinds of decisions
00:11:08
all of our decisions if we
00:11:10
will the downside to that is that we
00:11:12
make thousands of decisions every day
00:11:14
and if we stop to think about each one
00:11:16
of those choices very carefully it would
00:11:18
take us an awful lot of time so there's
00:11:20
another trade-off I want you to think
00:11:21
about and that's the trade-off between
00:11:22
something we call accuracy and effort if
00:11:25
you can think to yourself that this
00:11:27
decision I've got to get it right it
00:11:28
requires a high degree of accuracy then
00:11:31
it probably requires a high degree of
00:11:33
effort and you should apply the building
00:11:35
code if you're talking about the
00:11:37
decisions that you can get wrong and
00:11:39
still live through your day the
00:11:40
decisions that you can get wrong and
00:11:41
make right tomorrow those don't require
00:11:43
the building code you can sort of learn
00:11:45
by muddling through and I encourage you
00:11:46
to do that because life is short and it
00:11:48
should be fun and sometimes you have as
00:11:50
much fun making mistakes as you do
00:11:52
having big successes so think about
00:11:54
effort and
00:11:56
accuracy there's something else I want
00:11:57
you to think about and that is there's
00:11:59
no such thing as a free
00:12:00
lunch as you go into decision making
00:12:03
like this and as you start to think
00:12:04
about your values and as you start to
00:12:06
apply the building code and as you start
00:12:07
to think about how your different
00:12:08
Alternatives align with what you really
00:12:10
care about something really interesting
00:12:13
happens as you make choices in that
00:12:16
environment you begin to question them
00:12:18
more so the person that doesn't think
00:12:20
too much about their values and blindly
00:12:22
goes through their day making decisions
00:12:23
is a pretty happy person because they
00:12:25
don't really think too much about the
00:12:27
consequences of those choices because
00:12:29
they didn't stop to think in advance
00:12:31
about the consequences of those choices
00:12:33
as you begin to think about those
00:12:35
consequences and you make your choices
00:12:36
now you've got a reference point to look
00:12:38
back on and now that reference point can
00:12:40
be used in doubt did I make the right
00:12:43
choice would I have been happier if I
00:12:45
chose something else would I have
00:12:46
achieved a better outcome if I had
00:12:48
chosen something else and that too is
00:12:50
entirely natural it's part of the human
00:12:52
condition and you shouldn't look at a
00:12:53
building code for decision- making as
00:12:55
something that's making your life
00:12:57
miserable so what we want to do with the
00:13:00
building code is we want to add an
00:13:01
additional step and that step looks at
00:13:03
decision- making in a new way most of
00:13:05
you out there and certainly me think
00:13:07
about often think about decision- making
00:13:09
as something that we do once we have a
00:13:11
problem we're faced with an opportunity
00:13:13
we need to make a decision we make it we
00:13:15
wipe our hands and move on let me tell
00:13:17
you another truth decision- making is
00:13:20
something you do over your lifetime even
00:13:22
a decision you make today about which
00:13:24
cell phone to buy or which car to drive
00:13:26
or which clothes to wear is something
00:13:28
that you can learn from through time so
00:13:30
decision- making should be thought of as
00:13:32
something that's a lifetime activity an
00:13:34
organic activity that evolves just as
00:13:36
you evolve over time so we want to add
00:13:38
an add a step to our building code and
00:13:40
that is after you've made a choice
00:13:42
monitor that decision how do you monitor
00:13:44
that decision you recalibrate yourself
00:13:47
you look at your decision that you just
00:13:48
made and you think about to what extent
00:13:50
ises that decision now that it's
00:13:52
unfolding for me in my real life address
00:13:55
the values that I articulated at the
00:13:56
beginning is it doing a good job I'll
00:13:58
stick with it is it doing a a poor job I
00:14:01
might change my decision are my values
00:14:03
changing well I sure better change my
00:14:06
decision now so monitor that decision
00:14:08
learn about outcomes learn about
00:14:10
yourself and adapt through
00:14:14
time so I've said a lot is there an
00:14:16
upside to all of this I think that there
00:14:18
is and there's a pretty big upside and
00:14:20
I'm going to go back to what I said at
00:14:21
the very
00:14:22
beginning you are defined by the
00:14:24
decisions that you
00:14:27
make the decisions that you make project
00:14:31
the values that you hold to the world
00:14:33
around you so I think it's incumbent
00:14:35
upon you it's certainly incumbent upon
00:14:37
me to take the time to think about what
00:14:40
my values are to think about how those
00:14:41
values uh affect the choices that I'm
00:14:44
about to make and what those choices are
00:14:46
going to mean for the people around me I
00:14:47
think we all want to be the best people
00:14:50
that we can be and to be the best person
00:14:52
that we can be we've got to start
00:14:53
thinking carefully about what our values
00:14:56
are but there's something else as you
00:14:59
begin to make choices that are in line
00:15:01
with your values you begin to reflect
00:15:03
not only your choices to others but your
00:15:05
values to others those others are your
00:15:07
family members they're your friends and
00:15:10
maybe most of all they're are
00:15:12
leaders I think right now we go out into
00:15:15
the world and we make a decision every
00:15:16
four or five years about who we're going
00:15:18
to choose to lead us in the world and
00:15:20
that's a decision that we make we sort
00:15:22
of wipe our hands and move on and forget
00:15:23
about it but the reality is you can take
00:15:26
every decision you make in every day of
00:15:28
your life use that to project your
00:15:30
values to those around you to the
00:15:31
leaders above you to hold them
00:15:33
accountable to hold them accountable to
00:15:35
what matters to you to what matters to
00:15:37
your community to to what matters to
00:15:39
your
00:15:40
family I think that's
00:15:43
important
00:15:45
so that's the truth the truth is your
00:15:49
decisions matter the truth is that your
00:15:52
values matter and the truth is until you
00:15:54
begin to line those two things
00:15:56
up I don't think we're going to be
00:15:57
making our world a much better better
00:15:59
place for a long time but on a positive
00:16:02
note little incremental changes little
00:16:04
building codes can help us a whole lot
00:16:07
and I encourage you to try it tonight on
00:16:10
your way home and tomorrow and the day
00:16:12
after that thank you
00:16:15
[Applause]