A poster cited the terrific speech that “Moneyball” author Michael Lewis gave at Princeton’s graduation last week. So, I had to find it. It is worth sharing.
Here is the speech from Princeton’s web site, where you can also find a video.
Thirty years ago I sat where you sat. I must have listened to some older person share his life experience. But I don’t remember a word of it. I can’t even tell you who spoke. What I do remember, vividly, is graduation. I’m told you’re meant to be excited, perhaps even relieved, and maybe all of you are. I wasn’t. I was totally outraged. Here I’d gone and given them four of the best years of my life and this is how they thanked me for it. By kicking me out.
At that moment I was sure of only one thing: I was of no possible economic value to the outside world. I’d majored in art history, for a start. Even then this was regarded as an act of insanity. I was almost certainly less prepared for the marketplace than most of you. Yet somehow I have wound up rich and famous. Well, sort of. I’m going to explain, briefly, how that happened. I want you to understand just how mysterious careers can be, before you go out and have one yourself.
I graduated from Princeton without ever having published a word of anything, anywhere. I didn’t write for the Prince, or for anyone else. But at Princeton, studying art history, I felt the first twinge of literary ambition. It happened while working on my senior thesis. My adviser was a truly gifted professor, an archaeologist named William Childs. The thesis tried to explain how the Italian sculptor Donatello used Greek and Roman sculpture — which is actually totally beside the point, but I’ve always wanted to tell someone. God knows what Professor Childs actually thought of it, but he helped me to become engrossed. More than engrossed: obsessed. When I handed it in I knew what I wanted to do for the rest of my life: to write senior theses. Or, to put it differently: to write books.
Then I went to my thesis defense. It was just a few yards from here, in McCormick Hall. I listened and waited for Professor Childs to say how well written my thesis was. He didn’t. And so after about 45 minutes I finally said, “So. What did you think of the writing?”
“Put it this way” he said. “Never try to make a living at it.”
And I didn’t — not really. I did what everyone does who has no idea what to do with themselves: I went to graduate school. I wrote at nights, without much effect, mainly because I hadn’t the first clue what I should write about. One night I was invited to a dinner, where I sat next to the wife of a big shot at a giant Wall Street investment bank, called Salomon Brothers. She more or less forced her husband to give me a job. I knew next to nothing about Salomon Brothers. But Salomon Brothers happened to be where Wall Street was being reinvented—into the place we have all come to know and love. When I got there I was assigned, almost arbitrarily, to the very best job in which to observe the growing madness: they turned me into the house expert on derivatives. A year and a half later Salomon Brothers was handing me a check for hundreds of thousands of dollars to give advice about derivatives to professional investors.
Now I had something to write about: Salomon Brothers. Wall Street had become so unhinged that it was paying recent Princeton graduates who knew nothing about money small fortunes to pretend to be experts about money. I’d stumbled into my next senior thesis.
I called up my father. I told him I was going to quit this job that now promised me millions of dollars to write a book for an advance of 40 grand. There was a long pause on the other end of the line. “You might just want to think about that,” he said.
“Why?”
“Stay at Salomon Brothers 10 years, make your fortune, and then write your books,” he said.
I didn’t need to think about it. I knew what intellectual passion felt like — because I’d felt it here, at Princeton — and I wanted to feel it again. I was 26 years old. Had I waited until I was 36, I would never have done it. I would have forgotten the feeling.
The book I wrote was called “Liar’s Poker.” It sold a million copies. I was 28 years old. I had a career, a little fame, a small fortune and a new life narrative. All of a sudden people were telling me I was born to be a writer. This was absurd. Even I could see there was another, truer narrative, with luck as its theme. What were the odds of being seated at that dinner next to that Salomon Brothers lady? Of landing inside the best Wall Street firm from which to write the story of an age? Of landing in the seat with the best view of the business? Of having parents who didn’t disinherit me but instead sighed and said “do it if you must?” Of having had that sense of must kindled inside me by a professor of art history at Princeton? Of having been let into Princeton in the first place?
This isn’t just false humility. It’s false humility with a point. My case illustrates how success is always rationalized. People really don’t like to hear success explained away as luck — especially successful people. As they age, and succeed, people feel their success was somehow inevitable. They don’t want to acknowledge the role played by accident in their lives. There is a reason for this: the world does not want to acknowledge it either.
I wrote a book about this, called “Moneyball.” It was ostensibly about baseball but was in fact about something else. There are poor teams and rich teams in professional baseball, and they spend radically different sums of money on their players. When I wrote my book the richest team in professional baseball, the New York Yankees, was then spending about $120 million on its 25 players. The poorest team, the Oakland A’s, was spending about $30 million. And yet the Oakland team was winning as many games as the Yankees — and more than all the other richer teams.
This isn’t supposed to happen. In theory, the rich teams should buy the best players and win all the time. But the Oakland team had figured something out: the rich teams didn’t really understand who the best baseball players were. The players were misvalued. And the biggest single reason they were misvalued was that the experts did not pay sufficient attention to the role of luck in baseball success. Players got given credit for things they did that depended on the performance of others: pitchers got paid for winning games, hitters got paid for knocking in runners on base. Players got blamed and credited for events beyond their control. Where balls that got hit happened to land on the field, for example.
Forget baseball, forget sports. Here you had these corporate employees, paid millions of dollars a year. They were doing exactly the same job that people in their business had been doing forever. In front of millions of people, who evaluate their every move. They had statistics attached to everything they did. And yet they were misvalued — because the wider world was blind to their luck.
This had been going on for a century. Right under all of our noses. And no one noticed — until it paid a poor team so well to notice that they could not afford not to notice. And you have to ask: if a professional athlete paid millions of dollars can be misvalued who can’t be? If the supposedly pure meritocracy of professional sports can’t distinguish between lucky and good, who can?
The “Moneyball” story has practical implications. If you use better data, you can find better values; there are always market inefficiencies to exploit, and so on. But it has a broader and less practical message: don’t be deceived by life’s outcomes. Life’s outcomes, while not entirely random, have a huge amount of luck baked into them. Above all, recognize that if you have had success, you have also had luck — and with luck comes obligation. You owe a debt, and not just to your Gods. You owe a debt to the unlucky.
I make this point because — along with this speech — it is something that will be easy for you to forget.
I now live in Berkeley, California. A few years ago, just a few blocks from my home, a pair of researchers in the Cal psychology department staged an experiment. They began by grabbing students, as lab rats. Then they broke the students into teams, segregated by sex. Three men, or three women, per team. Then they put these teams of three into a room, and arbitrarily assigned one of the three to act as leader. Then they gave them some complicated moral problem to solve: say what should be done about academic cheating, or how to regulate drinking on campus.
Exactly 30 minutes into the problem-solving the researchers interrupted each group. They entered the room bearing a plate of cookies. Four cookies. The team consisted of three people, but there were these four cookies. Every team member obviously got one cookie, but that left a fourth cookie, just sitting there. It should have been awkward. But it wasn’t. With incredible consistency the person arbitrarily appointed leader of the group grabbed the fourth cookie, and ate it. Not only ate it, but ate it with gusto: lips smacking, mouth open, drool at the corners of their mouths. In the end all that was left of the extra cookie were crumbs on the leader’s shirt.
This leader had performed no special task. He had no special virtue. He’d been chosen at random, 30 minutes earlier. His status was nothing but luck. But it still left him with the sense that the cookie should be his.
This experiment helps to explain Wall Street bonuses and CEO pay, and I’m sure lots of other human behavior. But it also is relevant to new graduates of Princeton University. In a general sort of way you have been appointed the leader of the group. Your appointment may not be entirely arbitrary. But you must sense its arbitrary aspect: you are the lucky few. Lucky in your parents, lucky in your country, lucky that a place like Princeton exists that can take in lucky people, introduce them to other lucky people, and increase their chances of becoming even luckier. Lucky that you live in the richest society the world has ever seen, in a time when no one actually expects you to sacrifice your interests to anything.
All of you have been faced with the extra cookie. All of you will be faced with many more of them. In time you will find it easy to assume that you deserve the extra cookie. For all I know, you may. But you’ll be happier, and the world will be better off, if you at least pretend that you don’t.
Never forget: In the nation’s service. In the service of all nations.
Thank you.
And good luck.
–From Maureen Downey, for the AJC Get Schooled blog
59 comments Add your comment
SeanK
June 13th, 2012
3:58 pm
I would challenge someone to present a case where luck did not play a significant roll in any “exceptional” success, be it Walt Disney, Barack Obama, Bill Gates or Johnny Knoxville. Such success certainly does not simply fall out of the sky and into their laps. But in each case I suspect there were multiple forks in their lives beyond their control or vision of where they would lead, that ultimately resulted, without specific design, in their exaggerated degree of success. The speech does not attribute success to luck alone; it only asserts that it is ALWAYS a component.
What luck?
June 13th, 2012
5:09 pm
Did luck play any significant part in the discoveries of Newton, Darwin or Einstein? Sure it was lucky Newton witnessed an apple falling, or Darwin heamophillia made him a natural historian, or that Einstein dropped out of college. But why had the untold hundred or thousands who went through these same experience never produce anything of note? It takes brilliance and hard work to see through these difficult things to their logical conclusion.
The most important things, the most valuable, the most useful, amazing, renowned, admirable, and maybe even the noblest things ever produced by humanity are NOT based on luck, and should not even be credited to luck. To do so is to cheapen the highest form of brillance humanity has ever known. Sure many successful people today had their success attributed to luck, but who will still remember the lucky successes of today’s household names a century into the future? Who will remember Buffet or Obama or Jobs long after they are gone, how fleeting their successes are!
It is the people whose names would resound foward through time immemoral that have acheived true success. And credit is given to them as it is due.
And what luck it is to be born in America? Well what luck is it to be born at all? We witness poverty, diseases, suffering. We experience hunger, pain and despair. We fear death, heights and the dark. And for those who managed somehow to fulfill all our needs, nature has cruelly blessed us with boredom. We all die, most under a century, untold billions never making any mark on history. The presence or absence of a single person simply just doesnt matter at all. What a life! A century or less of experience, only to be snuffed out at the end like a flame. A century of labour to keep ourselves fed, clothed and sheltered only to have ourselves buried in the ground, our burnt in an incinerator.
Keep your luck if you want or share it with the rest of us, but if your frail and transcient successes comes at the expense of others, why strive for it? What success is it really?
E-Pluribus
June 13th, 2012
8:45 pm
“Lucky that you live in the richest society the world has ever seen, [in a time when no one actually expects you to sacrifice your interests to anything.]” Maybe most poignant statement though not all true. Probably not the wealthiest society. I would also change “in a time when” to “in a country where…”. Maybe a central concept of religion is to teach us fellowship: community, fellowship, and helping your(immediate!) neighbors. Religion is dying. The population has shot upward, there is no longer a tribal sense of altruism (within the tribe) because there is no tribe–community. Lewis is wasting his time because he is speaking at the wrong time and in the wrong place(country). SELF-interest is where it’s at and where it’s all centered these days—in this country especially. How is this society not rotting from the inside out? Starving of spirirtuality and culture–just a random opinion. It’s well on it’s way to crumbling apart. Am I a naysayer? Absolutely—very cynical about a turnaround. Duty, respect, honor. Who at the top wants to help those at the bottom? Those unfortunate or unlucky to be born stupid or lame, the unlucky, “the losers”?
Dick Swenson
June 13th, 2012
10:35 pm
It’s difficult to comment on this speech as much of it is well supported by research. I recommend Dan Ariely, Dan Kahneman, and in particular. Leonard Mlodinow. Everyone should remember, we all live in an environment to which we did not contribute a thing. Our success in that environment is a matter of being in the right place at the right time and being privileged. If you’re poor, you simply can’t expect to have the same probablity of success as if you are rich. Mutatis mutandis being the wrong color, sex, religion, etc.
I grew up too young for the Korean conflict, too old for Vietnam. Many there were seduced or conscripted by these idiotic events. Who can tell what was lost, what was gained, who won, who lost?
Chance is everything.
Science gal
June 14th, 2012
3:51 am
Yup, Chance is everything… I’m one of the lazy types who should be a “loser” but… I’ve been lucky! Lucky to be born in the US,
lucky to be born to educated parents,
lucky to be born smart (I sure didn’t work hard to get that… just a gift from Spirit)
lucky to be really healthy
lucky to be white in the pre-civil-rights days,
lucky to be female when the guys were all being drafted to go to Vietnam (not so lucky when job applications all asked for my typing speed!)
lucky to go to college when an ordinary person could afford it without loans, even without parental help
lucky to buy real estate back when a house in Berkeley, CA was $39,000
lucky to fall into job after job for which I wasn’t really qualified, but was given…
Luckiest of all… I know how lucky I am!
and am so lucky to have the freedom of time in my senior years to give back, and live a calm, free, spiritual life…
Ruth Hanneman
June 14th, 2012
9:58 am
“I find that the harder I work the more luck I seem to have.”Thomas Jefferson
Commencement | zuoshoublog
June 14th, 2012
3:22 pm
[...] another good one from Michael Lewis to Princeton about [...]
Aikibu
June 16th, 2012
7:08 pm
The fantasy that it’s only hard work that will make you rich is a meme right wing conservatives have used for decades to dupe some of the posters here…One of the Republican Presidential Candidates strongest arguments is..” If you elect me then I’ll make you rich too”!…Over 40% of the folks who are registered Republicans believe they too will be millionaires and billionaires someday with out every really explaining how they will do it…George McKay wrote about this kind of delusion almost 250 years ago in his book “Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds”. We live in trying times and the fear and uncertainty this has caused has brought out all kinds of (as Joan Didion wrote) ‘Magical Thinking”. Reading through this thread I see how hard it will be for us to come together and solve our countries serious problems because one side just refuses to let go of their fantasies about “Team America” and deal with reality. Mr. Lewis skewers this Cognitive Dissonance very well in his address and reminds us that no one got to be successful without the help of someone else.
Anne Kreamer « Anne Kreamer is an author and journalist . This is her official site.
July 11th, 2012
3:18 pm
[...] (By the way, I’m not unique in believing a random seating assignment was one of the luckiest breaks in my career. See what Liar’s Poker author Michael Lewis said about it in a commencement speech he gave at Princeton.) [...]