Monday, May 14, 2007

QOTD

Atul Gawande, Better at 213-14 (2007):
He began his speech with a gripping story about a 1949 Montana forest fire that engulfed a parachute brigade of firefighters. Panicking, they ran, trying to make it up a 76 percent grade and over a crest to safety. But their commander, a man named Wag Dodge, saw that their plan wasn't going to work. So he stopped, took out some matches, and set the tall dry grass ahead of him on fire. The new blaze caught and rapidly spread up the slope. He stepped into the middle of the burned-out area it left behind, lay down, and called out to his crew to join him. He had invented, on the spot, what came to be called an "escape fire," and it later became a standard part of Forest Service fire training. His men, however, either thought he was crazy or never heard his calls, and they ran past him. All but two were caught by the inferno and perished. Inside his escape fire, Dodge survived virtually unharmed.
While Gawande's second book is nowhere near as good as Complications, it contains a few great insights.

2 comments:

Cogito Sometimes said...

Counterintuitiveness. Gets us so very often. Ergo, we must be open to new ideas, consider new ways of thinking about things, even question our long-held beliefs. We may ultimately confirm that we have been right all along. Or we may realize we have been wrong all along. Then we must have the courage to change our opinions. Lest we perish like Dodge's fellow fire-fighters.

@nooil4pacifists said...

C_S: exactly.